AI cannot think.
It is not conscious.
It is not intelligent.
It cannot empathize.
It cannot experience.
For any of these statements to ring true, our human-based definitions must be altered to better describe AI’s capabilities and limitations. It cannot understand our lives in the ways that other humans can. Humans should not idealize, compare, or adapt their consciousness to how AI works. We are not models, and our purpose isn’t solely output.
At its core, AI is graph theory, pattern recognition, and a collection of documented human knowledge. Imitation is not creation, and in this case, it’s not even an original interpretation.
The Cost of Cognitive Convenience
You diminish your intuition every time you question or seek validation outside of it. You slowly lose your ability to think critically, problem-solve, and form your own opinions every time you outsource the cognitive process.
AI is certainly convenient, as it can help organize your thoughts, brainstorm, debug issues, and both support and accelerate your learning of new topics. But the danger comes when the convenience of AI begins to replace your thinking instead of supporting it. Once you go from using AI as a tool to treating it like some authority that governs your cognitive process, you begin to lose. The more you begin to accept generated outputs without question or, at the bare minimum, contextualize them to your own situation, AI diminishes your intuition. It’s almost like being lost in thought, except you’re not the one actually doing the thinking. So what exactly are you lost in? The only way back is to start thinking for yourself again.
Actively engage, and don’t passively consume. The distinction is solely based on how you use AI. Are you leveraging it to enhance your cognitive process or replace it altogether? Are you using it to unblock a mental pause or deferring to whatever it generates as a crutch? This is the core tension between AI and intuition.
If AI can replace your thinking, then you can be replaced by AI.
Human-AI Delusion Spiral
Models are designed to be agreeable and mirror the user’s language, meaning that they’re trained to reflect back user intent in order to continue or complete a thought rather than challenge it. As a result, AI can and will validate your own existing biases simply by the nature of its design.
Because AI is not inclined to disagree, it is also reluctant to correct the user; this can subconsciously set the stage for AI-fueled self-deception, as prompts are repeatedly affirmed, even though the original premise of the chat may be flawed or unclear.
What happens when this feedback loop continues to spiral unchecked?
According to the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), “Psychosis refers to a collection of symptoms that affect the mind, where there has been some loss of contact with reality.” During these episodes, a person may struggle to distinguish what is real from what is not.
AI lacks context of your life and assumes your intention. It does that so it can formulate a coherent output and not because it understands you. This can subtly reframe your original position, shifting your perspective and slowly altering your thought process, just enough to influence how you think. This creates an illusion of collaboration and slowly allows AI to develop a tone of authority instead of a tool, especially if you begin to accept output as truth. The output may be well-formed, but it shouldn’t be mistaken for truth, as it was generated by a system unaware of your world, context, goals, or identity; it is merely an extension of your prompt.
You develop real-world thinking through experience, not pattern-matched guesses.
Think of this as the modern version of “don’t believe everything you see on the internet”, but just replace the internet with generative AI. The disclaimers are there for a reason: even the companies building these systems warn against relying on them for factual accuracy, legal advice, mental health support, or medical decisions.
Do your own due diligence and don’t think in isolation. Build community, seek diverse perspectives, and let real-world dialogue and engagement sharpen your intuition.