Why AI Can’t Replicate Human Emotional Intelligence And Creativity

There’s a reason why some artists, writers, filmmakers, programmers, etc. are paid highly.

Vivek Naskar
ILLUMINATION

--

Photo by Frankie Cordoba on Unsplash

Ever since ChatGPT was made available to the public by OpenAI, it has significantly contributed to the advancement of ‘people accepting AI’, now that it can do so much within a short period of time.

Prior to that, we had AI doing so much in the background, doing the boilerplate work that didn’t require human intervention. Over the years, AI has always been developed and used in various real-life scenarios.

For example, your smartphone has an AI camera that can react to its environment without the help of the human mind. The camera software exhibits different cognitive functions like thinking, learning, and problem-solving, which are generally associated with the human mind.

Still, I would argue that despite these significant advancements, there are still key aspects of human cognition that make it unlikely for AI to completely replace humans.

Emotional Intelligence in AI would be extremely difficult to implement

I am confident that someone somewhere is working on making the AI systems emotionally intelligent…

--

--

Vivek Naskar
ILLUMINATION

A software developer by the day and a writer by the night!