How did we seamlessly outsource thinking to artificial intelligence?
We live in an era where artificial intelligence has become a part of everyday life.
We use AI for work, for study, for creativity, for decision-making, and even for personal matters.
It helps, speeds up, simplifies, and relieves stress.
But at what point did artificial intelligence stop being a tool and start thinking for us?
Previously, humans doubted, pondered, debated, made mistakes, and drew conclusions.
Today, it's increasingly enough to open a chat and receive a confident, logical, and calm answer.
And it's precisely this confidence that becomes the problem.
In this video, I discuss how we seamlessly outsource thinking, choice, and responsibility to artificial intelligence.
Why canned answers are becoming more important than personal experience.
Why we increasingly ask ourselves questions and increasingly seek instructions.
And why a sense of control and calm doesn't always make us happier.
This video is not anti-technology or anti-artificial intelligence. This is a conversation about the line between help and dependence.
About where AI is truly useful, and where it begins to replace internal dialogue, doubt, and personal choice.
We increasingly ask not "how to do something," but "how to live well."
We seek universal answers, although universal people don't exist.
And perhaps the most important skill of the coming years is not the ability to use AI, but the ability to stop in time and start thinking independently again.
If this topic resonates with you, write in the comments how you use artificial intelligence.
As a tool, an assistant, or a source of ready-made solutions.