"The limits of my language mean the limits of my world." — Ludwig Wittgenstein

What even is Artificial Intelligence? It's quite fascinating how much of our vocabulary and the words we intuitively use are hundreds of years old and rooted in pre-scientific principles. We don't even have a fully accepted definition of AI. We define AI intuitively, often in terms of human intelligence, but we don't really know what human intelligence is—which is quite interesting. Fundamentally, I think AI is a set of rules and principles that allow a non-biological system to solve problems and use these same principles to adapt to new problems. Complexity is relative to the environment, so saying something can only be intelligent because it solves 'complex' problems with a human framework is more of a reflection of our anthropocentric bias. AI is a gradient, not a binary concept. It's not as simple as saying 'this thing is AI' or 'this thing is not AI.'