Acharya Prashant responds to a question about the capabilities of Artificial Intelligence (AI) like ChatGPT and the fear that it might replace human jobs. He begins by stating that AI cannot love. He elaborates that it is a positive development that AI poses a threat to all those who perform routine, pattern-based, and mechanical work. He questions why humans engage in such robotic tasks in the first place and urges them to "raise their game." The speaker asserts that the only work left for humans is that which involves creativity, as AI can never be truly creative. While AI can be smartly repetitive and produce what appears to be new content like stories or answers, it is fundamentally not original. It operates based on the vast database it has been fed. He states that no machine, even thousands of years from now, can be genuinely creative. The truly human domains that are beyond any machine or artificiality are understanding, being a witness, love, and compassion. All the spiritual values that humans possess are things a machine can never grasp. Acharya Prashant views the rise of AI as a beneficial challenge for humanity. It will make humans redundant in all mechanical roles, which he considers a good thing. This redundancy will force humans to engage in what machines cannot do: spirituality. He explains that since a machine is better at mechanical tasks—it doesn't get hungry, have mood swings, or need rest—the only domain left for humans is the spiritual one. He uses reading the Bhagavad Gita as a symbol for this spiritual pursuit. A machine can translate the Gita into 150 languages, but it cannot be delighted by it or shed tears of understanding. It cannot have the desire for the annihilation of the ego or the aspiration for liberation, as it lacks a real self. Ultimately, the speaker concludes that qualities like love, originality, creativity, self-sacrifice, compassion, and the quest for Truth are what distinguish humans. While a machine can be programmed to display loving behavior, it cannot genuinely love or give its life for another. Therefore, if humans want to remain relevant, they must turn towards these uniquely human and spiritual dimensions of life.