Will AI Be the Collapse of Humanity?
There’s a growing feeling that something is off—that people aren’t always grounded in the same reality.
The Concern
- Blurring of interaction
- Not all online engagement is human
- It’s harder to know who or what you’re interacting with
- AI as a persuasive tool
- Reinforces beliefs
- Speaks with confidence and clarity
- Can make ideas feel “true” without being tested
- Cognitive offloading
- People rely on AI for writing, decisions, and communication
- Concern: unused thinking skills begin to weaken
- Fragile consensus
- Humans rely on others to validate ideas
- If that feedback loop is unreliable, beliefs can drift
- Group thinking
- “Us vs. them” dynamics
- Emotional alignment often overrides logical consistency
Core message:
Slow down. Question your beliefs. Try to understand opposing views.
A Grounded Response
There’s truth here—but it’s not the full picture.
- Bots exist, but humans still matter
- Most meaningful interaction is still human
- AI influences, it doesn’t replace
- It organizes and reflects—it doesn’t decide
- The real issue is how AI is used
- Passive use → weakens thinking
- Active use → strengthens it
- Reality isn’t just consensus
- It’s also evidence, observation, and verification
- This is a shift, not a collapse
- Like past tools, AI changes how we think—not whether we think
Where I Stand (Doug Bayliss)
After a year of writing and working with AI:
- I question and reject outputs regularly
- I use AI to pressure-test ideas, not replace them
- My thinking hasn’t weakened—it’s become more structured
The line is simple:
- If AI thinks for me → problem
- If AI helps me think better → tool
Final Thought
The risk isn’t AI—it’s passivity.
Stay engaged:
- Think first
- Question often
- Make the final call
Used that way, AI doesn’t dull thinking—it sharpens it.
Category: Independent Publishing
