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- Emotion play an important role in making humans more efficient when

cognitive fallacies are showing the contrary. The view of computer non-like-
brain only assumes intelligence as logical, rational and computable capability
A machine reached or not the criteria of human intelligence
- According to Stanford University study, human brain has 100 billion neurons,
which facilitate the creation and storage of memories. Each neuron connect with
thousands of others, allowing the human brain to juggle more of the data, which
eventually creates an exponentially larger storage capacity.
The arms race between human mind and machines is actually a toss-up.
However, machines still lag behind humans
Conquer new domains, tasks and skills
Drive humans into unemployment down the line
- Al-powered machines cannot engineer human common sense, in which
understanding the “cause” and “effect” of an event is beyond their capacity.
While real-life scenarios necessitates a holistic approach to a matter, these
machines only make decisions based on their associations with specific events.
Automated cars, for example, cannot make a split-second decision to either go
straight or swerve left or right to avoid a hurdle on the road because they are not
programmed to get to grips with this incident.
Human-led education trumphs that by machines. Learning is a practice of
information absorption, process and real-life experience. When human try to
grasp something new, they channel all sensory capabilities, including emotion,
which goes beyond a machine’s power. Also, human-taught education helps
learners enhance various skills and increases the prospect of career
development. A lecturer indubitably draws on his compendious knowledge to
make their learning more effective and worthwhile, or a professor guides
students how to learn things at a multifaceted level.

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