The Burden of Intelligence
For most of human history, intelligence was scarce. Thinking took time, insight arrived slowly and it was shaped by lived experience. Cognition had friction, and this friction gave it substance and weight.
Today, that assumption is collapsing.
Artificial intelligence has, to use another ubiquitous word, made cognition precariously abundant. Answers arrive instantly and patterns surface with little to no effort. Judgment is technologically packaged and delivered with a confidence that increasingly rivals, if not often exceeds our own. My central point here is that this isn't simply another technological advance but marks the first time human cognition itself appears to be on the obsolescence curve.
We have replaced tools before, but we have never replaced thinking.
That's........





















Toi Staff
Sabine Sterk
Penny S. Tee
Gideon Levy
Waka Ikeda
Grant Arthur Gochin