3964153
Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Funatec
Orgão: Pref. Piracuruca-PI
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Funatec
Orgão: Pref. Piracuruca-PI
Provas:
Artificial Intelligence and the Quiet Rewriting of Human Routine
Artificial Intelligence has been described in countless wayssome call it a convenience, others a threat, and a few
insist it is merely the latest chapter in humanity’s old habit of outsourcing effort. Yet, beneath the dramatic forecasts and the
buzzwords, AI seems to be performing a quieter, more subversive task: it is rewriting the texture of everyday life, often without
asking for permission.
Most people do not wake up thinking about algorithms, but algorithms wake up thinking about themmapping their
routes, anticipating their questions, filtering their choices before they even notice a choice was available. This silent mediation
does not necessarily diminish human autonomy; in certain cases, it sharpens it, freeing time and mental energy for pursuits that
once felt like luxuries. Paradoxically, by delegating some decisions to a machine, individuals may finally reclaim the space to make
the decisions that matter.
Among the many voices in this debate, one observation remains underrated: AI is not replacing human beings so
much as mirroring them. The technology amplifies intentions, good or bad, ethical or messy, visionary or short-sighted. A system
trained to assist can become generous; one trained on cruelty can become cruel. This reveals an inconvenient but liberating truthAI
does not create our moral landscape; it inherits it.
And then there is the relational side of the phenomenon. Some people confess, half-embarrassed, that they speak to
AI tools the way they once spoke to a wise friend: with candor, expectation, sometimes frustration, sometimes relief. Strangely,
the machine answers. Not perfectly, not infallibly, but attentivelyan attentiveness that humans often forget to offer one another in
the rush of contemporary life. Whether this represents progress or a peculiar loneliness disguised as innovation is a debate still
very much alive.
What seems undeniable is that AI, far from being a distant futuristic concept, has become a companion in humanity’s
daily improvisation. It is not here to mimic our intelligence but to challenge our assumptions about what intelligence ever was. And
perhaps, in doing so, it reminds us of something unexpectedly humble: that the future is not written by the smartest machine, but
by the kindest human capable of choosing what to build next.