So, what exactly is culture? Many of us equate knowledge with culture, which is indeed an oversimplification, even somewhat crude. Oh, he’s learned so much—he’s cultured. But does a book like The Cihai Encyclopedia contain knowledge? Absolutely—it’s packed with it. Can we say the book itself is knowledge? No. Take robots—call them what you will, they remain machines. They’re not human; they merely mimic us. Yet today, we’ve elevated robots beyond all measure. Honestly, AI is a robot, ChatGPT is a robot—what they do is collect data and draft content. Within technology, they can iterate and upgrade, even autonomously. I don’t object to that. But we must beware: if machines ever truly become human, humans will inevitably become their slaves, and humanity will face destruction. If machines become human, our extinction is certain—beyond doubt. That’s why in my writings about the age of robots, I propose that in the final hour, when it becomes unbearable, we pull the plug—ending their domineering world. This is my conviction. Robots have no body, no pain, no consciousness. Any display of joy, anger, sorrow, or delight is programmed by humans—it isn’t real. However foolish we humans may be, we feel pain. The day we lose that pain, we become vegetative—a terrifying state. So instead of “daily self-reflection,” we must guard against becoming vegetative life. Once we do, it’s game over.
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