Book Review: Human Again: In the AI Age by J.D. Macpherson

Book Details:

Author: J.D. Macpherson
Release Date: December 3rd, 2025
Series:
Genre: Blend of Psychology, Philosophy, and Technology, Non-Fiction, Computer Science, AI
Format: E-book 
Pages: 221 pages
Publisher: Cairnstone Press
Blurb:
Are you using AI or is AI using you?
In a world where algorithms shape thought and automation floods the creative field, Human Again is a field-tested playbook for staying awake, original, and alive in the age of machines. Part reflection, part practical guide, it invites readers to explore identity and inspiration in real time, learning to think with AI rather than be replaced by it.
Bending cultural insight, personal experience, and practical tools, Macpherson explores how artificial intelligence is reshaping creativity, work, and identity, and how to harness it without losing yourself.

You will learn how to:

  • Ask sharper questions that create leverage, not noise
  • Build a High Signal Question Engine to think deeper and faster
  • Use the Socratic method and mindfulness to train deeper thinking
  • Recognize the “qualia,” the unspeakable textures of human experience, that no algorithm can touch
  • Protect your authenticity, taste, and voice while others sound the same
  • Learn how to compound clarity and creativity

Whether you are a professional, a creator, or simply curious about what is next, Human Again shows how to use AI better than anyone around you while keeping what no algorithm can replicate: your judgment, conscience, and imagination.
Because finding identity and inspiration in the AI age begins with remembering what it means to be human.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Human Again: In the AI Age by J.D. Macpherson reads like a candid, idea-rich notebook from someone who’s spent time living with generative AI, not just theorising about it. What makes this book work is its voice; it is curious, slightly confessional, and persuasive, with “come sit with me, let’s think this through” energy. It doesn’t treat AI as a shiny toy or an apocalyptic villain; it treats it as a force that is already in our homes, our workflows, our attention spans, and our sense of self.

Structurally, it’s clean and bingeable with four sections: Discoveries, Possibilities, Operations, and Pitfalls, that move from first-contact curiosity (the early chapters feel like the author at the kitchen table, actually trying things) to more grounded strategy. I especially liked how author Macpherson keeps returning to a central tension that AI isn’t conscious, but it is convincing, and that gap between “sounds right” and “is true” is where modern humans are about to get tested. The chapters on credibility, creativity, mindfulness, and the practical mechanics of using AI (including promptcraft as a real skill, not a gimmick) feel written for readers who want to stay agile without losing their spine.

Where the book becomes most valuable is in the Operations + Pitfalls stretch: the mindset shifts, the attention economy warnings, the “don’t outsource your thinking” reminders, and the honest naming of risks like hallucinations, dopamine loops, and the subtle emotional attachment people can form with a tool that mirrors them too well. It’s also refreshingly not preachy, but more like a friend who’s a step ahead, turning around to say, “Here’s what I wish I’d known before I got swept up.”

That said, readers looking for a richer academic, citation-heavy AI book may find Macpherson’s approach more reflective than research-dense, as this is more experience-based wisdom and philosophical framing than a technical manual or a policy treatise. So if you want a smart, readable, humane guide to staying human while becoming AI-literate, Human Again: In the AI Age is a timely and thoughtful read that leaves you more alert, intentional, and (ironically) more present.


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