It depneds on the comment and the article. I actually had some contact with prolog (did a semester in university mamy years ago) and still up till today did not find a reason to use it on real life - mainly because I have responsibily to keep my solutions maintainable for decades and I do not see how could I keep easily find people willing to work on prolog and not switch obver to where reall money is at.
So when I saw an interesting insight that somehow maches my very old intuition (that prolog is mainly constraint solver) I wanted to ask more. And I believe that reading this whole introduction could potentially not give me this insight.
That seems like main reason any high level language exist - to give us abstraction layer with better building blocks to solve problems. The trick is to choose which DSL to use in project so its maintainable (and cost effective). I even long time ago learned some prolog (had a whole semester in university on it) but I cannot find a reason why I would use it anywhere in real projects.