logo

Harbingers’ Magazine is a weekly online current affairs magazine written and edited by teenagers worldwide.

harbinger | noun

har·​bin·​ger | \ˈhär-bən-jər\

1. one that initiates a major change: a person or thing that originates or helps open up a new activity, method, or technology; pioneer.

2. something that foreshadows a future event : something that gives an anticipatory sign of what is to come.

cookie_image

We and our partners may store and access personal data such as cookies, device identifiers or other similar technologies on your device and process such data to personalise content and ads, provide social media features and analyse our traffic.

The Harbinger Prize 2025 is an essay competition for teenage journalists. Stay tuned for the 2026 edition introduction image

AI has spread across our lives, reshaping how we work and communicate.

Picture by: Pavel Danilyuk | Pexels

Article link copied.

Is AI eroding the humanities – and humanity itself?

author_bio
Matthew Ng in Hong Kong, China

16-year-old Matthew warns that there are great dangers as well as benefits from AI

Matthew Ng is the one of the winners of the Harbinger Prize 2025. This is his winning entry.

Artificial intelligence is undeniably a gamechanger for both young people and adults. With the help of AI, we’ve been able to aim for the highest of highs, in ways that human beings alone are simply incapable of doing. Its effect has been revolutionary, with many industries and enterprises embracing AI as if it were godsent.

From Amazon and Google to the UnitedHealth Group and Walmart, firms in the Fortune Global 500 list (an annual ranking of the 500 largest corporations in the US by revenue) have surely had to adapt to this new change or be eliminated.

As students, my peers and I are no exception to these drastic changes, as AI penetrates every aspect of our daily lives. For instance, the increasing popularity of generative chatbots such as ChatGPT, DeepSeek and Gemini has been met with heated debate in academia over its controversial use of copyrighted content, as well as the risk it poses to academic integrity. Concerns have also been raised over its possible enabling of plagiarism among students who over-rely on AI to complete tasks and assignments.

Students in the humanities, in subjects such as literature, history or philosophy, are highly likely to take advantage of chatbot assistance given AI’s ability to formulate ideas based on existing information, which is what these disciplines require.

Because of that, I and many of my classmates feel as if we are increasingly disposable; that our talents and skillsets are unable to reach the new standard set by the all-powerful AI. Very often, we feel inadequate because we formulate ideas slower than our artificial counterparts.

The emerging ‘study tools’ that use AI to create resources such as flashcards and quizzes to help with active learning and revision, especially existing platforms such as Quizlet and Notion, are immensely popular among my classmates.

While most people agree that, at its current stage of development, AI has mostly improved their productivity rather than harmed it, we must ask ourselves, where do we draw the line with our use of AI?

Relationship between science and the arts

It doesn’t help that there has been a greater push in education everywhere for STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics) subjects as a strategy to encourage students in the world of AI – this really does not address our concerns and only exacerbates them further.

Many US colleges, including the University of Chicago, have announced that they are cutting the number of liberal arts admissions, due to the termination of federal grants for such programmes. This has also happened at Fudan University in Shanghai, a long-time stronghold of the arts and humanities among China’s top schools. This trend of slashing admissions is expected to continue globally.

While AI is not solely to blame for this, we must remain acutely vigilant of its impact on academia. Higher education has always prided itself on the range of disciplines it offers, as institutions seek to diversify through students from different demographics – but I doubt if that will continue to be the case.

Society’s growing preference for the sciences is the tip of the iceberg – the latter is the wider problem of an imbalance between the two disciplines. The sciences and the arts have always been an intersection; they aren’t mutually exclusive, but complement each other.

The critical and ethical aspects of philosophy and related domains have long shaped human research, helping to facilitate the seeking of new knowledge and discoveries. It is this nuanced framework that provides greater insights into humanity, and our future progress.

Not only does the prioritising of STEM harm the humanities, but it also hinders the development of science itself. Reducing the ways in which we study human experience will certainly lead to less holistic thinking, reasoning and criticism, which are all vital to understanding the complexities of our world.

Dangers of AI

Humanity’s embrace of AI, like any sort of advancement, has repercussions. Among them is our over-reliance on computer systems. If AI continues to replace our cognitive abilities to produce thoughts and formulate them into tangible, decipherable content, our efforts lose a sense of purpose.

I mean, why bother spending hours brainstorming an idea for a written piece, when AI can do it all for you, not just quicker but better?

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Harbingers’ Magazine (@hrb.mag)

Most of my peers, including myself, have found it challenging to complete essays without the help of AI, as if our brains are unable to do it on their own. ‘Only use it to fix grammar and structure’, we keep reminding ourselves, as if we don’t ‘unintentionally’ plagiarise entire ideas from chatbots.

In a tragic paradox, we have used a core part of our own humanity – arts and culture – to engineer a tool beyond human, one that casts a growing shadow over our lives. It is simply reckless for us to take out the very arts and humanities that define our humanness, by giving space to an artificial creation that has no intention of stopping evolving.

By allowing this to happen, we risk losing the very essence of humanity – our ability to create and imagine the most wondrous of things and possibilities.

The harm engendered by AI in its current form still seems subtle, but we shouldn’t be surprised to see human artistry eliminated as people become more and more reliant on AI assistance for dealing with every task. With the very cultural foundation of humanity under risk, we must rethink our welcoming of AI with open arms, and whether it would be wiser to restrain and curb its growth.

Every child dreams of being good at something, to strive and thrive. If everything could be replaced by AI, can this dream still live on?

Will our generation, and those to come, still have the liberty to dream big and fly high despite this technological revolution?

Creativity has always been our collective strength, and for that we should harness it to reach our full potential. This isn’t a declaration of war on AI, but a chance for us, young people, to reflect and attempt to strike a true balance between technology and humanity. We must ensure that AI isn’t just a product that displays our mastery over nature, but rather a helpful assistant to humanity.

Written by:

author_bio

Matthew Ng

Contributor

Hong Kong, China

Born in 2009 in Hong Kong, Matthew is currently studying for the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme (IBDP). He is deeply passionate about social politics, and has plans to study law, international relations or political science at university. He is also a self-proclaimed book worm and cinema enthusiast.

Matthew speaks English, Cantonese and Mandarin.

AI & tech

🌍 Join the World's Youngest Newsroom—Create a Free Account

Sign up to save your favourite articles, get personalised recommendations, and stay informed about stories that Gen Z worldwide actually care about. Plus, subscribe to our newsletter for the latest stories delivered straight to your inbox. 📲

Login/Register