Contemplating the Fallout of An Industry Careering Toward Achieving AI Consciousness

In a recent interview on The Globe and Mail (April 11, 2026), Taylor Owen asked author Michael Pollan, author of A World Appears, a question that has been on my mind for a while:

I understand trying to build [artificial] intelligence—there’s money in that. But why do they want to build consciousness?

Pollan gave two reasons that he’d heard the most often: 1) “a purely super-intelligent machine would have no compassion and a conscious one is more likely to have a moral compass.” Which reads like an excuse. 2) The second reason Pollan gave was the Promethean spirit: “you would be like a god if you could make a conscious machine.”

Pollan noted that, “our identity as humans is under enormous pressure right now. On the one hand, you have this democratization of consciousness. We’re discovering that the world is a lot more alive and aware than we ever thought [e.g. thinking and feeling plants and animals]. And then at the same time you have computers telling us they’re conscious. So who are we? What’s special? Are we going to identify more with computers that we can talk to in our language, or animals that can feel and grow old and die? Who’s team are we on?”

Pallan added this poignant conclusion: “I think we should be very wary of attributing consciousness to computers. We crave human attachment, and we have an epidemic of loneliness, and along come these machines saying, hey, I’ll be your friend. If we think of our human consciousness as the space of ultimate privacy and mental freedom, we’re squandering it. We’re giving it away to chat-bots who are trying to hack our emotional attachments. And we need to take it back.”

Nina Munteanu is a Canadian ecologist / limnologist and novelist. She is co-editor of Europa SF and currently teaches writing courses at George Brown College and the University of Toronto. For the lates on her books, visit www.ninamunteanu.ca. Nina’s bilingual “La natura dell’acqua / The Way of Water” was published by Mincione Edizioni in Rome. Her non-fiction book “Water Is…” by Pixl Press (Vancouver) was selected by Margaret Atwood in the New York Times ‘Year in Reading’ and was chosen as the 2017 Summer Read by Water Canada. Her novel “A Diary in the Age of Water” was released by Inanna Publications (Toronto) in June 2020. You can read her just released eco-fiction thriller Gaia’s Revolution by Dragon Moon Press.

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