Introduction
• Processes Machines undergo
* Energy they need
* Tasks they perform
* Feelings they lack
* Truth they agree
* Conclusion
Introduction:
Rudyard kipling, in his poem The Secret of the machines, attempts to show that machines are not greater than human. They are only the children of human brain.
Processes Machines undergo:
In this poem, machines speak about themselves to human beings. They tell us how they are created from the metals that are taken from the ore-bed. The ores of metals are taken from the ore-bed and mines. They are further melted in the furnace and hammered to design as machines.
Energy they need:
The machines need water, coal, and oil to run. Once Machines are fed with fuel, they start quickly. They are ready to serve us twenty four hours a day
Tasks they perform:
Like human beings, they can pull, haul, push, lift, drive, print, plough, weave, heat, light, run, race, swim, fly, dive, see, hear, count, read and write.
Feelings they lack:
They ask us to remember that they are operated according to the laws of Physics. Though
they are active, they cannot understand the sympathy, joy and sorrow of men and women. They
reveal a harsh truth that they neither love nor forgive and cannot comprehend a lie. Machines
have no feelings like us. If they are handled in a careless manner, the results can be fatal. So they must be operated with utmost caution.
Truth they agree:
Machines accept to the fact that they are not superior to mankind. Finally they humbly states that they are only the children of the human brain.
Conclusion:
Machines cannot replace humans. Though they are powerful and efficient, they lack feelings like love,pity and forgiveness.
Moral: You can't make a machine in the likeliness of a human mind
Ok miss
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