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Home OTHER VIEW

Outsourcing the Human Mind

Abid Hussain Rather by Abid Hussain Rather
November 30, 2025
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We proudly believe that we are living in the most enlightened era of human history—an age of artificial intelligence, instant information and boundless digital creativity. We tell ourselves that machines are making us smarter, faster and more efficient. But beneath this comforting illusion lies an uncomfortable question: Are we actually becoming wiser or are we merely reproducing copies of copies until the original meaning fades away?

We are living in what may best be described as the age of photocopy. Like a document repeatedly copied from an already faded page, our ideas, thoughts and expressions are slowly losing clarity. At first glance, everything seems abundant—articles, videos, opinions, artistic content flooding our screens every second. Yet abundance should not be confused with depth. The more we duplicate, the more diluted originality becomes.

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The logic is simple and unsettling. Take a sheet of paper with some beautiful image on it and photocopy it. The first copy is nearly perfect. Copy that again and the image begins to blur. Repeat the process several times and the page becomes dark, smudged and the image on it becomes unrecognizable. This is not a technological fault; it is a natural consequence of replication. What happens to paper also happens to ideas. Artificial intelligence tools, after all, do not create knowledge out of thin air. They feed on human-produced material—books, essays, research, poetry, lived experiences. The problem arises when the digital world becomes dominated by machine generated content, which then becomes the training material for future machines. In such a loop, intelligence begins to feed on itself. The result is not progress but intellectual decay.

Experts have started warning about this phenomenon, often referred to as “model collapse” or “knowledge degeneration.” In plain language, it means that when machines keep learning from other machines, nuance and insight disappears. Emotional depth erodes. Mistakes—the very soil from which innovation grows—are ironed out. What remains is polished but hollow content which is technically sound, statistically average but emotionally empty. Another alarming cost of this process is the slow death of diversity.

Artificial intelligence thrives on patterns and probabilities. It prefers what is common, popular and frequently repeated. Rare ideas, unconventional perspectives, minority voices and uncomfortable questions are quietly sidelined because they fall outside the algorithmic “norm.” In statistical terms, the machine worships the middle of the bell curve and neglects the edges. History, however, is written at the edges. Genius has never been average.

Revolutionary poets, philosophers, scientists and thinkers were rarely standard or safe. Their ideas initially appeared strange, unreasonable and even threatening. In an ecosystem where only the “most likely” ideas survive, such creative madness would struggle to exist. We are already seeing signs of this uniformity. Music follows formulas, articles echo the same viewpoints, films feel familiar before they even begin. Everything is optimized—but nothing surprises us. When creativity becomes predictable, culture stagnates.

The real danger lies not in artificial intelligence itself, but in human surrender. When we stop thinking critically because a machine can summarize faster, when we stop writing because software can generate words instantly, when we stop struggling with ideas because algorithms offer readymade answers—we gradually outsource our intellect. Resultantly, convenience becomes addiction and dependency becomes normal.

Yet this moment is not only a warning; it is also an opportunity. Paradoxically, as machines become better at imitation and copying, human experience becomes more valuable. Machines can rearrange information, but they can’t live through grief, failure, love, moral conflict or spiritual doubt. They can’t feel the weight of regret or the quiet joy of understanding something after years of confusion. Insight is born not from data alone but from experience filtered through consciousness. In the coming years, originality will be the new premium.

The most valuable voices will not be the loudest or the fastest, but the most authentic. People who think deeply, question inherited assumptions and speak from lived reality will stand out in a sea of mechanical noise. This is why artificial intelligence must remain a tool, not a teacher. A calculator never replaced mathematical thinking; it only supported it. Similarly, artificial intelligence should assist human reasoning but it should not replace it. When that boundary blurs, we risk becoming intellectual consumers rather than intellectual creators.

Education systems, research centres, media platforms and individuals all share responsibility here. We must protect critical thinking, encourage slow reading, value reflection over reaction and reward originality over virality. Writing a flawed but sincere paragraph should matter more than generating a perfect but soulless one. We may indeed be the last generation to clearly remember what an “original print” feels like. This fact should not depress us but it should awaken us. Because if copies dominate the world, authenticity will shine even brighter.

The future of knowledge will not belong to the most advanced machine, but to the human humans who refuse to think mechanically. In an era of photocopies, it is not technology that will save us but it is the courage to remain original. At the end, I must say that much has already been written regarding this concern and I am fully aware that no shortage of opinions exists on this subject. Yet, watching the rapidly growing culture of creating through AI and copying from it, I felt compelled to add my voice.

When technology begins to replace thinking rather than assisting it and creativity is outsourced instead of cultivated, silence itself becomes a form of surrender. This piece, therefore, emerges not from novelty but from concern over how this trend is quietly paralyzing our capacity to think, imagine and create on our own.

(The author teaches Geography at GDC Anantnag and can be reached at: rather1294@gmail.com)

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Abid Hussain Rather

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