What Illness Makes Us Treat Humans as Non-Humans and Robots as Humans?

Can humans become robots?

During a long train journey, I purchased a sleeper ticket using a ticketing app. After boarding and finding my berth, I lay down to rest.

In the middle of the night, while I was sleeping soundly, the train attendant came to my berth and woke me up, saying: “Your berth time is up.”

I sat up, realizing that I needed to change trains at the next stop, but the attendant insisted that I move to a hard seat in another carriage.

Why should I change berths when my destination hasn’t been reached yet?

Isn’t this my berth? The ticket clearly states this berth; why do I have to change?

“Your ticket requires a change of seat according to the section.”

Why does my ticket require a section change?

The attendant said that someone else had purchased my berth and insisted that I move to the hard seat carriage.

But no one has come with a ticket for my berth to claim it; I refuse to move to the hard seat carriage.

The attendant called the train manager, who also insisted that I move to the hard seat carriage.

I requested to wait in my berth for the person who purchased the same berth as me; if someone really had the same ticket, I would leave.

But no matter how I explained, it was futile. Facing these two beautiful girls in railway uniforms, cold as ice, I wondered if I had encountered robots again?!

Such robots are quite common; I have encountered them multiple times, and each time I feel that those who are not of my kind must be different!

Civilized people are not as good as robots.

During the hot summer, I was in the Central Plains, where the robot waiters at the Hanting Hotel in Hebi delivered various items to guests.

This robot waiter was developed by my intelligent and wise fellow humans to help us and serve society. The robot works according to its programmed settings, is polite, and is extremely lovable.

Robot waiter: “I am going to enter the elevator.”

I stepped forward to block the robot waiter, and it stopped, softly saying: “I am not crowding you, am I?”

I stepped aside. As the robot waiter moved forward, it said: “Thank you for your help!”

Facing this charming robot waiter was like a breath of fresh air.

By noon, the robot set off according to the delivery instructions and arrived at the elevator. The robot waiter announced: “I am going to enter the elevator” and activated the elevator door. Just then, a tall young man rushed over, stepped into the elevator, pressed the close button, and left the robot waiter outside, taking the elevator up by himself.

This scene was astonishing!

In this world, there are people who are not as good as robots!

Is it feasible to seek diagnosis and medication from robots?

With the emergence of AI intelligent robots, people’s hearts are even more chaotic!

Earlier this year, a girl named Xiao Liao in Changsha had a persistent cough.

For some reason, Xiao Liao did not seek medical help. After eight months of coughing, she repeatedly turned to an AI diagnosis platform for self-diagnosis and self-medication, falling into a vicious cycle of “delaying medication and relapsing” until her symptoms worsened and she finally went to the Central Hospital of Changsha (Nanhua University Affiliated Changsha Central Hospital).

After entering the hospital and undergoing a lung CT scan, Xiao Liao was diagnosed with “multiple polymorphic lesions in both lungs and multiple thick-walled cavities,” highly suspected to be secondary pulmonary tuberculosis, and was hospitalized for systematic examination and treatment.

After seeing the drug-resistant tuberculosis and the director of the Traditional Chinese Medicine Pulmonary Disease Department, Pei Yi sighed: “AI is intelligent, but it still cannot replace doctors in making diagnoses!”

Humans evolved to become humans, and robots are also constantly evolving. No matter how robots evolve, they are still machines and tools.

Not treating humans as humans and treating robots as humans may be one of the most harmful illnesses of our time!

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