Lately, I’ve noticed something unsettling: younger people I encounter — cashiers, students, and others — struggle to do relatively simple math in their heads. Even simple addition, much less the standard kind of calculating you’d do to leave a tip, seem to trip them up. Oddly, they often seem unembarrassed by it, suggesting it’s normal for their age cohort.
I’ll admit I hold a bit of a double standard here. Their similar inability to write in cursive doesn’t faze me, I think because it seems so much less practical a skill to know. Math is such a daily practical tool that I can’t help but feel they’re at a disadvantage without it.
I’m not pointing fingers at them, though. If anything, it’s unconscionable to me that these bright, capable individuals passed through years of schooling without adults emphasizing the enduring value of this skill. Yes, calculators are great. And yes, having them in school makes sense. But allowing the calculators to replace learning basic math? Where were the adults?
The parallel is striking — where calculators have systematically dulled numerical fluency, AI is most assuredly chiseling away at our ability to think and write independently. This doesn’t mean we stop using them. I, for one, am having amazing conversations with LLMs that allow me to do the kind of conversational research I’ve wanted to do my whole life. But let’s be real: we need to describe the calculator effect AI is having and thoughtfully address it for the benefit of upcoming generations.
In the 1960 film adaptation of The Time Machine, the time traveler arrives in a distant future where one group of people, the Eloi, have become so dependent on a machine-sustained world that they’ve lost the ability to think or question for themselves. This doesn’t feel so far-fetched anymore.
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