Developing machine’s capabilities to achieve artificial general intelligence, AGI, involves a learning process aiming at replicating human intelligence which is difficult to realize due to the continuous development of human cognitive abilities
Humans have been building intelligence since we were born. Nature gives us unlimited concepts, but we are creating artificial nature. That's why we can approach ourselves; everyone is similar but different.
Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) is designed to replicate the wide range of human thinking, but whether machines can truly match us is still uncertain. AI has come a long way in things like problem-solving, language, and pattern recognition, yet human intelligence is much more than that. It’s about emotions, creativity, moral choices, and adapting to completely new situations.
With every advancement, machines get closer to imitating parts of how we think, but capturing the full depth of the human mind—shaped by our experiences, biology, and culture—is a much bigger challenge. AGI might one day get close, but whether it can ever fully mirror the richness of human cognition is still an open question.