How LLMs Are Reshaping Human Intelligence
? Charles Cormier
50X Founder / 100k Finisher / Biohacker / AI Podcaster / BodyBuilder / 3X Ironman -> striking 100+ sales meets/week.
The rise of Large Language Models isn't just changing our tools—it's fundamentally reshaping human cognition itself.
Here's what's happening beneath the surface:
1?? We're witnessing an unprecedented externalization of cognitive functions LLMs are becoming our external memory, reasoning engines, and creative partners. This isn't simply outsourcing tasks—it's creating a new symbiotic relationship between biological and artificial cognition.
2?? The nature of expertise is being rewritten When knowledge synthesis becomes instantaneous, the value shifts from what you know to how you direct, evaluate, and integrate AI-generated insights. The most valuable human skills aren't being replaced—they're evolving.
3?? We're developing a new form of distributed intelligence Rather than Neuralink's vision of brain-computer interfaces, we may be seeing something more profound: a fluid boundary between human and machine cognition that doesn't require invasive technology.
The most fascinating question isn't whether machines will become conscious, but how human consciousness is being transformed through this relationship.
Are we witnessing the early stages of humans becoming primarily "directive entities"—beings whose primary value is in our agency, creative direction, and moral judgment rather than our processing power?
This transformation has profound implications for how we define personhood, rights, and the boundaries of human identity. As our cognitive processes become increasingly distributed across biological and digital systems, our legal and philosophical frameworks will need to evolve.
The future may not be about uploading our minds to machines, but rather about developing new models of intelligence that transcend the biological/digital divide entirely.
What aspects of your thinking have you already externalized to AI, and how has it changed your cognitive processes?