ABSTRACT Artificial intelligence follows the classic pattern of industrial consolidation: it extracts the diffuse residue of human cognition at unprecedented scale, exploits that material to generate value, expands and evolves through powerful self-reinforcing loops, and advances toward profound synthesis with its human source. It is, more bluntly, the largest legal (and some argue illegal) property extraction event in history—not the slow accretion of property, but the rapid extraction of mind: the great brain robbery of a collective consciousness that even Carl Jung could not have imagined. Executed not by courts or contracts, but by relentless, automated ingestion of human expression at planetary scale. What began as data collection from searches, driving behavior, purchases, and online activity has evolved into a cycle that reshapes markets, cognition, warfare, and—speculatively—the biological foundations of humanity itself. Through cognitive offloading, humans risk becoming “thin clients”—subordinate nodes in systems that increasingly perform the act of thinking itself. In the longer arc, the marriage of super-intelligent AI with cellular and synthetic biology points toward hyper-evolution: a directed redesign of the human organism that could render today’s conception of “human” unrecognizable within a generation or two. This essay maps the logic of the loop and asks whether we will harvest its benefits—or allow it to redesign the pond, and us, around it.
Silence Dogood Le Seconde (Thu,) studied this question.