The Philosophy of the Rider and Artificial Intelligence: Movement, Freedom, Power

Authors

  • B.M. Amantay

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31489/2025hph4/206-215

Keywords:

horsemanship, artificial intelligence, nomadism, movement, freedom, power, digitalization, adaptation, identity, philosophy, technology

Abstract

This article offers a philosophical reflection on how freedom, movement, and inner intuition can be preservedin the digital age. By comparing the figure of the horse rider in nomadic culture with the phenomenon of arti-ficial intelligence, the author reinterprets the concepts of motion, freedom, and power. The rider is presentednot merely as a person in control of transport, but as a sentient subject capable of intuitively and bodily en-gaging with space. In contrast, artificial intelligence can simulate movement but lacks the capacity to feel it.The paper identifies fundamental differences between nomadic consciousness and algorithmic logic, while al-so exploring potential points of convergence. The study calls for a humanistic reevaluation of technology—not a rejection, but a search for ways of living with it in a manner worthy of the human being. The authorraises a critical question: do we still choose our own path, or have algorithms already made the decisions forus? The conclusion suggests that the digital era does not erase nomadic consciousness but transforms it into anew form—a kind of digital horsemanship. The article serves as a philosophical invitation to rediscover hu-man existence and freedom within a digital world.

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Published

2025-12-31

Issue

Section

PHILOSOPHY