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AI or intuition: What is more important in making decisions?

Humanity has always relied on intuition. It's a mysterious "sixth sense" that tells you where to turn at a fork in the road, who to choose as a partner, or when to say yes, even if the numbers are in dispute. But today, artificial intelligence is entering the scene — cold, analytical, capable of shoveling terabytes of data in seconds. The question arises: whose voice should I trust?

AI does not get tired, is not subject to emotions and sees patterns where a person notices only noise. For example, retail demand prediction algorithms take into account thousands of factors, from weather to trends in social media. The solution based on such calculations seems to be flawless. But what to do when the data is incomplete or the context is too subjective? This is where intuition comes into play—the ability to combine experience, creativity, and ethics where the machine sees only numbers.

Let's recall the success story of startups. Many of them were born not from Excel spreadsheets, but from ideas that seemed absurd on paper. Airbnb, Uber, Tesla — their founders acted contrary to "rational" forecasts. Intuition here was a compass in a world of non-obvious possibilities.

AI minimizes risks, but does not eliminate them completely. The credit scoring algorithm can refuse a loan to someone who, by human standards, is trustworthy. Medical AI is able to miss a rare disease if it has not been trained on specific data. In such cases, the intuition of a doctor or manager becomes a safety net.

However, intuition is not omnipotent either. Cognitive distortions, fatigue, and subjectivity all influence our decisions. For example, a financier relying only on an "inner voice" may ignore market trends that AI has tracked for a long time.

The dispute "logic vs. feelings" is outdated. The future is in symbiosis. AI processes the data, identifies patterns, and suggests options. A person complements this with knowledge of the context, creativity, and moral choice. For example, in product development, AI can predict audience requests, but only humans decide which values to put into a product and which story to tell.

Example: a marketing campaign. Algorithms segment the audience and optimize the budget, but it is intuition that will tell you which image or slogan will elicit an emotional response.

At Resolventa, we believe that the best solutions are born at the intersection of rationality and creativity. We create complex IT products that not only process data, but also leave room for human intuition. We help startups bring bold ideas to life, and large companies to restart outdated systems, while maintaining a balance between innovation and the wisdom of experience.

If your task seems unsolvable, come to us. We know how to combine the precision of AI with the flexibility of human thinking to create not just a product, but a solution that makes a difference.

Our team building reminded us that the ideal symbiosis is not a choice between humans and AI, but the art of combining them in one shell. (P.S. Yes, we believe that plasticine is the best way to explain the philosophy of technology )

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интуиция, хотя АІ

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