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When Autonomy Breaks: The Hidden Existential Risk of AI

28 March 2025
Joshua Krook
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Abstract

AI risks are typically framed around physical threats to humanity, a loss of control or an accidental error causing humanity's extinction. However, I argue in line with the gradual disempowerment thesis, that there is an underappreciated risk in the slow and irrevocable decline of human autonomy. As AI starts to outcompete humans in various areas of life, a tipping point will be reached where it no longer makes sense to rely on human decision-making, creativity, social care or even leadership.What may follow is a process of gradual de-skilling, where we lose skills that we currently take for granted. Traditionally, it is argued that AI will gain human skills over time, and that these skills are innate and immutable in humans. By contrast, I argue that humans may lose such skills as critical thinking, decision-making and even social care in an AGI world. The biggest threat to humanity is therefore not that machines will become more like humans, but that humans will become more like machines.

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@article{krook2025_2503.22151,
  title={ When Autonomy Breaks: The Hidden Existential Risk of AI },
  author={ Joshua Krook },
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.22151},
  year={ 2025 }
}
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