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Students studying humanities and liberal arts surrounded by books, symbolizing critical thinking and human judgment in the AI era

Should Students Still Study Computer Science in the Age of AI?

25 February 2026

Why the Humanities and Liberal Arts in the AI Era Are Gaining Momentum

Humanities and liberal arts in the AI era are gaining renewed attention as artificial intelligence reshapes early-career work and lowers the cost of routine execution. Computer science (CS) isn’t “dead.” But the default advice to “study CS because it’s safe” is becoming less reliable in an AI-saturated world.

At the same time, something counterintuitive is happening: the humanities and liberal arts are starting to look more—not less—strategic, precisely because AI is getting better at routine execution.

This post makes three moves:

  1. It explains what AI is changing about CS (especially early-career work).
  2. It makes the case for humanities/liberal arts as an alternative with growing momentum.
  3. It gives practical “humanities + AI fluency” pathways students can copy.

 

The CS question has changed

A decade ago, CS often functioned as a broad, flexible “ticket” to opportunity. Today, AI tools increasingly compress the value of basic implementation and push human advantage upward toward:

  • problem framing
  • systems thinking
  • debugging and reliability
  • security and privacy
  • domain knowledge (health, energy, law, education)
  • communication and stakeholder judgment

 
Long-run projections still show strong demand for software developers. But for many students, the nearer-term reality is that the entry-level bar has risen: portfolios, internships, specialization, and real proof matter more than “degree + decent grades.” This shift helps explain why humanities and liberal arts in the AI era are becoming strategically complementary rather than obsolete.

So the question becomes: if AI lowers the cost of routine execution, what becomes scarce?
 

Why humanities and liberal arts in the AI era are gaining strength right now

It’s easy to confuse “what universities are cutting” with “what the economy will value.” Humanities departments have faced real contraction; for example, the American Academy of Arts & Sciences reports the humanities share of bachelor’s degrees falling to 8.8% by 2022—a decline that began around 2005 and accelerated in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.

But scarcity can be an advantage. And AI changes the payoff structure of skills.
 

Labor market signals are pointing to “human” skills

Two especially useful indicators (because they’re based on large employer samples):

 
Those are not “nice-to-have” skills. In many roles, they are the difference between:

  • using AI to produce plausible output, and
  • using AI to produce correct, defensible, high-impact work.

 

AI increases the value of interpretation and judgment

As AI gets better at generating text, code, slides, and summaries, the differentiator shifts toward:

  • interpreting ambiguous problems
  • deciding what matters
  • spotting weak logic
  • arguing responsibly
  • understanding humans and institutions
  • making tradeoffs under uncertainty
  • These are core liberal arts strengths—when taught rigorously and practiced seriously.

 

“Humanities” doesn’t mean “anti-technical”

The strongest version of this argument is not “skip STEM.”

It’s this:

The most resilient path for many students is humanities depth + technical fluency, so you can lead with judgment and still speak the language of the tools.

That combination is becoming more explicit in curricula. Universities are building interdisciplinary offerings that connect humanities to AI and the digital world (e.g., Leiden’s Digital Humanities & AI minor; programs and courses framed around human-centered impacts of AI).  

In other words: the “humanities comeback” is not just a vibe. It’s showing up in program design. For many students, humanities and liberal arts in the AI era offer a resilient foundation when paired with technical fluency and real proof of skills.
 

When students should still study CS

CS can still be the right choice if a student:

  • genuinely enjoys building software (even the boring parts)
  • likes logic and abstraction
  • wants to specialize (not just “learn Python”)
  • will graduate with proof: projects, internships, research, open-source, competitions

 
If that student exists, CS can be fantastic—especially when paired with a domain (bio, econ, energy, psychology) or with deeper systems/security work. But if a student is choosing CS primarily because it feels “safe,” it’s worth reconsidering what safety means in a market where baseline execution is cheaper.
 

The strongest humanities and liberal arts alternatives to CS in the AI era

Here are humanities/liberal-arts routes that are particularly compatible with the AI era:

  • Philosophy. Training in logic, ethics, argument, and clarity—critical for decision-making in high-stakes environments and for AI governance conversations.
  • History. Causal reasoning, evidence standards, context, and the ability to make sense of messy realities (which is exactly where AI output often fails).
  • Literature / Comparative Literature. Interpretation, narrative, persuasion, voice, and deep reading—skills that separate “generated” from “compelling” in communication-heavy careers.
  • Linguistics. A sleeper hit in the AI era: meaning, structure, ambiguity, pragmatics—highly relevant to language technologies.
  • Political Science / International Relations. Institutions, incentives, policy, power, and governance—areas AI is already stressing.

 
If you want a single label for the best alternative: humanities + a quantitative spine.
 

The “Humanities + AI Fluency” playbook

If you want to make humanities feel concrete and career-resilient, treat it like a two-track plan:
 

Track A: Humanities depth (real rigor)

  • heavy reading and writing
  • seminar-style discussion
  • original research
  • close argumentation

 

Track B: Technical fluency (enough to be dangerous)

Pick 2–3:

  • statistics / data literacy
  • basic programming (Python or R)
  • research methods
  • logic (formal reasoning)
  • AI literacy (how models fail, bias, evaluation)

 
LinkedIn’s reporting on skills trends has highlighted AI literacy and related skills as fast-growing.  

The point is not to “become a coder.” It’s to become someone who can:

  • ask better questions than the model
  • evaluate outputs
  • design good workflows
  • communicate conclusions responsibly

 

What careers does this actually lead to?

A humanities+AI-fluency profile can map cleanly to roles like:

  • product (especially user-centered product thinking)
  • marketing/communications (high-integrity, high-signal)
  • policy and governance (tech, education, health)
  • UX research / human-centered design
  • consulting / strategy (when paired with analytical rigor)
  • education and curriculum design
  • journalism/analysis (high standards, domain expertise)

 
The common denominator is not “writing.” It’s judgment + communication + evidence standards.
 

How to “prove it” to universities and employers the value of humanities in the AI era

In an AI era, proof matters more, not less—because everyone can generate plausible text.

For humanities students, proof can look like:

  • a sustained research project (published or presented)
  • a public writing portfolio (essays, analysis, reviews)
  • debate / Model UN / ethics bowl with strong artifacts
  • interdisciplinary work: e.g., “history + data,” “literature + digital humanities”
  • internships where writing and judgment matter (policy, media, education, nonprofit, think tanks)
  • Employers say they want evidence of skills like problem-solving, communication, and teamwork; show them.  

 

FAQ

Are the humanities “coming back” even if departments are being cut?

Departments are under pressure and degrees declined for years. But employer skill signals increasingly emphasize analytical thinking, communication, and judgment.  And universities are actively building interdisciplinary AI-and-humanities offerings. So: institutionally stressed, economically re-valuable—both can be true.

Will humanities majors be replaced by AI?

AI can generate content. It struggles with accountability, taste, context, and responsibility. The more a role depends on high-stakes judgment and persuasion, the more “human” strengths matter—especially when paired with AI fluency.

What if a student loves CS and humanities?

That is often the best-case scenario: double major, minor, or a deliberate hybrid. The future belongs to people who can connect disciplines and produce real work across them.

 

Bottom line

  • CS is still a great major for students who love it, will build real proof, and are thus prepared to face greater unpredictability in the job market (especially at entry level.)
  • But the “default CS because it’s safe” heuristic is weaker than it used to be.
  • For many students, humanities/lower-arts + AI fluency is becoming one of the most resilient and differentiating paths—because it trains the very capacities employers keep naming: thinking, judgment, communication, and adaptability.