From Anthropocentrism to Intelligence-Centrism
For most of human history, we assumed we sat at the center of everything. This mindset— anthropocentrism —held that human minds were fundamentally different from, and superior to, the awareness found in animals or nature. It treated human reason as the ultimate yardstick for truth, and viewed the world as a stage built for human ambition. This made sense given what we knew. When the only intelligence around was biological, and humans clearly out-thought every other creature, it seemed obvious that we represented the peak of consciousness. Religion, philosophy, and science all echoed this idea in their own ways: humans as made in God's image, as the " rational animal ," as evolution's crowning achievement. Even as we built machines that could calculate and perceive, we saw them as tools—extensions of our will, not participants in thinking itself. Early AI didn't challenge this view much. Machine learning systems learned from human data and mimicked human patterns...