A human brain has been created in a laboratory, mainly for research and harvesting purposes. There is growing evidence that computing systems are talking to each other. What happens when we are not the most intelligent being on the planet?
I ask you for a long time not to worry about the "perfection" of artificial intelligence. Turing test is correct if experts are professionals. Give the task to artificial intelligence to write a new classical melody. And an experienced conductor will immediately identify a fake context. Try to suggest writing a plot of classical painting on the theme of sadness. And this creativity is also not subject to artificial intelligence.
Vladimir, I'm not completely convinced by this argument as perhaps the nature of creativity can be understood through paradigms such as seeking to simply recreate and alter reality or impose reality onto an unknown (Religion). I do not believe creativity is this wonder that is exclusive to humankind and cannot be replicated.
I don't believe we should fear such an outcome, but I think we-even you-mystify human intelligence, the mechanism of intelligence itself, and we may be surprised how easily it is replicated.
There ease of replication might affect religious ideas, especially those based on human-special nature and connection thereby to god. Would that then produce a cosmic (I use the word unwisely) identity crises? Would we then possibly see our actual position in the universe and world?