Every age writes about intelligence, but rarely in the way it deserves.
Psychologists reduce it to numbers, philosophers to definitions, technologists to functions. Each approach captures a fragment, yet something essential slips through their fingers: the living presence of intelligence itself, the way it shapes us, guides us, betrays us, lifts us beyond survival into meaning.
This book exists because we are living at a threshold. For the first time in history, we confront intelligence not only as something we are, but as something we create. Machines think in patterns we designed yet do not fully understand. Human reason, stretched to its limits, questions its own future. And in the background, an older story continues: the struggle of intelligence with its shadows-error, arrogance, misuse, destruction.