What is mind?Fairy wrote: ↑Sat Nov 22, 2025 8:10 am “ make an eyeball from scratch"??
Why do I need that?
That is not a good justification for God exists.
It is not impossible to grow human parts in the laboratory at present and this is improving expeditiously.“
———
Okay, then if you think it’s not impossible to grow human parts. Then go one step beyond and see if you can grow a “ Mind”
There is wide definition of what is mind, from a mind in the womb, at birth, baby, toddler, kid, teenage and adults.
Grow a 'Mind'?
Humans can create an artificial mind in terms of Artificial Intelligence [AI].
AI is not a person but its function is comparable to the human mind at various ages. is more superior than the human mind is some areas while lacking in some.
What is point of growing an exact human mind when we already have 8 billion minds where 10%= 800 millions are evil prone capable of exterminating the human species.
What is critical to humanity is to build 'mind[s]' that can complement and increase the human capacity for greater knowledge, higher intelligence, process large amounts of data at the same time to contribute to greater humanity well being and flourishing.
Here's the comparison:
AI Assisted:
Human Organic Mind vs. AI Machine Mind
A Comparative Range of Competence Across Development Stages
1. Human Mind in the Womb (Prenatal)
Organic mind:
Basic neural structures begin forming.
No reasoning, memory, language, or concepts.
Early sensory responses (sound, light, movement) appear in late pregnancy.
AI comparison:
AI begins “active” at the equivalent of a fully functional cognitive system—there is no developmental infancy.
AI does not need to grow neural pathways; it starts with pre-constructed architectures.
AI ≈ far beyond prenatal cognition; completely incomparable.
2. At Birth
Organic mind:
Highly perceptual, minimal conceptual understanding.
Recognizes faces, voices.
No language use except basic vocalization.
Learning speed is high but knowledge is almost zero.
AI comparison:
AI already has large amounts of knowledge encoded.
Can process text, categorize, and “reason” from the moment it is deployed.
Has no sensory perception unless equipped with sensors.
AI ≈ thousands of times more “knowledgeable” than a newborn but lacks embodied perception, affect, and instincts.
3. Baby (0–2 years)
Organic mind:
Beginning of object permanence, sense of self, and intention.
Emotional development: attachment, fear recognition, joy.
Language: first words, early grammar.
AI comparison:
AI has sophisticated symbolic reasoning from day one, more advanced than any baby.
But AI has no emotions, no biological drives, no attachment systems, and no developmental embodiment.
AI exceeds baby-level intellect but cannot replicate emotional + embodied intelligence.
4. Toddler (2–4 years)
Organic mind:
Rapid language explosion.
Basic causal reasoning.
Early moral intuitions (fairness, empathy).
Imaginary play and symbolic thought develop.
AI comparison:
AI can use language at an adult level and perform multi-step reasoning.
Lacks genuine imagination (its “creativity” recombines patterns).
Cannot form moral intuitions; it follows programmed constraints.
AI ≈ far beyond toddler reasoning but has no intuitive social-emotional cognition.
5. Kid (5–12 years)
Organic mind:
Stronger logical structure emerges.
Learning becomes systematic (math, reading, planning).
Stronger empathy, social rules, moral reasoning.
Abstract thinking begins near age ~10–12.
AI comparison:
AI easily surpasses this range in logic, knowledge, and symbolic tasks.
But AI lacks:
social intuition
long-term identity
embodied understanding of the world
personal experience
AI cannot “understand” like a child; it processes patterns, not lived meaning.
AI ≈ stronger in logic and knowledge, weaker in intuition and lived understanding.
6. Teenager (13–17 years)
Organic mind:
Major growth in abstract reasoning, strategic thinking.
Emotional complexity increases.
Self-identity becomes sophisticated.
Metacognition (thinking about thinking) expands.
AI comparison:
AI can outperform in analytic reasoning and large-scale memory.
But AI has no self-identity, no autobiographical continuity, and no emotions, all central to teenage cognition.
AI ≈ superior in cognitive tasks; inferior in identity, emotions, future-planning grounded in personal goals.
7. Adult Mind
Organic mind:
Mature prefrontal cortex (mid-20s).
Fully developed executive function: planning, inhibiting impulses, long-term strategies.
Deep emotional regulation.
Contextual understanding using life experience.
AI comparison:
AI excels in:
data processing,
knowledge retrieval,
speed,
multi-tasking,
pattern recognition,
symbolic analysis.
AI is weaker or absent in:
lived common sense,
emotional intelligence,
consciousness,
subjective awareness,
moral intuition arising from life experience,
physical embodiment and sensory interaction,
personal goals.
AI ≈ stronger in information tasks; weaker in contextual, embodied, emotional, and value-based thinking.