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Klaus Schwab’s “intelligent age”: AI will replace human cognitive abilities

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Klaus Schwab may have been ousted from active leadership of the World Economic Forum, but that hasn’t stopped him from flitting around the world spreading his dystopian ideology.

At the end of May, he made an appearance in South Africa to have “a conversation” about his latest book ‘Universities, Professors and Students in the Intelligent Age’ in front of an audience of academics, students, policymakers and business leaders.

As Tim Hinchcliffe explains below, according to Schwab, the “intelligent age” means replacing our cognitive capabilities with AI.

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‘The Intelligent Age Is Replacing Our Cognitive Capabilities With AI’: WEF Founder Klaus Schwab

If intelligence were to become a utility billed on a meter, then the intelligent age would only benefit the elite and those who could afford it: perspective

By Tim Hinchcliffe, as published by The Sociable on 29 May 2026

The intelligent age is replacing our cognitive capabilities with AI, and universities should prioritise teaching students how to capably use technology over teaching actual knowledge, according to World Economic Forum (“WEF”) founder Klaus Schwab.

Livestreaming today [29 May] at the University of Johannesburg in South Africa, Schwab spoke at length about what he calls ‘the intelligent age” and what it means for jobs, students and humanity.

Comparing previous industrial revolutions to the so-called intelligent age, the grand architect of the Great Reset agenda said that our thinking abilities were now being delegated to artificial intelligence.

“Let’s go back to the Industrial Age; what does the Industrial Age do? It replaced our physical activities by the machine,” said Schwab

“What is the Intelligent Age doing? It is replacing our cognitive capabilities by algorithm, or by what we call our artificial intelligence.”

“In order to master this new intelligent age, we have to remind ourselves much more what really creates a human being. What makes us human?” he added.

According to Schwab, the winners in this brave new world. where intelligence is delegated to algorithms. will be those who are able to adapt.

However, we shall see that adaptability, or as the German-native Schwab calls it “adaptility [sic],” will mean having enough money to be able to afford access to AI knowledge bases and know how to use them to their advantage.

“If you want to succeed in the intelligent age, the keyword is adaptability, but combined with adaptability is also resilience,” said Schwab.

“The world is changing so fast today, and the world has become so interdisciplinary, so complex, that people don’t really understand anymore what’s going on.”

“We feel we are not anymore in control of what’s happening […] I think we have to accept that we are living in a very fluid, in a very fast, exponentially changing world and that we may be not anymore completely in control of ourselves, but we have to learn to adapt very much to this changing world,” the WEF founder added.

Without knowing what is going on in the world – what is real, what is true, what is genuine, what is fake – and the overwhelming amount of information at our fingertips, Schwab said that the way to get to “the truth” was through large language models (“LLMs”) like Claude or ChatGPT.

Notice how Schwab says, “if I make the necessary efforts?” Why is that? It’s because these AI tools scrape the internet and push forward the top-ranking results.

Top ranking doesn’t always correlate with truth. The necessary efforts, therefore, are related to human research.

You can’t trust an LLM to bring you the truth because it will spit back whatever some spook had ghost-edited in Wikipedia, or what was allowed by censors at Reddit, or what information wasn’t permitted by the gatekeepers at Google and their unelected globalist partners at the United Nations (“UN”).

Nevertheless, Schwab puts his faith in AI and the big tech companies for providing all the knowledge we need.

In this scenario, universities are outdated, and according to the WEF founder, higher education should focus more on learning how to use new technologies rather than teaching actual knowledge.

“You don’t have to go to university anymore. For each knowledge question, you can go to Claude, you can go to ChatGPT or whatever. Knowledge is around us and is free of charge,” said Schwab.

“Should you invest four years to learn something, which you can read on your iPad in real-time whenever you need it, instead of being loaded with knowledge of maybe 90 per cent you don’t need in your professional activities?“

So, instead of striving for the pursuit of knowledge, all you have to do is call on big tech, and they’ll give you the correct answers for free?

Not if OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has anything to say about that!

In March, Altman declared that after bypassing all copyright and intellectual property infringements by scraping the entire collective knowledge of humankind from the internet, he wants to sell it back to us on a meter.

[Related: Economics will curtail the widespread use of AI, The Exposé, 13 June 2026]

If intelligence were to become a utility billed on a meter, then the intelligent age would only benefit those who could afford it.  Everything Schwab said would be reserved for the elite. The poor would continue to be not just poor, but also dumb. And it all starts with education.

According to Schwab, we should give up our pursuit of knowledge. We should instead focus on our “capabilities.”

And what types of capabilities are those?

The capabilities to interact with a chatbot, and you should go back to university every year to get your updated certificate as if it were a subscription to be beholden to AI and big tech for life.

Schwab calls this a transition from “learning for life to lifelong learning.”

With only the elite having access to intelligence on a meter and lifelong learning, Schwab acknowledged that the WEF has long been criticised for being elitist.

However, he never actually denied being an elitist.

Instead, he doubled down on the notion that “we are part of global community,” which flies in the face of sovereign nations and of different cultural values that are not shared by a “global community.”

Speaking of the WEF, Schwab said he created it in 1971 as a means to reject Nobel Prize laureate and economist Milton Friedman, who said that the business of businesses was business.

Schwab said “NO” to that and came up with what he called stakeholdership to rival shareholdership, and that the entire focus of the WEF was to be a platform to promote stakeholder capitalism.

Stakeholder capitalism is only possible through public-private partnerships – the fusion of corporation and state. The stakeholders are governments, corporations and civil society – the latter being academics and non-governmental organisations (“NGOs”) and unelected globalist think tanks.

It’s ruled by the so-called expert and technocrat classes that bribe the State into giving them more power and influence, while the State delegates what it can’t do legally to the experts and technocrats.

But if you’re looking for well-documented and thoroughly cited research into Klaus Schwab and the origins of the WEF, look no further than investigative journalist Johnny Vedmore and his article ‘Dr. Klaus Schwab; or How the CFR Taught Me to Stop Worrying & Love the Bomb’.

Vedmore prefaces his investigation with the subheading: “The World Economic Forum wasn’t simply the brainchild of Klaus Schwab, but was actually born out of a CIA-funded Harvard programme headed by Henry Kissinger and pushed to fruition by John Kenneth Galbraith and the ‘real’ Dr. Strangelove, Herman Kahn.”

After stepping away from WEF last year, the grand architect of the Great Reset launched the Schwab Academy as a platform to accompany his book series on the so-called intelligent age.

You can find the entire livestream of Klaus Schwab at the University of Johannesburg on the Schwab Academy YouTube channel below.

Schwab Academy: Professor Klaus Schwab speaking at the University of Johannesburg, 29 May 2026 (88 mins)

Further reading from The Sociable:

About the Author

Tim Hinchliffe was previously a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and editor at Colombia Reports in South America.  He is now the editor at The Sociable.

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author avatar
Rhoda Wilson
While previously it was a hobby culminating in writing articles for Wikipedia (until things made a drastic and undeniable turn in 2020) and a few books for private consumption, since March 2020 I have become a full-time researcher and writer in reaction to the global takeover that came into full view with the introduction of covid-19. For most of my life, I have tried to raise awareness that a small group of people planned to take over the world for their own benefit. There was no way I was going to sit back quietly and simply let them do it once they made their final move.
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