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Does AI Make Students Dumber, or Is Our Definition of Intelligence Obsolete?

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Source: Wikipedia Introduction The conversation around AI and education often begins with a familiar accusation: students who use tools like ChatGPT are somehow cheating themselves, producing shallow work, or “learning less.” A recent MIT study has fueled the narrative, suggesting that AI usage diminishes cognitive engagement and recall. On the surface, the conclusion appears straightforward. But beneath the data lies a deeper issue: the debate itself is anchored in an outdated metaphysics of presence. The underlying assumption of this discourse is that intelligence is something wholly present, a possession of the mind, measurable once the tools are removed. In other words, cognition is treated as a book: bounded, stable, and self-contained. AI disrupts this illusion. It does not make students less intelligent. It exposes the obsolescence of a paradigm that still evaluates thought by what can be internalized and recalled. The old measures were never neutral; they were logocentric, ...

Baudelaire Against l’esprit français: A Polemic

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No verbal traps . Stencil graffiti. AI image Introduction: An Anachronistic Accusation Charles Baudelaire never read Derrida, Lacan, or Barthes. Yet it is difficult to imagine that he would have liked them. More provocatively, had he encountered French poststructuralism, he would likely have recognized in it the very cultural pathology he diagnosed in Le public moderne et la photographie (Salon de 1859). Beneath the gravity of theory and the prestige of philosophy, Baudelaire would have discerned a familiar vice: l’esprit français at its most triumphant—verbal ingenuity elevated into spectacle, linguistic cleverness mistaken for depth, and an audience eager to be astonished rather than transformed. This essay advances a deliberately anachronistic and polemical hypothesis. Reading French poststructuralism through Baudelaire’s critique of modern art, it argues that Baudelaire would have accused twentieth-century theorists and their readers of participating in the same econom...