Connect with us

Subscribe

Subscribe

Junior Contributors

AI is impressive, but it still can’t understand, feel, or fold your laundry

What AI can’t do yet, and why that Matters

BY AMARI SUKHDEO

We’ve all heard it: “AI is taking over.” It’s writing novels, diagnosing diseases, painting like Van Gogh, and even giving legal advice (which, for the record, should still come with a lawyer present). Some days it feels like the only thing AI can’t do is fold laundry — although someone’s probably working on that, too, but behind the buzz and the panic, there’s something important: AI still has major limits, and those limits aren’t just technical — they reveal something deeper about how human intelligence actually works.

“AI doesn’t think, it predicts. That’s a huge difference.”

It doesn’t “get” anything

At its core, AI doesn’t understand what it’s saying. It doesn’t know the meaning of the words it generates. It’s just extremely good at guessing what words statistically belong together. This works great for autocomplete and chatbots. Less great for, say, teaching a toddler empathy, or writing a heartfelt apology. Cognitive scientist Gary Marcus summed it up well in The New Yorker, “Today’s AI systems are essentially pattern recognition machines.” They don’t reason. They don’t reflect. They remix. So, when AI writes something that sounds deep, or clever, it’s not because it had an idea. It’s because it found a convincing pattern of words. That’s like calling a parrot a philosopher because it nailed the tone of your breakup text.

It lacks common sense

Ask an AI how to fix a broken coffee machine, and it might give you step-by-step instructions that sound great — until it suggests you “pour boiling water directly into the wiring.” Why? AI lacks the kind of everyday logic a six-year-old has. It doesn’t know what a coffee machine is. It just knows that “boiling,” “water,” and “coffee” often show up in the same conversations. This is why AI sometimes offers recipes that include glue or suggests driving across the ocean. It’s not being creative. It just doesn’t know any better.

It can’t feel anything

AI doesn’t get bored. It doesn’t fall in love. It doesn’t feel proud when it solves a problem, or frustrated when it fails. That means it also can’t offer real emotional support, understand the nuances of grief, or tell a joke with the kind of subtle timing your best friend has. It can mimic emotion — even convincingly — but it doesn’t experience it. Which is a pretty big gap when you consider how much of human decision-making is emotional.

Why this matters

We’re building systems to help us make choices, automate tasks, even create art — but we need to stay clear-eyed. AI is a tool. A powerful, sometimes amazing tool — but not a mind. Not yet. Knowing what AI can’t do is just as important as being amazed by what it can, because when we overestimate it, we risk misusing it, and when we underestimate ourselves, we forget what real intelligence actually looks like: messy, emotional, creative, thoughtful — and occasionally wrong in a much more interesting way. So no, AI isn’t coming for everything. Not your intuition. Not your ethics. Not your ability to say, “Wait, is this a terrible idea?” Definitely not your job folding laundry.

At least, not this year.

Newsletter Signup

Stay in the loop with exclusive news, stories, and insights—delivered straight to your inbox. No fluff, just real content that matters. Sign up today!

Written By

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending

Who protects journalists when truth becomes a death sentence?

News & Views

Rising Stronger: The Resilient Heartbeat of an Island Home

JamaicaNews

Black Excellence isn’t waiting for permission anymore; It’s redefining Canada

Likes & Shares

Over 100 global affairs workers expose systemic racism scandal

News & Views

Newsletter Signup

Stay in the loop with exclusive news, stories, and insights—delivered straight to your inbox. No fluff, just real content that matters. Sign up today!

Legal Disclaimer: The Toronto Caribbean Newspaper, its officers, and employees will not be held responsible for any loss, damages, or expenses resulting from advertisements, including, without limitation, claims or suits regarding liability, violation of privacy rights, copyright infringement, or plagiarism. Content Disclaimer: The statements, opinions, and viewpoints expressed by the writers are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or views of Toronto Caribbean News Inc. Toronto Caribbean News Inc. assumes no responsibility or liability for claims, statements, opinions, or views, written or reported by its contributing writers, including product or service information that is advertised. Copyright © 2025 Toronto Caribbean News Inc.

Connect
Newsletter Signup

Stay in the loop with exclusive news, stories, and insights—delivered straight to your inbox. No fluff, just real content that matters. Sign up today!