>>51077098know answers to things our brains can’t comprehend, but it could provide us with solutions to unresolved mysteries. It could be a chance for humans to learn more about where we came from and why we exist. In a way these answers already exist, creationism, the idea that God created humans and the world. If a robotic AI provides contradicting information to the beginning of the universe compared to God and our already existing theories, then what can we believe.
Eventually humans will figure out a way to integrate robotic components into their bodies. Whether its brain chips that keep us high functioning at old age or prosthetic limbs that can lift cars, a lot of these can be helpful to humans. Thinking about the health care implications, we can help people with brain damage or who were born impaired in some way. But if every human gets an “upgrade” are we abandoning a little of our old selves. I think that human limitations is what makes us feel emotions and makes us human. People would lose their sense of humor as well as their sense of morality as we become closer to robots. God did not ever intend to create humans to live to hundreds of years, he created heaven to allow those who leave the physical world to exist in a new place.
If God does exist then is it right to challenge him and twist humanity in a way that will forever change the world. I personally am not a religious individual, but I do believe that there is some force that drives everything in the universe. I use this belief as a crutch to explain things that don't have definite answers, but if