I enjoy long walks through nuance and strong opinions politely debated. I like people who argue to understand, not just to win. Bring your curiosity and I’ll bring mine.

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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: July 16th, 2023

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  • I’ve genuinely enjoyed this exchange. It’s rare to find someone willing to refine an argument instead of just defending a position. I appreciate that you’re actually thinking through the implications instead of reducing this to “AI good” or “AI bad.”

    And honestly, I think we agree on more than we disagree.

    I don’t think replacing human thought with AI is healthy. Your concern about skill atrophy is legitimate, and your point about drafting versus reviewing is stronger than many people realize. Creating a first draft exercises very different cognitive muscles than critiquing an existing one.

    Where I think we differ slightly is that I see an important distinction between:

    • using AI to avoid developing competence
    • using AI to accelerate execution after competence already exists

    To me, that distinction matters enormously.

    Someone blindly accepting AI output without understanding it puts themselves in a dangerous intellectual position. But someone who already has strong writing, reasoning, and communication skills can use AI more like a junior assistant or drafting tool while still retaining judgment, accountability, and intent.

    What concerns me more is exactly what you’re pointing at: competence itself is becoming rarer.

    If people start outsourcing the very processes that develop critical thinking, writing ability, synthesis, and communication before those skills fully mature, then we could absolutely weaken society’s long-term cognitive resilience.

    That should concern everyone, regardless of whether they’re optimistic or pessimistic about AI.


  • I can write an amazing email word by word, or I can have my digital secretary draft it while I review, edit, and approve every part of it.

    I don’t send anything I haven’t personally read and approved. The judgment, accountability, and intent are still mine.

    You’re absolutely right that outsourcing learning and critical thinking to AI would have serious long-term consequences. But using AI to accelerate execution after you’ve already developed those skills is different.

    I’m paid for the experience and judgment to know what needs to be said, what matters, and what outcome the communication is supposed to achieve.


  • Time is the main reason. In jobs where you write dozens of client-facing emails every day, small time savings compound fast.

    Most people working in Outlook all day are doing exactly this kind of work: responding to clients, coordinating projects, clarifying requests, following up, documenting decisions, and managing constant communication.

    Instead of writing every email from scratch, I can give AI instructions like:

    “Read the email chain. The client needs X, Y, and Z. Write a draft reply in my voice.”

    That takes seconds instead of several minutes per email. Across an entire workday, that can save hours.