The Real Cost of AI? Beyond Originality, It's Human Identity

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The Real Cost of AI? Beyond Originality, It's Human Identity

PR Newswire

How global thought leader Dr. Tae Yun Kim is redefining human agency, expertise, & purpose in the AI era

MEDFORD, Ore., Dec. 22, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Artificial Intelligence (AI) is no longer a distant or abstract concept. It is embedded in how people work, communicate, learn, and make decisions every day. Research from McKinsey & Co. estimates that up to 30% of U.S. jobs could be automated by 2030, with most remaining roles undergoing significant changes as AI tools spread across industries.1 As technology increasingly shapes outcomes at scale, concern is growing that critical thinking, independent judgment, and even one's sense of personal identity are being quietly eroded.

Generative systems now influence content, recommendations, and decisions that once relied on human discretion, raising questions about authenticity and trust. As it becomes harder to distinguish what is real from what is simulated, Dr. Tae Yun Kim is gaining attention gaining attention for her clear, human-centered perspective on identity, judgment, and purpose, and faith, in a digital-first world.

Dr. Kim is the Founder of Lighthouse Worldwide Solutions and a longtime leadership voice known for exploring how individuals and organizations maintain clarity and integrity during periods of rapid change. Her work challenges the idea that progress should be measured only by efficiency or speed. Instead, she emphasizes that in an AI-driven economy, the most valuable qualities are distinctly human: judgment, ethical reasoning, creativity, and the ability to think independently, along with the body–mind connection, feelings, spirituality, future visions, and the human drive.

"AI can replicate patterns and generate endless output," Dr. Kim said. "What it cannot replace is human identity. When independent thought fades, influence shifts to systems people do not control."

"I've watched people become over dependent on AI," she added. "They lose the ability to write, research, and communicate—until even personal letters begin to sound the same."

Her message resonates across generations, from Millennials and Gen Z navigating algorithmic hiring tools and automated workflows to experienced professionals adapting to a rapidly changing workplace. Dr. Kim is especially attuned to the impact on women, who continue to face structural barriers to advancement and are often concentrated in roles most vulnerable to automation. As a longtime advocate for women's empowerment, she underscores that preserving identity, confidence, and independent judgment is not only a workforce issue, but a leadership imperative for women seeking to maintain influence and agency in an AI-shaped economy.

Born in South Korea in 1946, Dr. Kim transformed early hardship into self-mastery and purpose. She survived war and abandonment and defied cultural barriers that discouraged girls from ambition or self-expression, or career building. She insisted on martial arts training at a young age, developing discipline that would shape her life's philosophy. After immigrating to the United States with limited resources, and not knowing the culture, and not speaking English, she faced prejudice while building her first martial arts school, yet persisted. From this journey emerged a life motto that underscores her approach to life and leadership: "He Can Do, She Can Do, Why Not Me!"

Dr. Kim's philosophy is captured in her bestselling book, Seven Steps to Inner Power: A Martial Arts Master Reveals Her Secrets for Dynamic Living. Widely read and translated into multiple languages, the book distills her leadership framework into practical steps for cultivating focus, resilience, and inner authority. In an age of rapid technological change, its principles are being rediscovered as tools for overcoming obstacles, maintaining relevance, purpose, and meaning.

"People are highly skilled in the world they knew ten years ago," Dr. Kim said. "In this new AI-driven world, everyone is learning again. That requires humility, awareness, and the discipline to rebuild identity with intention."

Her work centers on questions many now face but struggle to articulate, including how independent judgment survives in a world shaped by algorithms, how communication remains authentic when content is easily simulated, how relationships retain depth when technology mediates connection, and how success should be defined when speed outpaces values.

As organizations, educators, and media outlets grapple with the long-term implications of AI, Dr. Kim offers a grounded, accessible perspective rooted in lived experience. Her message is not anti-technology. It is a call to ensure technology serves human purpose rather than replacing it. "The future will not belong to those who generate the most output," Dr. Kim said. "It will belong to those who preserve clarity, judgment, and identity in a world that increasingly tries to automate them."

Dr. Kim is available for keynote speeches, expert commentary, and media interviews on AI, identity, leadership, women empowerment, and the future of human expertise

1 McKinsey & Co. (2023) "Generative AI and the future of work in America." Source: https://www.mckinsey.com/mgi/our-research/generative-ai-and-the-future-of-work-in-america

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SOURCE Lighthouse Worldwide Solutions