I’ve been using and researching its impact on society.
Not casually, seriously.
The Observation
Almost every criticism I hear about AI sounds the same.
It will make people lazy.
It will reduce creativity.
It will weaken human skills.
And while I understand those concerns…
I’ve started thinking we may be blaming the wrong thing.
Because the problem may not be AI at all.
It may be how we’re choosing to use it.
Breaking the Expectation
It’s easy to treat technology as the cause.
But tools rarely determine outcomes by themselves.
Use a calculator badly, and you weaken mental arithmetic.
Use it well, and you extend capability.
AI is no different.
Yet many people are using it in the shallowest possible way:
- to avoid thinking
- to shortcut understanding
- to generate without judgment
And then blaming AI for the consequences.
That feels misplaced.
The Next Edition of ReThynk AI Magazine is Live Now:
The Insight
I’ve started seeing AI less as intelligence…
and more as amplification.
It amplifies what you bring to it.
Clear thinking becomes sharper.
Lazy thinking becomes faster.
Depth becomes deeper.
Superficiality scales too.
That changes the question entirely.
The question is no longer:
“Is AI good or bad?”
It is:
“What is AI amplifying in us?”
And that is a much more uncomfortable question.
What We May Be Getting Wrong
I think many people are using AI primarily for substitution.
Replace effort.
Replace drafting.
Replace analysis.
Replace decisions.
But some of the most powerful use cases emerge when AI is used for augmentation instead.
Not:
- think for me
But:
- challenge me
- stretch my thinking
- expose blind spots
That is a completely different relationship.
And most people haven’t made that shift yet.
The Real Risk
The danger isn’t that AI exists.
It’s that we use extraordinary tools in intellectually passive ways.
That’s where the erosion happens.
Not in the model.
In the mindset.
Because if people use AI mainly to remove friction…
they may also remove the struggle where insight forms.
And that has consequences.
The Reflection
The more I work with AI, the less I fear the technology itself.
What I pay attention to now is behaviour.
Because tools don’t determine whether thinking grows or weakens.
Usage does.
And I keep coming back to this:
The problem isn’t AI.
It’s whether we are using it to deepen our minds, or quietly outsource them.

Top comments (1)
The more I work with AI, the less I fear the technology itself.