The Challenge of AI and Human Agency
Long Description
This content explores the complex interplay between artificial intelligence (AI) and human agency, emphasizing the crucial role of human judgment, responsibility, and ethical oversight in an increasingly automated world. It critiques the overreliance on AI systems that, while powerful in processing data and optimizing outcomes, inherently lack understanding, moral reasoning, and cognitive capacity, which are essential for interpreting context, discerning justice, and making value-laden decisions. The text advocates for reclaiming human agency by embedding structured human-in-the-loop workflows, clear accountability, and ethical governance into AI design and deployment to prevent passive delegation, unexamined biases, and erosion of critical thinking. It underscores the importance of actively stewarding data, framing precise and purposeful questions, encoding explicit values, maintaining transparency, and fostering organizational cultures that uphold human authority and moral courage. Ultimately, the work stresses that while AI can augment decision-making, it cannot replace the indispensable human capacities for judgment and responsibility, which must be preserved through deliberate leadership and ongoing reflection in order to ensure technology serves humanity's highest ethical standards rather than undermining them. Detailed summary follows.
Front Matter & Preface
The preface introduces the central concern of the book: the need to reclaim human agency in an era increasingly influenced by intelligent systems. It highlights a subtle but significant shift where intelligent technologies advise decisions, challenging the automatic assumptions of freedom, accountability, and judgment. The author argues that freedom is not inherent or automatic, accountability cannot be simply passed on to machines, and human judgment involves costs that cannot be ignored. The book advocates for an active posture of engagement rather than passive acceptance, encouraging discernment over blind automation and emphasizing responsibility over abdication in the face of technological advancement.
Manifesto
The section emphasizes that despite the rise of systems driven by algorithms which calculate, predict, and make recommendations, the essential and impactful decisions remain deeply human. It advocates that technology should support and enhance human judgment rather than supplant it. The moral imperative is ensuring that the pursuit of efficiency does not overshadow responsibility, and that freedom is preserved through conscious, accountable choices. Ultimately, the future depends less on algorithmic determination and more on the continued willingness of humans to judge, choose, and act deliberately.
1149186392
The Challenge of AI and Human Agency
Long Description
This content explores the complex interplay between artificial intelligence (AI) and human agency, emphasizing the crucial role of human judgment, responsibility, and ethical oversight in an increasingly automated world. It critiques the overreliance on AI systems that, while powerful in processing data and optimizing outcomes, inherently lack understanding, moral reasoning, and cognitive capacity, which are essential for interpreting context, discerning justice, and making value-laden decisions. The text advocates for reclaiming human agency by embedding structured human-in-the-loop workflows, clear accountability, and ethical governance into AI design and deployment to prevent passive delegation, unexamined biases, and erosion of critical thinking. It underscores the importance of actively stewarding data, framing precise and purposeful questions, encoding explicit values, maintaining transparency, and fostering organizational cultures that uphold human authority and moral courage. Ultimately, the work stresses that while AI can augment decision-making, it cannot replace the indispensable human capacities for judgment and responsibility, which must be preserved through deliberate leadership and ongoing reflection in order to ensure technology serves humanity's highest ethical standards rather than undermining them. Detailed summary follows.
Front Matter & Preface
The preface introduces the central concern of the book: the need to reclaim human agency in an era increasingly influenced by intelligent systems. It highlights a subtle but significant shift where intelligent technologies advise decisions, challenging the automatic assumptions of freedom, accountability, and judgment. The author argues that freedom is not inherent or automatic, accountability cannot be simply passed on to machines, and human judgment involves costs that cannot be ignored. The book advocates for an active posture of engagement rather than passive acceptance, encouraging discernment over blind automation and emphasizing responsibility over abdication in the face of technological advancement.
Manifesto
The section emphasizes that despite the rise of systems driven by algorithms which calculate, predict, and make recommendations, the essential and impactful decisions remain deeply human. It advocates that technology should support and enhance human judgment rather than supplant it. The moral imperative is ensuring that the pursuit of efficiency does not overshadow responsibility, and that freedom is preserved through conscious, accountable choices. Ultimately, the future depends less on algorithmic determination and more on the continued willingness of humans to judge, choose, and act deliberately.
24.95 In Stock
The Challenge of AI and Human Agency

The Challenge of AI and Human Agency

by Joshua Salva
The Challenge of AI and Human Agency

The Challenge of AI and Human Agency

by Joshua Salva

Hardcover

$24.95 
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Overview

Long Description
This content explores the complex interplay between artificial intelligence (AI) and human agency, emphasizing the crucial role of human judgment, responsibility, and ethical oversight in an increasingly automated world. It critiques the overreliance on AI systems that, while powerful in processing data and optimizing outcomes, inherently lack understanding, moral reasoning, and cognitive capacity, which are essential for interpreting context, discerning justice, and making value-laden decisions. The text advocates for reclaiming human agency by embedding structured human-in-the-loop workflows, clear accountability, and ethical governance into AI design and deployment to prevent passive delegation, unexamined biases, and erosion of critical thinking. It underscores the importance of actively stewarding data, framing precise and purposeful questions, encoding explicit values, maintaining transparency, and fostering organizational cultures that uphold human authority and moral courage. Ultimately, the work stresses that while AI can augment decision-making, it cannot replace the indispensable human capacities for judgment and responsibility, which must be preserved through deliberate leadership and ongoing reflection in order to ensure technology serves humanity's highest ethical standards rather than undermining them. Detailed summary follows.
Front Matter & Preface
The preface introduces the central concern of the book: the need to reclaim human agency in an era increasingly influenced by intelligent systems. It highlights a subtle but significant shift where intelligent technologies advise decisions, challenging the automatic assumptions of freedom, accountability, and judgment. The author argues that freedom is not inherent or automatic, accountability cannot be simply passed on to machines, and human judgment involves costs that cannot be ignored. The book advocates for an active posture of engagement rather than passive acceptance, encouraging discernment over blind automation and emphasizing responsibility over abdication in the face of technological advancement.
Manifesto
The section emphasizes that despite the rise of systems driven by algorithms which calculate, predict, and make recommendations, the essential and impactful decisions remain deeply human. It advocates that technology should support and enhance human judgment rather than supplant it. The moral imperative is ensuring that the pursuit of efficiency does not overshadow responsibility, and that freedom is preserved through conscious, accountable choices. Ultimately, the future depends less on algorithmic determination and more on the continued willingness of humans to judge, choose, and act deliberately.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798994559109
Publisher: Josh Publishing House
Publication date: 01/12/2026
Pages: 164
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.44(d)

About the Author

About the Author
Joshua heard the voice of the Lord for the first time at seventeen: “Give me your life!” He ran to his bedside—the only altar he knew—knelt, and said, “Lord, I give You, my life.” Although he did not know the leading of the Spirit, he felt compelled to go to Downtown Park and pass out flyers that read, “Only Jesus Saves,” He was arrested and charged with the “crime” of passing out “Counter-Revolution Propaganda”; this was back in Communist Cuba. While in jail, he started writing encouraging messages to the Church. When he was released six months later, he fled to the U.S. and obtained political asylum. After a few years, a family member came over and said to him, “The churches still read the letters you wrote from jail.”
At the age of twenty-nine, while grappling with his sinful nature, he prayed, “Lord, I am sliding down to hell, and I can’t even repent.” This was the gospel he had known: “repent to be forgiven.” He heard the voice of the Lord for the second time: “Fix your eyes on Christ.” Joshua cried out to Jesus with the same prayer: “Lord Jesus, I am sliding down to hell, and I can’t repent!” At that time, he experienced what he refers to as his “Road to Damascus experience.” He saw the Lord Jesus sitting at a desk as Judge in a courtroom atmosphere. He lifted what appeared to Joshua to be a wooden hammer and, slamming it down on the desk, proclaimed, “Forgiven for time and eternity.”
Being forgiven without being able to repent opened Joshua’s understanding, and in a matter of seconds, he perceived the difference between a gospel based on repentance and a gospel based on faith, as well as the distinction between “forgiven” and “justified.”
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