Wednesday, June 4, 2025

About the Difference Between Conviction & Truth


When Considering AI Agents’ impact on humans we must also think about building in guardrails to protect humans from Bonhoeffer’s warning — “Against stupidity, we are defenseless.”

 AI Agents must include guardrails to identify “truth” over “conviction” and prevent “stupidity” by facilitating “critical thinking” and “self-reflection.”

Consider this extract from, The Terrifying Theory of Stupidity You Were Never Meant to Hear – Dietrich Bonhoeffer (Philosophy Coded)  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sfekgjfh1Rk 

“What if the greatest threat to civilization isn't evil people doing evil things but ordinary people who've simply stopped thinking?” 

“We're entering the age of AI deep fakes that can fabricate reality itself. The threat is not just escalating; it is targeting the very architecture of human cognition. This is not just about Nazis or propaganda it is about the wiring of your brain. Our minds evolved to prioritize speed over accuracy to trust familiar sources over unfamiliar ones and to seek information that confirms what we already believe. These were survival features that helped our ancestors make quick decisions when hesitation meant death. The scariest part is we are all vulnerable no matter how smart we think we are. The mechanism is exactly what Bonhoeffer described. When people feel threatened and uncertain they become more susceptible to authoritative sounding explanations that reduce complexity to simple narratives.”

“But here is the crucial insight that makes Bonhoffer's warning more urgent than ever. We are not just dealing with human manipulation anymore. We are facing systems designed by artificial intelligence to exploit our cognitive vulnerabilities with surgical precision. Every click, every pause, every emotional reaction is being analyzed and weaponized against our capacity for independent thought. We saw this play out in real time during Covid 19. Doctors, engineers, and lawyers, people with demonstrated analytical abilities began sharing debunked theories about vaccines and treatments. These were not failures of intelligence, they were failures of intellectual independence under unprecedented pressure.”

The question Bonhoeffer leaves us with is not whether we are smart enough to avoid stupidity. It is whether we are committed enough to keep thinking when thinking becomes inconvenient, uncomfortable, or costly in a world that profits from our intellectual surrender.

Will we develop AI to help or hinder us with our world that “profits from intellectual surrender”?

Consider the positive impact on humanity if AI Agents included modules to help:
  • Present and leverage critical thinking
  • Present and leverage counterintuitive arguments 
  • Identify “cognitive dissonance” thinking
  • Present and leverage benefits derived from Diversity, Equality, Inclusion (DEI)
  • Identify arguments derived from gaslighting and counter with arguments based on verified facts
  • Identify deceptive audio or visual media (deepfakes)
  • Identify arguments based upon “information disorder”, e.g., misinformation, disinformation,    malinformation, and all "AI-manipulated, synthetic content". See: Misinformation, Disinformation & Malinformation: A Guide (Princeton Public Library) https://princetonlibrary.org/guides/misinformation-disinformation-malinformation-a-guide/
Ben Nimmo, Director of Investigations - Graphika



Becoming Foolproof to Misinformation with Sander van der Linden


Dr. van der Linden, Professor of Social Psychology and Society and the Director of Cambridge Social Decision Making Lab in the Department of Psychology at the University of Cambridge

Online Verification Skills — Video 4: Look for Trusted Work


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