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{ "item_title" : "Borrowed Judgment", "item_author" : [" Cyran Valek "], "item_description" : "Most books about artificial intelligence ask what it will do to work, productivity, and the future.They miss the deeper change already underway.As AI systems become better at summarizing, interpreting, evaluating, and recommending, they do more than help us move faster. They begin to occupy the mental space where human judgment is formed.In Borrowed Judgment, Cyran Valek argues that the most important risk of AI is not only automation of labor, but the gradual weakening of human decision-making itself.Judgment is not information. It is not intelligence. It is not opinion. It is a practiced human capacity built through ambiguity, difficulty, error, consequence, and the effort of deciding under uncertainty. When that effort is increasingly handled by intelligent systems, the result is not just greater efficiency. It is a quieter and more consequential shift: people may remain articulate, informed, and productive while becoming less capable of independent discernment.This book examines how that shift unfolds across modern life. It shows how assistance becomes guidance, how fluent machine outputs acquire authority, how decisions begin to feel less fully owned, and how AI mediation changes trust, selfhood, and culture. What emerges is a disturbing possibility: a society can become more optimized on the surface while growing thinner in one of its most essential human capacities.Sharp, serious, and unsettling, Borrowed Judgment offers a powerful framework for understanding what intelligent systems may be taking from the people who depend on them most.This is not a book about panic, resistance, or nostalgia. It is a book about judgment as a condition of adulthood, agency, and responsibility, and about the forms of thought that must remain irreducibly human if freedom is to mean anything at all.If you care about AI, decision-making, and the future of human agency, this book will change how you see the age now arriving.", "item_img_path" : "https://covers4.booksamillion.com/covers/bam/9/79/825/496/9798254960591_b.jpg", "price_data" : { "retail_price" : "11.99", "online_price" : "11.99", "our_price" : "11.99", "club_price" : "11.99", "savings_pct" : "0", "savings_amt" : "0.00", "club_savings_pct" : "0", "club_savings_amt" : "0.00", "discount_pct" : "10", "store_price" : "" } }
Borrowed Judgment|Cyran Valek

Borrowed Judgment : AI and the Weakening of Human Decision-Making

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Overview

Most books about artificial intelligence ask what it will do to work, productivity, and the future.

They miss the deeper change already underway.

As AI systems become better at summarizing, interpreting, evaluating, and recommending, they do more than help us move faster. They begin to occupy the mental space where human judgment is formed.

In Borrowed Judgment, Cyran Valek argues that the most important risk of AI is not only automation of labor, but the gradual weakening of human decision-making itself.

Judgment is not information. It is not intelligence. It is not opinion. It is a practiced human capacity built through ambiguity, difficulty, error, consequence, and the effort of deciding under uncertainty. When that effort is increasingly handled by intelligent systems, the result is not just greater efficiency. It is a quieter and more consequential shift: people may remain articulate, informed, and productive while becoming less capable of independent discernment.

This book examines how that shift unfolds across modern life. It shows how assistance becomes guidance, how fluent machine outputs acquire authority, how decisions begin to feel less fully owned, and how AI mediation changes trust, selfhood, and culture. What emerges is a disturbing possibility: a society can become more optimized on the surface while growing thinner in one of its most essential human capacities.

Sharp, serious, and unsettling, Borrowed Judgment offers a powerful framework for understanding what intelligent systems may be taking from the people who depend on them most.

This is not a book about panic, resistance, or nostalgia. It is a book about judgment as a condition of adulthood, agency, and responsibility, and about the forms of thought that must remain irreducibly human if freedom is to mean anything at all.

If you care about AI, decision-making, and the future of human agency, this book will change how you see the age now arriving.

This item is Non-Returnable

Details

  • ISBN-13: 9798254960591
  • ISBN-10: 9798254960591
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publish Date: April 2026
  • Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.33 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.47 pounds
  • Page Count: 154

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