Summarizer

Cognitive Effects of LLM Use

← Back to Claude Code On-the-Go

The discussion reveals a profound anxiety that LLMs are inducing cognitive atrophy by encouraging users to "offload" their critical thinking in exchange for immediate convenience. This shift fosters an "always-on" work culture that many find exhausting, creating a painful dissonance between the tools' daily utility and the fear that they are "domesticating" the human mind. Commenters warn that this mental reliance risks a broader societal decline into a "zombie-like" state, where the ease of automated answers replaces the grit of independent thought. Ultimately, the consensus reflects a wary realization that as we shape these powerful AI tools, they are simultaneously reshaping our mental landscapes and long-term cognitive health.

5 comments tagged with this topic

View on HN · Topics
Pandora's box is open; we're moving towards a world where white collar workers will be working 24/7 and they'll be expected to do so. It won't matter if I'm washing the dishes, walking the dog, driving to the supermarket, picking up my kids from school. I'll always be switched on, on my phone, continuously talking to an LLM, delivering questionable features and building meaningless products, destroying in the process the environment my kids are going to have to grow in. I'm a heavy LLM user. On a daily basis, I find LLMs extremely useful both professionally and personally. But the cognitive dissonance I feel when I think about what this means over a longer time horizon is really painful.
View on HN · Topics
>But the cognitive dissonance I feel when I think about what this means over a longer time horizon is really painful. Excluding work (where granted, some companies are dictating the use of llms) and trying not to sound uncaring or disrespectful, but have you thought about not using llms for everything and using the old grey cells? Not having answers to every whimsical thought might be a good thing. It's very easy to relax the brain (and be lazy tbh) with llms and it's scary to think what will happen in the next 4 years in terms of personal cognitive ability (or as a society). e.g. I've noticed (and probably most have here) that the world is full of zombies glued to their phones. Looking over their shoulder (e.g. on a train, yeah it's a bit rude but I'm the curious type), they are doom scrolling or playing waste-time games (insert that boomer meme in Las Vegas with slot machines [0]). I try to use my phone as little as possible (especially for dog walks) and feel better for it, allowing me to daydream and let boredom take over. Maybe I'm fortunate to be able to do this (gen-x: having grown up before cell phones/internet), but worth stating in case anyone wants to try. [0]: https://tenor.com/view/casino-oldpeople-oldpeopleonslots-slo...
View on HN · Topics
There is evidence that LLM usage is actually making people dumber. I'm not sure if they've figured out the cause/effect or not but that's enough evidence for me to avoid them if I can. They can be useful for some stuff but I found myself offloading my thinking a little too frequently. Anyways if we do get to the point where you need to use LLMs to write code, I can make a decision then, but for now I don't feel the need to adopt agentic workflows and I think the people who don't will be better cognitively positioned in the future.
View on HN · Topics
The LLMs have successfully domesticated humans.
View on HN · Topics
"We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us." - Winston Churchill