2 thoughts

  1. There are several crucial points in your posting about AI and the very real dangers. One, the loss of human agency if we place all responsibility on a machine that somehow automates or imitates thinking… The other point you make about AI, which was already emerging with Google search: “The danger is not tyranny, but infantilization—citizens relieved of judgment in exchange for efficiency and comfort.”
    We are seeing this all over the place: interactions are reduced to memes, magical thinking is replacing the hard think… Too many of my friends just wave all concerns away, as if there was nothing one could do…
    The laziness that our outsourcing physical labor to machines, as much as that is desirable, because we have a mass society that needs mass solutions, is gaining our thinking, and with it our connection to reality. We live online, outside we are zombie-like… It is a level of alienation that is excruciating. And it will end, I believe, badly.

    (Now I get back to work…)

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    1. Dear Marton, thank you for your comment and you capture well the unease beneath the surface. What worries me is not so much tyranny as the quiet relief from responsibility. The resignation leads to no decisions at all. In a way, resignation is the perfect environment for the transformation from citizens to watchers. History shows that people rarely lose their agency because it is taken from them. More often, they surrender it willingly—because delegation feels efficient, comfortable, and modern. The danger is not that we become zombies overnight, but that we slowly grow accustomed to watching rather than deciding. And once that habit settles in, it is difficult to reverse. Perhaps there is a deeper meaning to this, the danger is not technology itself, but the moment when people quietly decide that their judgment no longer matters.

      W

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