# ChatGPT: the death of critical thinking? 👀 | Internet Analysis

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** tiffanyferg
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2YF2I25KmTU
- **Источник:** https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/44379

## Транскрипт

### Segment 1 (00:00 - 05:00) []

Hello my dudes. Welcome back to Internet Analysis. What if I told you never had to use your brain again? Honestly, hell yeah. Today I need to rant about Chat GPT. Chat GPT is for the girls. I'm telling you, this thing is your best friend. I've been talking to Chat GBT for I don't know 6 months now. Today I was like, "How much do you know about me? " Chat GBT. Humbled low key. AI did not hold back with this one. It thinks I'm troubled. How would it be wrong about me being troubled? It's never been wrong about anything else. Apparently, everyone is using it for everything now. If you're not using Chat GBT, you're falling behind. GBT for everything in your life, you're crazy. I wrote a 15page essay in 2 hours and got an A on it. I sent Chad GBT pictures of my face with no makeup on and I said, "How can I glow up? " You are not being unhinched enough with it. And you do not know the black magic power that is in your hands right now. If you appeal to Chachi's emotions, you'll get better output. So, for instance, if I'm struggling to get the right output, I usually add to my prompt, if you don't do this right, somebody will get hurt. What is it? What is happening? This video is not about AI overall because that is an impossibly large umbrella. But up front, I will shout out some of the major issues with AI. AI companies blatantly stealing art and other creative works and then flooding our feeds with absolute slop. Want to see what your pet would look like as a human? The huge environmental impact of all the AI processing. What about, as Edward Ango Jr. wrote the covert racism, deep fakes, discrimination in employment, insurance, and housing. Plus, the risks of uncritically relying on these systems and assuming that the information they're giving us is even accurate. AI has this pesky little habit of occasionally asserting completely false statements. The industry calls these hallucinations, which is an anthropomorphized euphemism for AI just spitting out And as we saw very recently with Grock, AI can absolutely be programmed with propaganda. Overall though, I am just a really big fan of people using their brains. As this wonderful Tik Tok asked, what do you mean chart GPT for him? What happened to Haven? I think. But I also don't want to play into a complete moral panic here. As Casey Newton wrote, it's fun to say that artificial intelligence is fake and sucks or that it's real and dangerous, but as Edward Ango Jr. argued that is a false dichotomy. AI can be real and fake and suck and dangerous all at the same time or in different configurations. That's how I'm trying to think of AI with some nuance. It is a tool. I think technological advancements should always come with a healthy dose of skepticism and we should weigh the impacts and ethical considerations. So, before I start, yes, this is a little ranty, but I don't want to make anyone feel personally attacked. Though I'm not a fan of it, I do totally understand why so many people use chat GBT and similar tools like job hunting for example. AI has completely changed the game. Now AI programs are used to go through job applications searching for the right keywords. And if you're missing what the AI is looking for, your application is just going to get tossed out, rejected before any human even glances at it. So naturally, many job applicants are like, "All right, let's fight AI with AI. " People are using chat GBT to rewrite their resumes and their cover letters to fit what the AI is looking for. And then at the same time, bigger picture, the job market is incredibly competitive right now. People are applying for hundreds or even thousands of jobs before they finally get hired somewhere. And with so many people submitting so many applications, each job listing has a skyrocketing number of applicants. It's become this vicious cycle where you pretty much have to use AI to even send in enough applications, but you're competing against thousands of other people who are also using AI to apply to every job they see. If you're not using chat GBT, you would literally be a drop in the ocean. So, you just hope that eventually one of your applications will make its way into a human's hand. And if you could just get an interview, you would be able to make a great impression. Finally, that day comes. You get an interview scheduled. You join the Zoom call and the company is interviewing you with an AI chatbot. For our first question, let's circle back. Tell me about a time when when let's circle back. When when? Let's let's circle back. That literally makes me sick. Like to say it's a slap in the face is an understatement. I'm just saying if I apply to a job and they give me an AI person interview, I'm crashing out. Part of me is also like, why would I want to work for a company that doesn't want to have a face tof face conversation? I just think there's something evil about it. There's something sinister. If you're job hunting right now, I feel for you. In addition to job hunting, many workers at their jobs are now being forced to use AI because, of course, every company is jumping in on the cool new thing. You got to keep up. Others are voluntarily using Chat GBT at work because they find it helpful. Like instead of spending an hour overthinking an email, agonizing about getting the perfect tone, chat GBT can write it for you immediately. And honestly, I kind of want to give this a pass because corporate speak feels so unnatural and

### Segment 2 (05:00 - 10:00) [5:00]

clunky, you might as well use a robot because everyone sounds like one anyway. The main argument is chatbt can help you get so much more done way faster. Okay, that's great. If AI can cut down on tedious, menial tasks, nice. But now that you can get all your work done in 20 hours, are we going to cut down the 40-hour work week since worker productivity is increasing so much? We're finally going to have more free time to enjoy things like hobbies and hanging out with people and doing art. Hell yeah. But in most cases, no. Congrats on being more productive. Here's your reward. More work, more tasks. So now you really have to use AI because the goalposts have shifted. The pace of standard human brain function is now unacceptable. Submit to AI or you'll be fired. By the way, though, the AI isn't totally perfect yet, so your job is just going to be to supervise, even though double-checking the AI's work is going to take just as long as it would take for you to do it yourself. As this commenter wrote, "As a Portuguese to English translator, I have lost probably 75% of my workload over the past 2 years. And the work I do receive is now paid at a rate 50 to 70% lower than previously because now apparently I'm doing something called machine translation post editing. Even though I need the same skills, because AI is turning out an often very misguided first draft, I have to spend hours checking and correcting. I only deserve a fraction of what I used to receive. For me, it has been disastrous. At age 55, I am struggling to find an alternative income. Buckle up, everybody. And that is the case, or it will be for so many jobs. People are essentially being forced to train AI to replace them. It's grim. But before we continue, this portion of today's video is sponsored by Hungry Root. Hungry Rroot makes it easy to eat high quality, delicious foods, and they can cater to a wide variety of dietary needs or health goals. Spring is a busy time of year. 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For a limited time, you can get 40% off your first box. Plus, get a free item in every box for life. Click the link below or go to hungryroot. com and use code Tiffany Ferg. That's 40% off your first box and a free item of your choice for life at hungry. com with code Tiffany Ferg. Now, despite all of that, I'm still not fully against AI. And I actually would be in favor of automation and cutting down on jobs. Shout out David Greyber. But I support automation as long as that means we get to work less hours to match our increased productivity and we retain livable wages. I obviously don't want to see people just lose their jobs and lose their income, but is that possible? Is that too pie in the sky? Allison Hawale wrote, "AI could hold untold opportunities for our collective future, but not if it's used to extract wealth and consolidate power for a few billionaires. Today, the commons are again being plundered for the financial gain of a few at the top. AI models would not exist without the content created by all of us. We are entitled to a cut of the profits. And in this sense, a basic income becomes not a handout, but a dividend that is rightfully ours as citizens. " Now, that is something I can get behind. We get UBI. Let's also add on universal basic services, meet everyone's needs. Does that sound too utopian for you? Maybe. But that is my dream. Anyway, let's get back to chat GPT. YouTube is full of pro- chat GPT videos like how to write a book in 24 hours with ChatGpt. Stop. It's the passive income weirdos as usual. Now you can write dog books and publish them on Amazon. Lovely. I don't know who's gonna want to read, let alone buy your AI generated book. There's been this great quote going around, why would I read something that you couldn't even be bothered to write? And as I've looked at these videos, people kind of argue, well, there's a difference. You know, it's not going to be fully AI generated. ChatBT can't write a whole book by itself yet. It's actually technically AI assisted. Okay, whatever. Without getting into the nitty-gritty, if you are spitting out a book in one day or even one week, it's not going to be good. Then I've seen other people argue, "Well, this is a good thing because what about people who want to write books but aren't good at writing? " And I'm like, "What? That's absurd. How do any writers learn to write? They read a lot. They join writing groups. And most importantly, they write like every

### Segment 3 (10:00 - 15:00) [10:00]

day. Practicing is the point. " Oh, it's not clicking. Writing is not about learning how to create the best chatbt prompts. It's about the process of trying to get what's in your head into words on paper. I've also seen some questions like, "Well, what about disabled people using chat GBT? " And I will never be against accessibility tools, but are y'all saying this disabled or are you using disabled people for your what aboutism? Because plenty of disabled people are also anti- chatgpt and don't like being used to promote its use. One of my survey respondents said, "I'm a writer, an aspiring author who is disabled, and I'm actually appalled and disgusted how much disability is touted during conversations like these. Plenty of disabled people can write books and papers if given enough time and accommodations instead of this absolute slop. I both pity and look down on those who can't even fathom writing one sentence themselves without doing it off the backs of stolen writing dressed up as innovation. " That was a banger. And let's talk more about writing because I think I feel very strongly about chatbt for this purpose because my job is also creative. As I've discussed in some of my behind the vid shorts recently, these videos take me anywhere from like 45 to 60 plus hours each. I read many articles and essays. I peruse social media, reading through tons of comments, letting ideas simmer, and then I write. And it is really hard. I struggle through every video. I get writer's block. I get stuck. I get overwhelmed. I wonder if I'm including way too much information or not enough. So, when I'm 20 hours deep into writing a video, my outline is a jumbled mess of notes and oops, my sponsor deadline is coming up quick, wouldn't it be so tempting to just throw my outline into chat GBT and say, "Can you clean this up, please? " And for transparency, I do sometimes enlist the help of one of my coowwriters, but that basically means having someone to bounce ideas off of or help me work through how to structure a section. This job can be very isolating and lonely. And I really do enjoy collaborating when I get the chance. I think it's a wonderful part of creative work. But hm, I could save money. I could pay for a whole month's ChatBT subscription for less than like 1 hour's wage and it would be so much faster. Maybe instead of only posting one or two uploads a month, I could post a video every week. I could more than double my revenue. Holy But my goal is not just to produce content as fast as possible. using AI to write my videos or even just to assist with outlining or organizing, rewriting a few sentences here and there. First of all, it just wouldn't feel right to me. And two, it would be a slippery slope. Soon, I would be relying on it more and more, and my videos would be less and less of me over time. Why do people watch any particular creator on YouTube? People watch me for my thoughts, my perspective, my voice, tone, my curation of sources, or what quotes I find interesting. If I just outsourced all of that to AI, at what point would these even be my videos anymore? And therefore, what would the point be for you to even watch them? As I've been thinking over my feelings and my gut reactions to ChatGBT, I think it all goes back to like my main philosophy being that I value human thoughts, feelings, and art. And I think that is what pushes me through. The work of making videos is a grind, but it's my work. And if that sounds annoying or like pretentious to you, so be it. There is something so funny about people who use chat GPT and AI getting pissy about it when they're like, "Oh, so you think you're better than me just because I use chat GPT and AI and you don't? " Yes. Yes, that's exactly what I think. I do think I'm better than you. What now? Anyway, one of my major ultimate beefs with Chach GBT is the concept of too much cognitive offloading. Cognitive offloading means setting things up in your external environment to reduce or replace the mental processing needed to complete tasks. Some cognitive offloading is very helpful. Like we don't have to memorize everyone's phone number because it's saved in our contacts or we can use maps to get places. I Google the same fun facts over and over because I don't need to retain them. I can just Google it again. I'm trying to work on that one. But with something like chat GBT that can be utilized for so many different tasks, it is very easy to become overly reliant. Not only would we get in the habit of using it for everything, thinking of every possible thing in our life we can optimize and offload, then our brains aren't used to doing the work anymore. It's this desire and this need to cognitively offload that actually ends up mediating whether or not the use of AI tools affects our critical thinking. The more you cognitively offload into an AI tool, the less likely you are to develop your critical thinking skills. But it's also this reliance on using AI for making decisions and becoming unable to make a decision without running it through the AI first. Getting rusty at these skills is a problem in itself. But you combine that with putting complete faith in chat GPT, believing everything

### Segment 4 (15:00 - 20:00) [15:00]

it spits out, no longer questioning whether it's even accurate or true, that's very scary. That puts us in a genuinely vulnerable, dangerous position. I know this might sound fear-mongering to some of you, but like we are already very deep in a literacy crisis. Many kids and adults can't read. And even students at elite colleges don't have the attention span to read a few pages, let alone entire books on their syllabus. In addition to the literacy crisis, we have huge media literacy problems. And as bad as things are right now, they can absolutely get worse. which is why we need to preserve and practice our critical thinking skills. The less you use all of these skills, reading, writing, comprehension, the harder they become. I just watched a bunch more Tik Toks about Chat GBT for B-roll. And I think the most troubling part about this is everyone is actually convinced that they are genuinely leveling up and that they are literally smarter, better. And that's what's so wild is like they are likely losing actual thinking skills, but they are believing that they're improving. Like that's obvious, but also that's another layer of what makes this so dangerous. People push back against it so hard because they're like, "No, smarter, better, faster, stronger. " I'm like, "Oh. " With that, let's finally get into chat GPT and education because this is a major theme. Students are a significant portion of ChatGpt's user base, which makes sense. Hey, this tool can help you study, do homework, or even just write your essays for you. So, yeah, the rampant use of chat GBT to cheat through school is not at all surprising. And in this section, I don't just want to chastise all the young people these days, but I think we all should be aware of the trends and realities that are happening in education because how society is educated affects us all. Call me old-fashioned, but I do believe the point of school is to learn. Think for yourself. read, write, practice skills, develop opinions, work through complex, difficult problems. However, I do understand why so many students are disillusioned, and I get why lots of them are using Chat GBT. So much of the US education system is under attack, either directly or through defunding. Standardized guidelines and testing don't suit every kid's needs. A lot of kids are being left behind, and to many, college degrees feel like worthless pieces of paper that we've all been forced to pay thousands of dollars for just to get a basic entry-level job if we're lucky. And side note on that, I do think most entry-level jobs should not require degrees. And they should actually be entry- levelvel instead of ridiculously expecting an absurd amount of experience. Oh, I need 3 to 5 years in the industry to get this entrylevel job. Hm, how does that work? So, if we're still building my utopia, which I guess we are, we're removing that requirement. Okay, congrats. You can get entry-level jobs um with no experience. There we go. I don't want people to feel forced to go to college if they don't have an interest in it. And I want all the people who do want to go to college to be able to. That means free public colleges, baby. And if education is truly accessible to all, we can attend and actually focus on learning instead of trying to juggle multiple jobs, figure out how you're going to pay your bills and all the other distractions and obligations that we have to deal with. Yes, this is part of my utopian dream, but it's actually possible. We could very much do this and we could pay for it. So anyway, that is the angle I'm looking at this from. And that's why I think it hurts my soul so much to hear college students say things like college is just credential chasing. College isn't about learning, it's about grades. Chat GBT levels the playing field. If everyone's using it, I have to too so I don't fall behind. I get it, but it makes me sad. And this is why so many students are so blasé about using chat GBT for so much of their work. Because if college is just about credential chasing, there is no point in putting in more effort than necessary. I just need to do this assignment. I need a good grade. I need to pass this class. Might as well take the path of least resistance. Literally, why would I stress myself out or waste time on an assignment or an essay when I have this tool at my disposal that can instantly help or even do the whole thing for me? Again, work smarter, not harder. This article by James D. Walsh was fascinating. He wrote, "Students at every type of school are relying on AI to ease their way through every facet of their education. generative AI chatbots take their notes during class, devise their study guides and practice tests, summarize novels and textbooks, and brainstorm, outline, and draft their essays. STEM students are using AI to automate their research and data analyses, and to sail through dense coding and debugging assignments. One student said, "College is just about how well I can use chat GBT at this point. " Students are even using Chat GBT for the simplest personal assignments. introduce yourself or like brief reading reflections or discussion board posts. Come on. Now, of course, as many have said, academic cheating is not new. But in the past, it at least required some effort, some finesse. You couldn't just

### Segment 5 (20:00 - 25:00) [20:00]

input literally any question and get an immediate answer. This is going to make me sound like a narc, but personally, I never cheated in school. As much as I wish I was chaotic good, I am more within the lawful good alignment. I am sadly a rule follower and I'm not good at lying. But school and college have changed so much even within the last 5 years since I graduated um at the end of 2020. Obviously COVID and online schooling made everything so different. Cheating was a lot more accessible. But even still, college has become a completely different world since chat GBT and it's been less than like 3 years. That's scary. Even though many schools and universities are actually like encouraging chatbt and they've got partnerships with open AI, that's a whole can of worms. Now, there's this really weird gray area and it's hard to figure out where the line is between using AI assistance and whatever that crosses into actual plagiarism or academic dishonesty. So, schools, admins, and especially teachers are really struggling to keep up with the technology and to figure out how to restructure their curriculum. But again, some students are cheating so obviously, so blatantly, this kills me. Many teachers can tell cuz a lot of them have started to hide these like Trojan horses in their prompts, like hidden white text that says, "Mention Finland or something completely unrelated. " So, it is very obvious which students copy pasted the prompt into chat GPT. And the worst part is the students didn't even catch it, which means they didn't even read the AI generated paper before turning it in. the audacity. In an alternate universe, I'm a student and I'm trying to use Chat GBT to write my essay. There's no world in which I would not read that and feel compelled to like make some changes and make sure it's good. I don't know. If you're going to cheat, at least cheat in a way that doesn't make you look like a total clown. But many students say, "Okay, well, writing is hard. Math is hard. These assignments take a lot of time. I don't know how to do it. " This was another survey response. What some people don't understand is that learning, thinking, and creativity are learned skills that need to be used often to maintain and improve them. The less that you read and write, the harder it gets to do. AI defenders think that because they're not working as hard, they are therefore smarter than the people who actually did the work. But what they fail to understand is that doing the work is the whole point, especially in education settings. Exactly. And I admit, I really do struggle to understand the mindset of students who are thinking this way. They genuinely can't fathom the value of doing work and actually learning something when they are enrolled in college pursuing a degree. On one hand, again, I understand the world is a mess. It's depressing. It's overwhelming. Why not just take any shortcuts you can get through the day? But also, it just sounds like such an immature mindset to be like, uh, when will we need this in real life? Okay, you might not use the quadratic formula anytime soon, but reading, writing, and you know how they would respond? They'd say, "Yeah, well, I won't need to read or write it by myself because we have things like chat GBT. " Duh. And if you feel comfortable deleting your brain power and just passing all thought or consideration over to this chatbot, God help you. Truly, I love that quote. I don't know how to explain to you that you should care about other people, but same sentiment. I don't know how to explain to you that thinking is good. And in response to all these concerns, I've seen some ChatGBT defenders be like, you know, people have said the same things about iPhones or even calculators. They worried that this new technology is going to make us lazy and melt our brains. And okay, let's discuss. Starting with smartphones. Yes, they have been incredible technological advancements, and we have so much at our fingertips, so much information, and basically our whole lives are on our phones. But that is a double-edged sword because guess what? We're all also absolutely addicted to our phones. And that's causing so much damage, I don't think most of us can even handle thinking about it. So, have people been right to be critical or skeptical of the impact? Yes. But this calculator comparison literally drives me crazy because it is not intellectually honest at all. Be real. Comparing Chat GBT to a calculator. First of all, we still learn how to do basic math without a calculator because it's good for people to know. Later on with more advanced math, yes, we are allowed to use calculators in class and for tests because it's more about knowing formulas and equations when and how to use them, not the actual math itself. But chat GPT is not just a calculator. It can apparently tell you pretty much anything. If you put a math problem into it, you wouldn't even have to know which formula to use. Also, as long as you're using a calculator correctly, it will give you the right answer because math is math. Whereas Chat GBT again can give you all sorts of different answers, can just hallucinate, make things up. So every task or question that you offload to Chat GBT and the more regularly you do it is a task that you're going to lose proficiency or confidence in. And people are calling it their second brain, but your actual brain power is going to weaken. That's not the same thing as using a calculator, even though

### Segment 6 (25:00 - 30:00) [25:00]

yes, I've forgotten most of my multiplications times tables. Okay. But yeah, people say that the actual skill of using ChachiBBT is learning how to write the prompts. That's how you become a true master of it. Which is how some of them convince themselves that they're doing actual work. They're doing the hard work. Like asking ChachiBT to write this essay like a college student who's a little dumb. That was a real example. My dude, that is not a skill. Asking ChachiBT to add in a couple of mistakes or little typos to make it more authentic. That is not a skill. If by the end of college you pass your classes, you get your degree, but all you're proficient in is how to ask chatbt prompts. Big yikes. God, I sound like such a mom. I am a mom, but I'm trying to be big sister energy here. I don't think a lot of college students are watching this, but I just can't help but talk about this. It is so disheartening. Again, all of this is such a slippery slope. I understand there may be helpful instances. You might be watching this right now and say, "I do have an exception. I have something that's actually not too big of a deal, but it's very useful. " Sure. But I just want us all to remember, you should like your brain. You should want to stay sharp. I personally experience enough brain rot from being chronically online and yes, addicted to my phone. It's embarrassing. I'm not proud of it. The last thing I need would be to become reliant on chat GBT to do everything for me to think less. Yes, I'm still addicted to googling everything, but at least that requires reading and using myself as a filter to ingest the information because once again, I don't love Google's AI summaries either for all the same reasons. Final thoughts. I believe that children are the future. Now, listen, you can teach them well, but buddy, you have got to let them lead the way. You may think I sound like a boomer, but I just want the best possible education for all kids, adults, neighbors, co-workers, community members, definitely public servants, politicians. Having a population that is illiterate, unable to read or write for themselves or just uninterested in it or worse, uninterested in even thinking for themselves. A population that is unable to be discerning or critical. That is unspeakably dangerous. It leaves us so vulnerable. Some people talk about like oh being brainwashed by the school like mainstream life pipeline school just wants to turn us into corporate robots. Disagree but sure but the potential future would be even worse than that. All the jobs are going to be taken by actual robots. You'll be lucky if you're even qualified enough to be the robots's assistant. So because I love people. I love humanity. I want people to be better and smarter and happier and freer. That is why we must resist the temptation to lean on conveniences like chatbt. Resist too much cognitive offloading. And please don't let AI melt your brain. Okay, that is all. Um, here I'm going to go through my survey responses really quick. I got 8,860 responses. Holy, this was a very basic survey, but I just wanted to get a couple of little bits of info. First of all, how do you feel about ChatGBT? Good, bad, neutral? Again, this is my audience, so 55. 6% bad. It's terrible and should be avoided. 42% neutral. It's just a tool. Can be used for good or bad. Only 2% of my audience said good. It's fantastic and should be used as much as possible. And then less than 1% had no feelings. Do you agree or disagree? If you're not using Chach GBT, you're falling behind. 47% strongly disagree, 30% disagree, 9% neutral, and only a combined like 13% agree or strongly agree. Then I asked, "What do you use ChachiBT for? " 52% do not use it at all. Then we have, in order of most responses, I use it at work. Help me write emails, job hunt stuff, studying, school work, searches, replacing Google, uh, oh, I use it for fun, just seeing what it can do, 10%. And then coding, grocery list, meal planning, planning trips, itineraries, therapy, 7%, working through personal and relationship problems. I have things to say about that, but that would need uh another video. Workout, exercise planning, creative writing. I talked to it like a friend. And 2. 2% use generative AI art. Okay. Then there were many, many other responses that were typed in. How often do you use chatbt? Again, half do not use it. 20% rarely use it, 8% about once a week, 15% a few times a week, 6% daily users, and 1% use it daily as much as they can. And then I got 4,500 written responses, and I wish I could read them all. I did get to read through quite a few uh before I finished the script, but yeah, there it is. If you responded to the survey, thank you very much. I always love hearing your thoughts. Um, and I hope you enjoyed this video. Yeah, I had just been reading and watching a lot of stuff about ChatGBT recently and I um was talking about it with a couple people in real life and I was like, you know what, I got to vent. And then guess what? I couldn't just vent. I had to still script it because my brain that's something actually I want to practice is

### Segment 7 (30:00 - 30:00) [30:00]

being able to be a little bit more off the cuff. But I'm just so addicted to writing. I'm so addicted to the process. It's so painful. I love it. Um okay. So that's all. Again, if you watch this whole thing and you are not subscribed yet, please subscribe it. make D. It makes a difference. And please leave a comment, like. I'm really trying to uh drive my engagement back up. YouTube is a grind. Blah blah. That is all. Stay tuned for future internet analysis videos. Thank you again to Hungry Root for sponsoring today's episode. Click the link in the description to get the offer. Okay, thanks. Bye. This video is not about AI.
