Michael Jordan did not like writing. In fact he stopped writing to focus on basketball but once he retired, he found love with the pen and started writing his own books
In this example, free indirect speech gives the reader an inside view of Elizabeth Bennet's inner thoughts and feelings. Especially interesting is that she thinks Mr. Darcy is looking at her because he dislikes her, unable to imagine at this point that he has had a change of heart about her, although the reader knows he has begun to change his attitude toward her. The third-person narrator knows how he has come to feel, so the narration here is clearly tracking her point of view. The gap between the views of the two characters also fuels the intrigue about their potential relationship, making the reader wonder how they might overcome their distance to admit to one another and to themselves that they do like, respect, and even love one another.
They give the answer right after telling you how to buy a cone.
It's pretty much saying that we humans have one of the greatest traits or freedoms that an AI would never be able to have, the ability to change how we are feeling at any given point of time.