Artificial intelligence is becoming the invisible force behind modern life. It answers questions, writes, recommends, decides, and increasingly shapes how we work, learn, and live. It promises convenience, speed, and efficiency. But what happens when the tools designed to support human thinking begin to replace it? In The Convenience Trap, Michael Gerlich explores one of the most important and least examined consequences of the AI age: the quiet transfer of thinking from human minds to intelligent systems. As people rely more on AI to generate ideas, solve problems, and make decisions, the benefits are obvious. The hidden costs are not. Critical thinking weakens. Reflection becomes shorter. Dependency grows. Drawing on years of research into the societal impact of AI, Gerlich examines how artificial intelligence is reshaping behaviour, leadership, education, work, and society, and asks one of the defining questions of our time: what do we lose when convenience begins to think for us?