The emergence of Artificial Intelligence (AI) marks one of the most transformative periods inhuman history. As AI increasingly integrates into various facets of society, from decision-making algorithms to generative models capable of creative output, the boundaries of humanselfhood and identity are being redefined. The concept of self and identity has evolvedthroughout history. In ancient philosophy, figures like Socrates and Plato emphasized the souland reason as central to understanding the self. The Enlightenment era shifted this focus toindividual autonomy and rationality, epitomized in Descartes' cogito, "I think, therefore Iam." The 20th century introduced further complexity, with existentialists like Sartrehighlighting freedom and responsibility, and postmodern thinkers such as Foucault andDerrida deconstructing the self as a stable, unified entity. In this historical trajectory, identityhas often been framed in terms of human consciousness, social roles, and cultural narratives.However, the AI revolution demands a reexamination of these frameworks. AI technologieschallenge the anthropocentric view that human beings are the sole creators and interpreters ofmeaning. Advanced AI models like neural networks exhibit capabilities in patternrecognition, problem-solving, and even creative domains such as art and music. While thesemodels do not possess consciousness, their outputs often mimic human creativity andreasoning, blurring the distinction between human and machine agency. This raises profoundquestions: If machines can perform tasks traditionally associated with human ingenuity, whatremains uniquely human? The decentering of human exceptionalism forces a reconsiderationof the self as more than a repository of rationality and creativity. This paper shall explore thephilosophical implications of this transformation, focusing on how the AI revolutionchallenges traditional notions of self and identity.
Dr. Arun Garg (Sat,) studied this question.