Thinking Fast, Slow, and Artificial

In 2011, Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman published his bestselling book “Thinking, Fast and Slow.” In it, he describes the two modes of thinking we all operate in: System 1, which is fast and intuitive, and System 2, which is slow and deliberate. Now, in a new paper, Steven D. Shaw and Gideon Nave from The Wharton School argue that AI introduced a third mode of thinking:

People increasingly consult generative artificial intelligence (AI) while reasoning. As AI becomes embedded in daily thought, what becomes of human judgment? We introduce Tri-System Theory, extending dual-process accounts of reasoning by positing System 3: artificial cognition that operates outside the brain. System 3 can supplement or supplant internal processes, introducing novel cognitive pathways.

And, as you would expect, with it comes a whole host of questions: “System 3 reframes human reasoning and may reshape autonomy and accountability in the age of AI.” The study is worth reading…

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Pascal Finette @radical