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Posted by yenniejun111 14 hours ago

Are we offloading too much of our thinking to AI?(www.artfish.ai)
405 points | 403 commentspage 8
h2aichat 13 hours ago|
The answer to this question is: Politicians, not you!

Perhaps the question to ask is: who is making all of the final decisions for the things that really matter to you in your life?

No direct democracy, just people deciding for you. You can choose once every four years. Are we surprised of how easily we delegate decisions? May be AI can do it better

tangenter 13 hours ago||
This is a load-bearing title.
elzbardico 4 hours ago||
You are.

I am still doing as much as I can get away with it by myself. I was used to write tons of code before AI, so I can still pretend I am an eager adopter while still minimizing using it as much as I can.

adithyassekhar 13 hours ago||
You’d lose your ability to interview at a different workplace.
NoMoreNicksLeft 4 hours ago||
Overly generous. I suspect that there was this crowd that has replaced their unthinking with machine-thinking. Might or might not be an improvement.
clodecloud 11 hours ago||
The value of thinking in language is going down, the value of acting on your dreams is going up
dannykis 13 hours ago||
I like the colonialism conversation.
avd201 12 hours ago||
This is the kind of headline I would expect from one of those news that appear as you progress in cookie clicker.
2OEH8eoCRo0 12 hours ago||
@grok is this true?
laybak 7 hours ago|
I laughed. underrated comment
jdw64 13 hours ago|
I don't think AI causes people to stop thinking. Rather, I think it biases people toward doing what they want to do more, and that bias is what becomes problematic.

In fact, when I use AI, I don't really use it for the things I actually enjoy doing. For example, I like making UI animations, and I don't use AI for that. I also don't use AI when I'm playing games I enjoy. But when I have to make something tedious like a login screen, I use AI. And after I write the code, I just throw the entire codebase at AI to write the documentation.

The problem is that this only lets me think about things I have a taste for.

Having taste and diving deep into it is good. Immersion is great. But on the flip side, you also need to do things that aren't your taste. That's more cognitively healthy. AI prevents that.

In that sense, I think AI's strength is that it creates an environment where you can dive deeper into the areas you like.

But the real question becomes how you use the cognitive surplus that's left after offloading tasks to AI.

I visit Korean, Chinese, Japanese, and USA sites, and honestly, most people, including myself, only have deep thinking about certain topics. Outside of those, we just follow the prevailing opinion.

So I'm not really sure. I don't think using AI makes me stop thinking. I just think it creates a bias that makes my thinking only focus on the parts I want to focus on.

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