The twenty-first century has witnessed an unprecedented entanglement between human cognition and computational systems. This conceptual paper explores the philosophical, cognitive, and sociotechnical dimensions of the deepening inseparability between humans and computers in the digital age. Drawing on the Extended Mind Thesis, theories of human-computer symbiosis, and contemporary scholarship on cognitive offloading and digital well-being, we argue that the boundary between human agency and machine intelligence has become increasingly porous, and perhaps irreversibly so. Rather than framing this fusion as purely threatening or liberating, the paper advances a nuanced understanding that acknowledges both the augmentative promise and the ethical risks of this entanglement. We examine four interconnected themes: (1) the philosophical dissolution of the human-machine boundary; (2) the cognitive and psychological consequences of digital integration; (3) the sociotechnical reordering of identity and labour; and (4) the ethical imperatives that must govern this evolving relationship. The paper concludes by proposing a framework for cultivating a responsible human-computer symbiosis that preserves human dignity, autonomy, and moral agency.
Agamalafiya James Musa (Thu,) studied this question.