As someone who works in education, I often think about how AI is changing the way we learn and teach. Artificial intelligence has become part of our daily routine, from helping us write to generating art or analysing data. It makes things faster and more convenient, but I sometimes wonder if it also makes us forget what being human really means. Professor Osman Bakar, in his recent essay Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Creative Thinking: A Reflection from Islamic Perspective (2025), raises the same concern. He reminds us that the question is not how powerful AI can become, but how wisely we decide to use it.
He writes that AI, like all forms of knowledge, carries both benefit and harm. It can stimulate creativity and make learning more accessible, but it can also weaken our capacity for deep thought, especially when we let machines do the thinking for us. He shares Sweden’s experience of moving education from printed textbooks to digital tools, which coincided with a decline in reading comprehension and overall student well-being. The lesson is clear: technology is useful, but it is not neutral. It shapes how we think and who we become.
In Islam, knowledge is also never neutral. The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) taught us to seek ‘ilm naf‘, or beneficial knowledge, and to seek refuge from unbeneficial knowledge. This means that knowledge becomes valuable only when it improves the human being, both morally and spiritually. Professor Osman argues that AI should be guided by this same principle. It must help us grow in wisdom and compassion, not just in productivity or speed.
He also reminds us to keep AI in its proper place. The machine can process information, but it cannot determine what is good or right. Only humans, guided by intellect (‘aql) and spirit (ruh), can make that judgment. AI should therefore assist us in developing creativity and critical thinking, not replace them. If we rely too heavily on technology to think for us, we risk losing our sense of purpose and accountability.
Another point he makes is about balance. While digital tools can enrich education, they should not completely replace traditional and physical forms of learning. Reading a printed book, having a real conversation, or reflecting quietly on what we have learned are still vital experiences that shape our character. Over-digitalisation may make learning more efficient, but it can also make it shallow. Without space for empathy, humility, and reflection, education loses its human soul.
The heart of Professor Osman’s idea is the unity between intellect and spirituality. True creativity, he says, happens when the mind and the soul work together. Thinking without spirituality becomes cold and mechanical. Spirituality without thinking can become blind and directionless. When both are integrated, creativity becomes meaningful, ethical, and transformative. In that sense, AI can be a tool that helps us think better, as long as we use it with moral awareness and spiritual grounding.
For Muslim educators, researchers, and students, this has real implications. We need to design AI applications that serve higher goals. AI should help us address issues that truly matter, such as improving public health, promoting justice, caring for the environment, and nurturing compassion. It should not exist simply to make us faster or wealthier. Ethical principles drawn from maqasid al-shariah (the objectives of Islamic law) should guide how we create and use technology, ensuring it protects life, intellect, faith, lineage, and property.
At the end of his essay, Professor Osman quotes a hadith stating that the world will not end until no one remembers God. It is a profound reminder that remembrance of the Divine is the foundation of human existence. Without that remembrance, all our progress loses meaning. In the same way, if AI advances but humanity forgets its spiritual purpose, we will end up with brilliant machines and empty hearts.
Perhaps the real question for our time is not how intelligent AI can become, but how wise we can remain while using it. Technology will continue to evolve, but our task is to ensure it serves what is good, just, and beneficial. As Professor Osman beautifully reminds us, knowledge must be both true and good. AI, too, must follow that path.
So, as generative tools like ChatGPT become part of our daily thinking and writing, how can we really adapt them to nurture not only intelligence but also conscience and compassion?
Reference
Bakar, O. (2025). Artificial intelligence and the future of creative thinking: A reflection from Islamic perspective. In The Muslim 500, 2025 Edition. The Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Centre. https://themuslim500.com/2025-edition/guest-contributions-2025/artificial-intelligence-and-the-future-of-creative-thinking-a-reflection-from-islamic-perspective/
