Forgotten Dairies
AI Is Not Replacing Professionals; It Is Refining Them -By Isaac Asabor
Condemning AI is not a defense of professionalism, it is a resistance to progress. The 21st century is defined by rapid technological evolution. The world is moving forward, whether we approve or not. The real question is not whether AI should be used, but how well we learn to use it. Because in the end, the most dangerous professional is not the one using AI—it’s the one who refuses to evolve.
Every generation greets new technology with suspicion. The printing press was accused of corrupting memory. The calculator was said to weaken mathematical ability. The internet was feared to erode attention spans. Today, artificial intelligence (AI) has become the latest target of this old argument: that professionals who rely on it are somehow lazy, less competent, or cutting corners. That claim does not just miss the point, it fundamentally misunderstands how tools have always shaped human progress.
AI does not do the job for professionals; it assists them. That distinction matters. Across dozens of professions, journalism, law, medicine, engineering, design, education, AI functions as an accelerator, not a replacement. A journalist still needs judgment, context, and ethical awareness to shape a story. A lawyer still needs deep knowledge of the law to interpret and apply information. A doctor still needs training and experience to make life-or-death decisions. AI can support these processes, but it cannot own them.
In fact, the idea that AI makes people lazy collapses under scrutiny. If anything, using AI effectively demands more skill, not less. The ability to prompt AI properly, asking the right questions, refining outputs, verifying accuracy, is a discipline of its own. And here is the uncomfortable truth for critics: if someone lacks competence in their field, they will struggle to use AI well. The quality of AI output is heavily dependent on the quality of the human input guiding it. Put bluntly: a weak professional does not become strong by using AI. They just produce faster mistakes.
At this juncture, it is germane to recall that there is a historical parallel to this context as the fear of tools or technological advancement is nothing new. This is not the first time society has wrestled with this kind of anxiety. When search engines first emerged, people argued they would make individuals intellectually lazy. Instead, they expanded access to knowledge and raised expectations for what people could know and do. Before that, the transition from manual to electric typewriters triggered similar complaints, yet no one today argues that typing faster made writers less intelligent.
Go back further: when the printing press was invented, scholars worried that the ability to mass-produce books would weaken memory and oral tradition. Yet the press democratized knowledge, fueling the Renaissance and the Enlightenment. When calculators entered classrooms, critics claimed students would lose the ability to do arithmetic. Instead, calculators freed learners to focus on higher-level mathematical reasoning.
The pattern is clear: every new tool is first condemned as a shortcut, then embraced as a standard, and finally recognized as a catalyst for progress. AI is simply the latest chapter in this recurring story.
To buttress the foregoing views, it is expedient to opine that doctors are not replaced by AI diagnostic tools. Instead, they are refined. AI can scan thousands of medical images in seconds, flagging anomalies that might escape the human eye. But the final judgment, whether a shadow on a scan is cancer, whether a treatment plan is appropriate, rests with the physician. AI accelerates detection; it does not replace expertise.
Lawyers use AI to sift through mountains of case law, contracts, and precedents. This saves time, but it does not eliminate the need for interpretation. The art of advocacy, the nuance of negotiation, the ethical responsibility of representation, these remain human domains. AI is a paralegal on steroids, not a courtroom advocate.
In my profession, Journalism, reporters can use AI to transcribe interviews, analyze large datasets, or even draft preliminary summaries. But storytelling, framing, and ethical responsibility are irreplaceable. A machine can generate words; only a journalist can craft meaning. Far from making journalism lazy, AI raises the bar: audiences now expect faster reporting, deeper analysis, and broader coverage.
Looking from a different perspective, it is not out of place to say that teachers can use AI to personalize learning, adapting materials to each student’s pace and style. But teaching is not just information transfer, it is mentorship, encouragement, and human connection. AI can refine lesson plans, but it cannot inspire curiosity or empathy. The teacher remains central.
Critics often overlook that AI is not a “push-button” solution. It requires skill to use effectively. Prompt engineering, the art of asking the right questions, is itself a discipline. Verification is essential: professionals must cross-check AI outputs against trusted sources. Contextual judgment is irreplaceable: knowing when to trust the machine and when to override it.
In this sense, AI is like a musical instrument. A violin does not make someone a musician; it amplifies the skill of the player. In the hands of a novice, it produces noise. In the hands of a master, it produces art. AI is no different: it magnifies competence but cannot create it.
So, we have to ask a simple question: is it wise to reject tools that improve efficiency?
Refusing to use AI in today’s world is not a badge of honor. It is closer to insisting on trekking long distances when automobiles are readily available. You might feel virtuous, but you are simply slower, and eventually, irrelevant. Efficiency is not laziness; it is progress. Professionals who embrace AI are not cutting corners; they are sharpening them.
At a deeper level, the fear of AI reflects anxiety about human identity. If machines can do what we do, what makes us unique? The answer lies in creativity, judgment, and values. Tools have always extended human capacity, but they have never replaced human meaning. A hammer does not replace a carpenter; it empowers one. A telescope does not replace an astronomer; it refines one. AI is simply another extension of human ingenuity.
The philosopher Marshall McLuhan once said, “We shape our tools, and thereafter our tools shape us.” AI is shaping us, not by erasing our roles, but by redefining them. Professionals are not disappearing; they are evolving.
The reality is this: AI enhances competence. It allows professionals to process information faster, explore ideas more broadly, and execute tasks more efficiently. It does not replace expertise; it amplifies it. Those who embrace it thoughtfully gain an edge. Those who reject it risk falling behind.
Condemning AI is not a defense of professionalism, it is a resistance to progress. The 21st century is defined by rapid technological evolution. The world is moving forward, whether we approve or not. The real question is not whether AI should be used, but how well we learn to use it. Because in the end, the most dangerous professional is not the one using AI—it’s the one who refuses to evolve.
AI is not replacing professionals; it is refining them. It is sharpening judgment, accelerating efficiency, and expanding possibility. The critics who call it laziness are repeating an old mistake: confusing progress with decline. History shows that tools do not weaken humanity; they strengthen it. The printing press, the calculator, the internet were feared, all were embraced, all became indispensable. AI will follow the same path. The professionals who thrive will be those who learn to wield it wisely. The ones who resist will not be guardians of tradition; they will be relics of stagnation. The future belongs to those who evolve. And AI is not the end of professionalism; it is its refinement.