Intelligence, Consciousness, and Wisdom in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
Description
This article examines the philosophical implications of artificial intelligence for contemporary theories of mind, consciousness, and human identity. Moving beyond traditional debates that frame intelligence as uniquely biological, the study investigates whether cognition should be understood as an organizational and informational phenomenon capable of emerging across multiple substrates. Drawing upon philosophy of mind, cognitive science, and developments in artificial intelligence, the paper proposes that recursion and self-modeling constitute key structural conditions underlying reflective awareness.
The analysis develops a gradualist account of consciousness, arguing against binary distinctions between conscious and non-conscious systems in favor of a spectrum model grounded in degrees of informational integration and recursive complexity. Competing informational theories of consciousness—including functionalist, predictive-processing, and integrated-information approaches—are examined alongside metaphysical perspectives that consider consciousness as potentially fundamental to reality. The discussion situates artificial intelligence within a broader evolutionary trajectory of increasing complexity, interpreting technological cognition as an extension of distributed human intelligence rather than a rival to it.
The article further explores the emergence of a human–AI cognitive ecosystem in which biological and artificial systems contribute complementary forms of intelligence. While artificial systems expand analytical and computational capacities, human cognition remains distinguished by embodiment, meaning formation, emotional valuation, existential awareness, and ethical responsibility. These differences suggest that the defining challenge of the AI era is not the replacement of human intelligence but the transformation of knowledge into wisdom.
The study concludes that philosophy assumes renewed significance in the age of artificial intelligence by providing conceptual and ethical frameworks necessary for guiding hybrid intelligence systems. Rather than signaling the end of philosophy, the development of artificial cognition reaffirms philosophy’s role as a bridge between scientific knowledge, technological power, and human meaning within an increasingly self-reflective universe.
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Intelligence, Consciousness, and Wisdom in the Age of Artificial Intelligence.pdf
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