There is a specific psychological trap that closes once people believe intelligence has been defined. Not improved, not approximated, not extended—but captured. Once intelligence is perceived as a solved object, externalised and perfected elsewhere (in systems, institutions, or machines), the individual cognitive posture changes in a very particular way: curiosity collapses into compliance. This is […]
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Intelligence, Lost
- Post author By G
- Post date Dec 30, 2025
- No Comments on Intelligence, Lost
- Tags AGI hype, AI hype, answer culture, anti-curiosity dynamics, attention economy, authority transfer, automation bias, belief hardening, certainty addiction, civilisational cognition, cognitive atrophy, cognitive offloading, cognitive surrender, collective intelligence decline, communication systems, complex systems, compliance over cognition, curiosity collapse, definition trap, entropy and cognition, epistemic authority, epistemic closure, epistemic complacency, epistemic passivity, epistemic risk, field intelligence, finality trap, hype and cognition, illusion of completion, intellectual dependency, intelligence as solved problem, knowledge fetishism, language and cognition, learned helplessness, loss of epistemic tension, metacognition failure, normalisation of stupidity, outsourced thinking, post-critical cognition, psychology of belief, psychology of intelligence, superintelligence myth, synthetic consensus, systems psychology, technocratic authority, thinking as retrieval