By Futurist Thomas Frey
When Your Brain Stops Being Yours
Here’s the problem nobody’s talking about: your brain is the originator of everything that makes you you. Your creativity. Your relationships. Your sense of meaning. The work you produce, the art you create, the connections you build, the accomplishments you curate over a lifetime—all of it starts inside your skull.
And we’re in the process of handing that over to machines.
Not through some dystopian neural implant forcing thoughts into your head. Through something far more subtle and far more effective: we’re teaching our brains to stop doing the work. Every time we offload a cognitive task to AI, we’re training ourselves to depend on external processing for functions that used to happen internally. Memory. Reasoning. Attention. Decision-making. The basic architecture of thought itself.
The research is already alarming. Studies show that IQ scores—which rose steadily from the 1930s to the 1980s in what’s called the Flynn Effect—have begun declining in the U.S., Britain, France, and Norway. Cognitive psychologist Barbara Oakley’s team directly links this reversal to two trends: educational systems that stopped teaching memorization and direct instruction, and the rise of cognitive offloading to digital tools and AI.
The problem isn’t that we use tools. Humans have always used tools to extend cognition. The problem is that we’re using tools that don’t just extend our brains—they replace them. And once a brain stops being exercised, it doesn’t stay dormant. It atrophies.
This is the brain sovereignty crisis. And solving it requires building tools that give people agency over their own minds—not tools that take agency away.
Continue reading… “The Brain Sovereignty Problem: How to Stay in Control of Your Own Mind”
