We have surpassed what philosophers Charles Taylor, Martin Heidegger, and Herbert Marcuse predicted regarding technology. While it is true that social media has contributed to the rise of mental illnesses such as anxiety and depression and has disrupted family communication, AI is set to reduce us to the level of apes. Who would have thought that Stanley Kubrick would turn out to be a prophet with his film 2001: A Space Odyssey?
AI is replacing everything—work, human thought, and the pursuit of knowledge.
Apple CEO Tim Cook once stated that we had reached such a high level of technological advancement that distance and communication barriers between countries were disappearing, and we now held all the knowledge of the world in our hands. It was almost as if we had fulfilled Nietzsche’s vision of the Übermensch—the dream of the superman.
Unfortunately, what these predictions failed to account for in this union between humanity and technology is that human beings are inherently imperfect.
We possess all the knowledge of the world at our fingertips, yet we waste it scrolling through TikTok. The distances between countries have been shortened, yet we now struggle more than ever to communicate with our own families.
AI has not yet revealed the full extent of its capabilities.
Remember, the primary purpose of AI is to imitate the human mind—yet it is already surpassing the greatest geniuses in human history.
This progression will not stop. It is driving many people into a dark world where machines, governed by algorithms, will make decisions on our behalf. The AI-driven market will dominate humanity, and people will have no choice but to submit, as there will be no viable alternatives.
This is nothing new. The market has always dictated change—steam engines revolutionized industry, replacing local workers who were ultimately forced to conform or perish in the coal mines.
But this time, things are different.
Human beings, like traditional computers, think in binary: YES or NO.
This is how we make decisions—how we discern right from wrong.
Computers operate in 0s and 1s, which represent their equivalent of YES and NO.
However, with Majorana 1, YES and NO are no longer absolute. In the realm of quantum technology, YES can be NO, NO can be YES, or both can exist simultaneously. In other words, the information obtained will be correct, whether we want to accept it or not. This is the world of probabilities governed by quantum superposition.