The human factor is a key consideration in all things done in all spheres of live. We are uniquely different, and as such posses different processing power and capabilities which makes life interesting on a social level but very frustrating on a scientific and technological standpoint.
Humanity as a race is know for many accomplishment in our over 200,000 years of existence (H. Sapiens) from something that seems mundane like the discovery of the ability to make objects in our environment work for us, like the crafting of crude tools and fire (which contributed to place us as an apex predator) and the mind blowing development of AI, rocket science and recently the development of the block chain revolution, we are less and less relying on our our processing power for precise calculation and functioning of critical systems but rather showing a dependency on objects born of our conceptualization devoid of error.
This is largely due to "human error" human beings mostly struggle to be objective, our environment, our exposures and our core beliefs most often times mix to form prejudices, opinions and innate ability to favour some practices more than the other, even with the standardization of best practices, several outliers exist that could in turn be catastrophic to a process.
Human error means that something has been done that was "not intended by the actor; not desired by a set of rules or an external observer; or that led the task or system outside its acceptable limits". In short, it is a deviation from intention, expectation or desirability. Logically, human actions can fail to achieve their goal in two different ways: the actions can go as planned, but the plan can be inadequate (leading to mistakes); or, the plan can be satisfactory, but the performance can be deficient (leading to slips and lapses). source
This just goes to reaffirm the need to eliminate human error in all critical functions of our existence, but much like every subject there exist a pro and con side to all observed aspects of life. Some people believe that human error in its flawed form is the basis to what makes us...simple put human, the learning process incurred from the error we make, actually is quite vital to the accomplishment of the task or more so critical to ensuring that we learn and learn well in our numerous failures.
Many argue that without human error our existence will fade into monotonous certainty, and we will devolve in a psychotic cacophony of madness brought about by the surety of all our actions 😂😂.....i personally think that this is fucking insane and its not gonna be that drastic, but the question remains "would we be better off without HUMAN ERROR?"
What would life be like for all of us if we could in surety determine all course of action as the right one?
Would our society be perfect or would we be bored out of our minds and start killing each other for sport?
What do you think our society and world would look like with the total non existence of human error?
Your thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
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I am @kboss and i hope you enjoyed reading as much as i did writing, kindly share your thoughts in the comment section.
great topic! The gramma is too much tho, had to like grab dictionary (hahahahahahhaaha).
Let's take it practically...have you ever come across someone that is close to perfection? yeah! no one is perfect but we have some people that are close to perfection and almost accurate in everything. How do you perceive them? for me i find them quite annoying. Imperfection(human error) is an attribute just like immortality, our life will be tottaly different and yes boring! if human error is totally eliminated.
This was an insightful answer thanks