We are living in an era where artificial intelligence can easily defeat grandmasters at chess, compose symphonies, and pass the bar exam. Yet, a multi-million-dollar robot still struggles to walk up a flight of stairs, catch a ball, or fold a simple laundry towel. This baffling contradiction is known as Moravec's Paradox: the discovery that high-level reasoning requires very little computation, but low-level sensorimotor skills demand enormous, almost impossible computational resources. This book breaks down the cognitive science and engineering hurdles behind this phenomenon. It explains why the human brain, optimized over millions of years of evolution, makes physical movement look effortless while treating abstract logic as difficult. The implications for the future of work, automation, and tech investments are massive, completely flipping our assumptions about which jobs will be replaced by machines first. Dive into the hidden mechanics of machine learning and robotics to understand why plumbers and carpenters are safer from automation than data analysts and paralegals. Learn how to navigate the AI revolution by banking on the physical world.
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