this post was submitted on 22 Oct 2025
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Chatgpt helped me build my garden beds, build a lamp out of an old telephone, learn Japanese grammar quirks, improve lacklustre recipes, look after my plants and stop my dog from barking. That's this month.
I could have gone to Reddit or blogs and scrounged around for hours/days to find that info, but chatgpt had already aggregated it and neatly presented it.
The Luddites who refuse to use AI are simply that. You either don't understand it's weaknesses and learn to work around them, or you're becoming your techphobic grandparents.
I've also used it successfully for those kinds of special cases - particularly translating complicated medical documents back and forth to Japanese due to my wife's treatment.
But I think the caution here is overreliance. Using it in a university setting, where you feed it everything you were supposed to read and understand, and having it write down all the analysis that you were meant to analyze, and what have you personally gained as a result? The article cites students who couldn't even recall what they'd "written" after submitting an assignment.
You can use it as a tool, or you can use it as a crutch. If you outsource your whole thought process to a computer, I can see the detriment.
This is the same with literally any tool. People were complaining about computer use decades ago for fear we would forget how to write by hand. Same thing with writing in general and memory.
You're proving the point, though. People's ability to write by hand has indeed deteriorated. Literacy has indeed reduced the need for and intensity of memorisation - and having stuff memorised is useful. What skill will AI cause to atrophy? Is that skill merely like handwriting, or something more?