Publication: Reclaiming Inquiry: Rethinking Research in the Age of AI
Type:
Article
Date
2025-10-10
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
School of Psychology. Faculty of Humanities and Sciences, SLIIT
Abstract
To speak of “research excellence” today is to navigate an unsettled epistemological terrain where artificial intelligence is reshaping how we recognise, value, and produce knowledge. What constitutes rigor,
originality, or discovery when algorithmic processes increasingly thread through research practice? The terms we inherit—authorship, creativity, novelty, discovery—are being recast, their meanings destabilized
and renegotiated in ways we are only beginning to articulate. In these remarks, I discuss AI not as a tool or a threat but as a force that exposes the assumptions, hierarchies, and aspirations embedded in research
culture itself. Language, as the medium through which we constitute knowledge, becomes the critical site for this reckoning. I argue that universities must meet this transformation with both rigor and
imagination—alert to the genuine risks of superficiality, proprietary enclosure, and eroded judgment, while actively reclaiming inquiry as moral practice and intellectual adventure: transforming what becomes
possible without relinquishing what remains irreducibly human.
Description
Keywords
Reclaiming Inquiry, Rethinking Research, Age of AI
