Tripping Robots and Human Coordination
It is amazing how denizens of the secular science industry are looking to use artificial intelligence to advance evolution, yet they ignore the conflict in the theories. That is, particles-to-programmer evolution is supposedly a trial-and-error unguided process, but AI requires intelligent design.
When robots work well to help us in highly repetitive or dangerous activities, domo arigato to them. But when they fail, it is often spectacular and possibly dangerous. Some secularists think AI robots can supplement or even replace humans.
![]() |
| Robot tripping and falling, made at DeepAI — but I did not ask for three arms |
The AI revolution has taken the world by storm, with some industries rushing to harness the perceived superior efficiency brought by these technologies. This technological race has seen a flurry of publications on methodologies suggesting how to minimize the need for human input into AI data processing systems and exploring mechanisms to improve the mechanical design of AI-powered robots.But despite the rapid progress in artificial intelligence, time and again, AI systems continue to fall far short of human dexterity and fine-motor capability.
To read the rest of this interesting article, navigate to "Robot Fail Highlights Human Coordination."

