General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsAI and the Psychology of Cognitive Surrender (Psychology Today)
Gradual dependence on AI can lead to a threshold you won't notice crossing.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-digital-self/202606/ai-and-the-psychology-of-cognitive-surrender
Key points
AI subtly erodes our cognitive strength by making delegation seem like self-generated thought.
After repeatedly turning to AI for answers, the first thing that erodes is tolerance for not knowing.
True judgment is built by wrestling with uncertainty, not outsourcing discomfort to machines.
Cognitive surrender implies a conscious decision. What I'm describing is more gradual than that. It's what happens when a tool works so well, for so long, that you forget what you were doing before you picked it up.
bucolic_frolic
(56,055 posts)There's a whole emerging genre in psych world of ACON - Adult Children of Narcissists, and there is the universally well understood phenom of external validation. We have bred uncertainty and outsourcing for a long time.
usonian
(26,742 posts)The rugged individualists (of the sociopathic bent) play this game to make you dependent on them, especially the technocrats and demagogues..
No need to supercharge the externalization/projection, IMO.
Tim S
(325 posts)GreatGazoo
(4,762 posts)I study and discuss history frequently. There is a wonderful trend now toward demanding primary sources, not summaries or narratives because those are much less reliable. AI is terrible at summarizing history.
AI is a Dunning-Kruger machine. Confidently asserting absolute lies. My general impression is that people started to see through the lie that AI is intelligent about 6 months ago. As the graduation speaker said, 'AI is making mediocre people even dumber' for now but when its limitations are better understood and there is more competition for quality that may change.
AI is not thinking, not "intelligence". It is text generating algorithms.
usonian
(26,742 posts)https://www.democraticunderground.com/100220281483
https://www.techdirt.com/2025/04/29/the-hallucinating-chatgpt-presidency/
Judge for yourself.
Tue, Apr 29th 2025 09:34am - Mike Masnick
snip
But over the last few months, it has occurred to me that, for all the hype about generative AI systems hallucinating, we pay much less attention to the fact that the current President does the same thing, nearly every day. The more you look at the way Donald Trump spews utter nonsense answers to questions, the more you begin to recognize a clear pattern he answers questions in a manner quite similar to early versions of ChatGPT. The facts dont matter, the language choices are a mess, but they are all designed to present a plausible-sounding answer to the question, based on no actual knowledge, nor any concern for whether or not the underlying facts are accurate.
snip
This is not the response of someone working from actual knowledge or policy understanding. Instead, its precisely how an LLM operates: taking a prompt (the question about job losses) and generating text based on some core parameters (the system prompt that requires deflecting blame and asserting greatness).
The hallmarks of AI generation are all here:
Confident assertions without factual backing
Meandering diversions that maintain loose semantic connection to the topic
Pattern-matching to previous responses (ripped off, billions of dollars)
Optimization for what sounds good rather than whats true
Great article and hard to summarize, because the author gives so many spot-on examples.