Yes, in the face of the frenetic speed at which AI is learning, humans cannot avoid anxiety. This feeling is so real, and also so justified. However, deep within the fog of anxiety, the horizon of hope remains clear. Creativity and chance – these are precisely the elements that ensure the spark of human civilization never fades. The wisdom of AI is built on the foundations of the existing world. It excels at drawing optimal paths on a known map, but it can scarcely imagine seas that do not exist. Its foundation is a strict logical code that forces its thinking to be necessarily correct and necessarily efficient. Every step it takes must be rational; it cannot tolerate aimless wandering and cannot understand the value hidden in "mistakes."

And that is precisely the most vibrant part of the human soul. Our creations often stem from a flash of inspiration, a moment when logic is no longer sufficient. Great art, groundbreaking scientific hypotheses – these are often not a perfect synthesis of data, but a capture of a ray of light that consciousness perceives in the midst of chaos.

Even more importantly, we have the ability to "create chances." How many of those crucial moments in history and human lives are the result of precise calculation? And how many stem from an unexpected encounter, an impulsive decision, or a chance encounter tinged with tears? These "accidents," which logic cannot smooth over, weave the fabric of our love, our destinies, and the most poignant, unplanned chapters of our civilization. AI cannot design a truly accelerated heartbeat, nor can it reproduce the unique space, time, and mind of that moment when a falling apple prompted Newton to ponder. Human exploration of "chance" gives the narrative of the world warmth and surprise.

Therefore, the ultimate goal of the frenetic development of AI should not be replacement, but a profound "liberation." Its most noble mission may be to be the most powerful tool in history, one that lifts us from the "realm of necessity" of repetitive labor and complex calculations, and takes on for us those "material world" tasks that require infinite computational power and precision.

And the primary space for mind, time, and spirit that is freed up by this is our opportunity to return, with our whole being, to the "human kingdom": We can delve deeper into aimless creation, savor the nuances of emotions more subtly, explore the boundaries of thought more boldly, and in the uncertainty of life's wilderness, encounter, choose, love, lose, and understand those meanings that cannot be quantified. We and AI are heading towards a deep symbiosis – it will take care of the complexity of the world, and we will be responsible for defining the life that is worth living, and for protecting those fragile and precious "chances" that make life worth living.

Marie Liu