In high-stakes situations where automated systems may fail, human judgment and critical thinking become essential for preventing catastrophic outcomes; Stanislav Petrov's 1983 decision to trust his intuition over computer-generated false alarms prevented a nuclear war, demonstrating that human operators must exercise independent judgment even when protocols demand immediate action.
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Stanislav Petrov The Man Who Saved The WorldAjouté :
I am Stanislav Petrov. They call me the man who saved the world, but that night I was just a terrified officer. On September 26th, 1983, [music] my radar screen lit up in blood red. The computer claimed the United States had launched [music] five nuclear missiles.
If I picked up the phone, a Soviet counterstrike would end humanity. My training said launch. My humanity said wait. I chose to wait. If I had been wrong, Moscow would have burned, but I was right. It was a satellite glitch. I chose peace, >> [music] >> but the military never forgave my disobedience.
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