<p>Do people actually understand what they think that they really understand? Truth is something and what humans perceive to be true is another, right? Such an important question should never stop there with us. So, apart from the human-race, and as the entire world seems in a chaotic endless competition in the Artificial Intelligence (AI) arena, it is a sensible thing to ask the exact same question in terms of whether AI truly understands beyond the linguistic gymnastics it excels in. Yongho Choi proposes a multi-layered and multi-axial model, or better call it a multi-dimensional model as a whole, to answer this question precisely and accurately, much more professionally than previous scholars. This present article comes to add up to the discussion presented by Choi (<CitationRef CitationID="CR9">2026</CitationRef>) introducing larger fitting frames and meditations to the rich real-world picture portrayed in Choi’s article under the title of “<i>Linguistic Understanding Beyond Knowledge</i>,<i> Ability</i>,<i> and Process: A Multi-Layered and Multi-Axial Model</i>” (Choi, <CitationRef CitationID="CR9">2026</CitationRef>). This commentary supports and extends Choi’s work by discussing some relevant important examples arguing that genuine understanding requires possessing several indispensable dimensions which are absent in present-day AI.</p>

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Artificial Intelligence, Honey Bees, Linguistic Understanding, and Paediatric Dentistry: Further Discourse on Choi’s Proposed Model

  • Muhammed Al-Huda BALLOUK,
  • Mohamed ALTINAWI

摘要

Do people actually understand what they think that they really understand? Truth is something and what humans perceive to be true is another, right? Such an important question should never stop there with us. So, apart from the human-race, and as the entire world seems in a chaotic endless competition in the Artificial Intelligence (AI) arena, it is a sensible thing to ask the exact same question in terms of whether AI truly understands beyond the linguistic gymnastics it excels in. Yongho Choi proposes a multi-layered and multi-axial model, or better call it a multi-dimensional model as a whole, to answer this question precisely and accurately, much more professionally than previous scholars. This present article comes to add up to the discussion presented by Choi (2026) introducing larger fitting frames and meditations to the rich real-world picture portrayed in Choi’s article under the title of “Linguistic Understanding Beyond Knowledge, Ability, and Process: A Multi-Layered and Multi-Axial Model” (Choi, 2026). This commentary supports and extends Choi’s work by discussing some relevant important examples arguing that genuine understanding requires possessing several indispensable dimensions which are absent in present-day AI.