The Thin Line: The Illusion of Knowledge in the Cognitive Era
Resumen
The Thin Line: The Illusion of Knowledge in the Cognitive Era interrogates the epistemic crisis of our time: a world saturated with information yet starved of understanding. Drawing on Edmund Gettier’s critique of “justified true belief” and John Searle’s Chinese Room argument, the essay reveals how the Cognitive Era has institutionalized a profound illusion—that fluency implies comprehension and correctness implies knowledge. Today’s cognitive technologies generate statistically plausible truths without causal or conscious connection to meaning, producing what the author terms a “collective Gettier problem” within a “global Chinese Room.” The article argues that while algorithms simulate intelligence with increasing elegance, they cannot embody understanding, which remains an irreducibly human act rooted in presence, humility, and ethical responsibility. The true danger lies not in artificial intelligence itself, but in the human willingness to outsource thinking—to confuse the convenience of instant answers with the labor of genuine inquiry. Invoking Nicholas of Cusa’s “learned ignorance,” the piece calls for a renewed commitment to uncertainty, reflection, and the fragile yet vital bond between truth and lived comprehension. In an age of luminous ignorance, wisdom endures not in those who are merely right, but in those who dare to doubt, linger, and seek meaning beyond data.
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