Yes, that's a great way to put it and a great example! I definitely didn't see it that way before with both sides of the brain seeking seemingly opposite aspects. Maybe that's why there's always some friction with our decision making process.
Your example reminds me of early childhood, where we learn to do many things automatically after having incorporated them through constant practice. Walking, for instance, may be a good example. It's definitely fascinating that we can still do such things in our adulthood, opens up a new range of possibilities for me :)
Thank you for the insightful comment :)
Cheers! I've learned to appreciate a lot of the complexities, no pun intended, of life and the brain is one of the most complex things! We have a super computer sitting on top of our shoulders that's for sure. As much as these crazy technocrats want to make us think, our bodies are absolutely unreal and incredibly complex machines. A robot may be stronger in some ways and AI smarter in others but there's so many things that our body does subconsciously it's wild when we understand it more! All that and it didn't get "technology" to make it so!
Definitely! It will probably take a million years for technology to reach that level lol. Even if AGI comes about, there will be many aspects of human nature that it wouldn't understand, simply because it will be missing the know how to understand such complexities, trying make sense of them from a purely rational perspective :)