AI was always a tool. It is a tool. And it always will be a tool
If you use AI to brainstorm, your brain is not
storming
The Great Debate | III BA English
12th February 2025
Report by Ms. Lekhaa MeenakshiSundaram
The topic of the day: Does AI scuttle or enhance creativity and critical thinking. The class divided themselves into two teams.
“Mind Wins” claiming that AI scuttles creativity and critical thinking, and “Smart Work” claiming that AI enhances creativity and critical thinking.
To everyone’s surprise, only two people in the class were on team “Smart Work.”
The photographer for the debate was Catherine and the time keeper was Libby. Lekhaa recorded the proceedings.
Team Mind Wins won the coin toss and opted to dispute. Gouri, from team Smart Work started the debate, talking about how AI began. She said that “AI was always a tool. It is a tool. And it always will be a tool.” She said that we don’t know how to use it properly, which is why problems arise. She stated that no one, including the companies that create AI systems say that it is replacing human intelligence.
Ilfa, for team MW, disputed this when she spoke about generative AI. She asked why there are so many artists talking about how their work was stolen by generative AI. She said that people are not willing to think about the ethics surrounding plagiarism. She said that art has been “commodified” and used to build tools further. She also said that if people stop to think and talk to other people, they can figure out the things that they need AI to do. For example, if one wants to know what places to visit in a place, say Chennai, they can do so by talking to the people around them.
Thang, for team SM, asked whether Ilfa –
or people in general – had the time to go figure things out in person. Even if
they did, he asked if they really would go talk in person, or ask Google, or
call other people. He believed that they would use Google or a similar search
engine, as it is the best way to find places. He claimed that indirectly,
people who claim to dislike AI rely on it.
Shauna, for team MW, said that the best place to actually see a place is to go there. She said that human experience can explain things that AI cannot. She said that “AI is a tool for submission or subjugation, which obstructs our thinking process.” She also came back to the argument that AI takes artists’ work and turns it into something else.
Gouri, for team SM, challenged Shauna – and the others – to try to live without AI or the internet for one day. She said that technology structures society and that we need it for societal survival and progress. We cannot move on without technology, and a huge part of technology is AI. However, behind it is a human working for the future of the society.
Shauna, for team MW, countered with the difference between AI and technology. What makes AI different is that it is artificial, not backed by human intelligence. She said that we can not progress without water to drink and the drinking water is being used to cool down the AI systems. She agreed that the society needs technology to progress, but what if there is no world to progress on?
Thang, for team SM, reasoned that if AI is a threat, why do global powers depend on and fight for AI. He talked about how AI could be a destructive weapon. Then, he said that AI can be a threat or be good in warfare, and that is both a threat and redeemer. It depends on how it is used.
Shauna, for team MS, said that global superpowers are afraid of AI because such systems pose a threat, referring to the Epstein files. Then, she said that they support something destructive, like AI, just like they have supported other outrageous things in the past.
Gouri, for team SM, said that AI is a tool, but it depends on ethics and the person using it. Anything can be used in a bad way. She said that everyone uses AI, but asked if that puts a lid on creativity.
Shauna, for team MW, countered saying that an ultimatum was needed. AI as we now know it uses tons of water and harms the environment. Instead, there are AI systems that run on data, and that to expand such systems would be the way forward for the good of the environment.
Ann, for team MW, added that AI does not have a mind of its own. She talked about Intellectual theft and the consequences of stealing ideas that AI can not comprehend. She said that people are blatantly stealing ideas and styles. Similarly, Humanize AI (AI Humanizers) do not really humanize things, but instead they are what AI thinks a human thinks like.
Gouri, for team SM, talked about emerging intellectual property rights. She said that they can be used to counter the negative aspects of AI that Ann talked about. She reiterated that AI is a tool and assistant and that rights can be protected based on how people use AI
Megha, for team MW, revealed the harsh truth that our legal system is very slow. She said that many more important problems are not solved, and that those rights do not work. By the time the verdict in the court comes out, one’s idea is already stolen and there is going back. She said that in an ideal world, AI could be an assistant, but that it is not being used as such.
Eshal, continuing for team MW, talked about the damages caused by AI, such as picture morphing. She reiterated that we do not live in an ideal world. Often, the damage is done and people are suffering. Even if justice is served, it is still out on the internet and tarnishing people’s reputations. She said that the benefits do not outweigh the damages.
Gouri, for team SM, talked about free will. She said “if you are scared of it, just don’t use it.” She said that AI is a learning system, which will obviously take things from the internet. She said that we should be vigilant. Then, she said that if AI is so dangerous, we should use our free will and use it in a non-dangerous way.
Catherine, for team MW, said that the whole point of laws is because of the misuse of AI. She said that intellectual property rights have not caught up to ethics and that subjective morality comes into play when it comes to free will, not societal ethics. Without that boundary, it is hard to understand what’s right and what’s wrong. She said that only a small portion of people use free will correctly.
Ilfa, continuing for team MW, said that the
creation of art is political, not small scale. It reflects the society we live
in and that we should want to live in a world filled with creativity. Without
the process of learning, unlearning, and relearning, we hinder human empathy.
She said that AI does not do this and that it’s recreation of art does not
represent society.
Gouri, for team SM, countered that AI is not everything. AI cannot completely disappear. It can help as an assistant and to brainstorm. She said that it is not our whole life, but it will be a part of life.
Shauna, for team MW, concluded saying that “If you use AI to brainstorm, your brain is not storming. For critical thinking to work, you need to think yourself.”
PS: You may want to look up an exciting debate on a similar topic, in the II MA English Class, three years ago, HERE on our blog.





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