Today, AI can produce answers, ideas and content faster than we can think. This talk explores what that actually means for human creativity now, and how our creative role is shifting compared to the past. Instead of asking whether AI replaces creators, it asks a deeper question: why do we still feel compelled to make things when machines can make almost anything?
The session looks at what happens to our minds when we only consume AI-generated content. It touches on cognitive overload, the risk of losing our creative muscles, and how constant automated output can weaken our ability to form original thoughts. It also explores the hidden value of human-made work in an age of automation, supported by interviews, research and conversations with creators who continue to stand out in their fields.
The talk will briefly consider the economic side of originality, and what shifts when authentic human work becomes rare. It will also offer gentle suggestions for creative habits and practices that help people stay imaginative in a world that makes it so easy not to create.
Overall, the talk invites the audience to rethink what creation represents today, and what might happen if we stop doing it.’
All my contents will be based on research and interviews or formal conversations with experts.

