The different levels of Artificial Intelligence.

Rumi Juwairiyyah
Fnplus Club
Published in
3 min readFeb 5, 2018

Within the realm of artificial intelligence, there are different classifications. They include:

Strong Vs Weak:

Strong artificial intelligence refers to the work that looks to genuinely imitate a human and that could potentially even explain the way humans think. Few examples of this exist, currently. Then there is weak artificial intelligence, which simply aims to build systems that are able to behave in the same manner as humans but do not have the aim of thinking as humans think.

Narrow Vs General:

Another classification of artificial intelligence are those that are meant to meet certain tasks, known as narrow artificial intelligence; and those designed to reason, known as general artificial intelligence.

So what are the pros and cons of artificial intelligence?

There are several advantages and disadvantages associated with the concept:

The advantages:

1) Dealing with mundane tasks

One massive advantage of artificial intelligence is its potential to complete mundane tasks through intricate automation that will increase productivity. Theoretically this can even remove “boring” tasks from humans and free them up to be increasingly creative.

2) Faster decisions

Using artificial intelligence alongside cognitive technologies can help make faster decisions and carry out actions quicker.

3) Avoiding errors

The phrase “human error” was born because humans, naturally, make mistakes from time to time. Computers however, do not make these mistakes — that is, of course, assuming they are programmed properly. With artificial intelligence, data could be processed error-free, no matter how big the dataset might be

4) Taking risks on behalf of humans

With artificial intelligence, you can arguably lessen the risks you expose humans to in the name of research. Take, for example, space exploration and the Mars rover, known as Curiosity. It can travel across the landscape of Mars, exploring it and determining the best paths to take, while learning to think for itself. Using artificial intelligence in this manner could potentially lead to massive benefits in areas such as demand forecasting, medical diagnosis and oil exploration.

The disadvantages:

Job losses:

There is little doubt that artificial intelligence will displace many low-skilled jobs. Arguably, robots have already taken many jobs on the assembly line — but now this could extend to new levels. Take, for example, the concept of driverless cars, which could displace the need to have millions of human drivers, from taxi drivers to chauffeurs, very quickly. Of course some would argue that artificial intelligence will create more wealth than it destroys — but there is genuine risk that this will not be distributed evenly, particularly during its early expansion.

Distribution of power:

Artificial intelligence carries the risk, in the minds of some, of taking control away from humans — de-humanising actions in many ways. Nations that are in possession of artificial intelligence could theoretically kill humans without needing to pull a trigger.

Lack of judgement calls:

Humans can take unique circumstances and judgement calls into account when they make their decisions, something that artificial intelligence may never be able to do. One example occurred in Sydney, Australia, in 2014 when a shooting drama in the downtown area prompted people to make numerous calls to Uber in an effort to escape the area. The result was that Uber’s ride rates surged based on its supply and demand algorithm — there was no consideration involved for the circumstances in which the riders found themselves.

Clearly, artificial intelligence has massive potential advantages. The key for humans, however, will be to use their own judgement to apply it productively and ensure the “rise of the robots” doesn’t get out of hand.

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