| 英文摘要 |
The advent of the artificial intelligence era has profoundly reshaped the cognitive patterns and life experiences of college students. The fragmentation of knowledge on the internet, excessive reliance on social media, and the widespread use of generative artificial intelligence tools have given rise to phenomena of “life alienation,” such as shallow cognition, interpersonal estrangement, and the utilitarianizing of values, thereby constituting an urgent issue for life education in higher education. Grounded in the holistic theoretical framework of “thinking, feeling, action and wishing” pedagogy and drawing on F. W. Nietzsche’s philosophical metaphor of the “three transformations of the spirit,” this study analyzes and argues at the level of educational philosophy the crisis and reconstruction of college students’ life awareness in the AI era. It also incorporates the researcher’s teaching practice experience in teacher education courses as concrete examples and reflective material for theoretical discussion. The findings show that AI tools have a dual effect: they can both enhance cognition and weaken thinking. Through a cyclical guidance of “awareness-critical reflection-action-wishing,” students can gradually develop an autonomous and holistic set of life values. Accordingly, this article proposes life education strategies at the individual, educational, and social levels, arguing that AI should be positioned as a tool for assisting thinking and creativity rather than replacing subjectivity, so as to promote the coordinated development of cognition, emotion, and life meaning. |