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Is AI Making Us Smarter — or Slowly Erasing Our Minds?

As AI tools like ChatGPT, Google Gemini, and Siri become daily companions, experts are raising alarms: not about what AI can do for us, but about what it’s doing to us. New research suggests our collective brainpower may be in decline — and offloading our thinking to machines could be accelerating that trend.
This concern isn’t new. From GPS dulling our sense of direction to smartphones fracturing our focus, technology has long been blamed for weakening human cognition. Now, generative AI (GenAI) is under scrutiny for relieving us of deeper thinking altogether — from writing essays to solving complex problems.
Psychologist Robert Sternberg warns that AI may already be compromising our intelligence. The slowing — and even reversal — of the long-documented Flynn effect, which once saw IQs rising globally, now coincides with declining scores in reading, math, science, and attention span. Yet pinning this trend solely on AI oversimplifies a complex issue. Factors like education, nutrition, pollution, and screen time also play critical roles.
Still, cognitive offloading is real. Studies show that using AI for memory tasks weakens our own memory retention. Frequent users also show reduced critical thinking abilities — especially younger generations raised on algorithm-curated information. “We’re training our minds to rely instead of reason,” says researcher Michael Gerlich.
AI’s efficiency comes at a cost: critical thinking, problem-solving, and creativity may atrophy if we stop using them. And while AI can boost productivity and even spark creativity, it often does so with less diversity and depth, potentially stalling the next big idea humanity desperately needs.
The concern goes deeper. Instant AI-generated insights don’t stimulate our brain’s reward system like self-discovered solutions do — a vital loop that fuels learning, memory, and creative risk-taking. Worse, as students trade language learning for translation apps, we may unknowingly give up benefits like delayed dementia onset.
So what’s the solution? Experts say we must train humans to be more human — nurturing skills AI can’t replace: critical thinking, intuition, originality. That starts not in labs or boardrooms, but in schools and homes.
AI is here to stay. But if we’re not intentional with how we use it, we risk outsourcing not just our tasks — but our very capacity to think.

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