
Mike Brooks has a phenomenal post on Psychology Today that touches upon a lot of points that I myself have been discovering in using AI to assist with my own psychological growth and development, especially since AI can help us to become aware of the limited worldview lenses we are looking at life through and thus learn to see beyond them.
Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson nailed it: “The real problem of humanity is the following: we have Paleolithic emotions, medieval institutions, and god-like technology.” Our brains, wired for 150-person tribes, now navigate a hyper-connected world. This evolutionary mismatch fuels cognitive biases that turn online debate into digital civil war.
This pretty much captures the issues of our world today. Everything is out of alignment.
This kind of reminds of Charlie Chaplin’s speech in the movie The Great Dictator in which he says the following. “We have developed speed, but we have shut ourselves in. Machinery that gives abundance has left us in want. Our knowledge has made us cynical. Our cleverness, hard and unkind. We think too much and feel too little. More than machinery we need humanity. More than cleverness we need kindness and gentleness. Without these qualities, life will be violent and all will be lost…”
AI is both mirror and lens, reflecting and magnifying our divided hearts and minds.
Mike Brooks Ph.D
The “AI Alignment Problem” asks: How do we ensure AI upholds human values? But the question is really, “Which values?” East or West? Left or Right? Christian, Jew, Muslim, or atheist? The reality is: We can’t align AI until we align with each other.
It’s like the saying goes. Everybody wants to save the world but they all have a different ways of doing it. What vertical development helps us to understand is the larger context of life. Like we no longer see left or right as political stances but just different stages of growth that are often competing against each other rather than being in alignment with each other.
Why? Because it would be like saying an adult is superior to a child. Yet for an adult to become an adult they have to be a child first. So no child, no adult.
So it’s not about saying my perspective is right and yours is wrong. It is recognizing how each perspective is essential for each aspect of your growth and development.
Here’s an example of this in terms of politics. You can’t focus on addressing higher order needs of people (i.e. left perspective) until lower order needs are met (i.e. right perspective).
Like a lot times politicians will focus on pie in the sky stuff that’s lays out a better vision of how people can creatively thrive but the vision is often completely outside of a lot of people’s vision because they’re just trying to economically survive from day to day.
So again, until people’s lower order survival needs are met, they won’t really be able to focus on their higher order, creative thriving needs. But most politicians miss this because they’re often not living the same reality of most their constituents.
Yet at the same time, it’s also realizing it’s not a zero sum game. Both lower order needs and higher order needs can be addressed at the same time, if the leader has the capacity to deal with the complexity of doing so. It’s just that rarely do you see a leader at this latter, evolved stage of psychological development that can achieve this.
Here’s the paradox: AI sees us as one species, but our tribal fights play a cacophony, not a symphony. We send wildly contradictory signals about who we are and what we value. We demand AI respect human life, then program drones to kill. We insist on truth, then spread misinformation and create deepfakes. We can’t tell AI who we are—because we haven’t agreed on it ourselves.
What’s even more difficult about the above is that through our growth and development, who we are is constantly changing, even though we may not realize this until we actually reflect upon it.
What if, instead of using AI to find more “intelligent” ways to attack one another, we instead use it to help us seek and understand truth/reality? If it is true that truth sets us free, then that means the deeper the truths we find together, the freer we become. In this way, the truth unites us, and the house united will not fall.
This is how I’m using it with my own growth and development. I pose queries that question my assumptions and beliefs and ask the AI to help me see what I may be perceptual blind to, thus making something normally invisible to me visible. I usually achieve this by describing how I’m transitioning between two stages of development and asking the AI to assist me in understanding the change of context in the perception of both.
Rather than treating alignment as a rigid code to enforce, we can approach it as an evolving dialogue—one that grows as both humans and AI deepen in understanding.
This relational view shifts our focus from control to collaboration. When educators use AI to help students explore opposing viewpoints on complex issues—like immigration or Middle Eastern conflicts—something powerful happens. Beneath the surface-level differences, shared human concerns emerge: safety, belonging, fairness. In that exchange, truth becomes co-discovered—not dictated.
The best way I could describe the above is to think about the proliferation of people using Google to find information and knowledge today. It’s become so common that it’s the norm. Don’t know something? Google it.
What AI allows us to do now is to query something that we think we may “know” but we may actually not know the true meaning of it. In effect, based upon your stage of psychological development, you will often be looking through a worldview lens that can misinterpret our understanding of reality.
So by clarifying our understanding of something through AI, we can verify if we are interpreting it correctly from our current point of vantage of life.
But guess what’s the main thing stopping us from using AI in this way?
Ourselves.
This is how our limited worldviews work, especially in relation to our ego. We often just assume what we know and believe to be the “truth” and “right,” even though it may not be. And thus we don’t bother validating our assumptions and beliefs, because “we know we obviously are right.”
This is the exact same reason why most people don’t even use Google today anymore. They just assume they’re “right”…because they don’t want to be “wrong.”
So we all walk around believing delusions that we think are reality…just like AI can hallucinate and believe something is right as well. (BTW this is why I always like to look and understand something from multiple perspectives rather than just one, as it help to self-validate and reveal discrepancies that I may have missed from looking at it from just one perspective.)
The real question isn’t “Can AI align with us?” It’s “Can we align with each other—and with reality—before it’s too late?”
Mike Brooks Ph.D
Imagine systems that help us see beyond tribal lines. That help us remember our shared humanity. That help us love our neighbors as ourselves—not just in principle, but in practice.
This is what vertical development really reveals to us. It shows the arc of our potential growth and development as a human being and, at the same time, reveal how we are all the same person deep down inside (i.e. we are all seeking the same basic psychological needs of safety and belonging).