

276 - Guest: Michael Gerlich, Adaptability Thought Leader, part 1
11 snips Sep 29, 2025
Michael Gerlich, Head of the Center for Strategic Corporate Foresight and Sustainability, dives into the societal impacts of AI. He discusses how GenAI encourages cognitive offloading, especially among younger users, leading to reduced critical thinking. Gerlich draws intriguing comparisons between GenAI and traditional tools like calculators. He warns of the risk of losing individual voice and essential learning pathways, particularly in the workplace, while emphasizing that guided AI collaboration can enhance outcomes and critical thinking.
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GenAI Drives Cognitive Offloading
- Michael Gerlich found GenAI use usually causes cognitive offloading and reduces critical thinking.
- Younger and lower-educated users offload more and trust AI faster than older, educated users.
GenAI Replaces Thinking, Not Just Memory
- Gerlich distinguishes past offloading (books, calculators) from GenAI that provides final answers and replaces thinking.
- GenAI can be used constantly, unlike calculators, so it risks replacing broad thinking, not just memory.
Executives Admit Using GenAI Constantly
- In an executive course Gerlich asked who used ChatGPT and everyone raised their hand.
- Some participants admitted they use it for pretty much everything, illustrating pervasive reliance.