Who am I?Humanity in the Age of AI AbundanceAs artificial intelligence, automation, and autonomous systems advance at unprecedented speed, a future of material abundance is no longer a distant abstraction. Public statements by leading technologists suggest that within decades, work as a requirement for survival may disappear. If that future arrives, the most important questions will not be economic or technological. They will be human. Who Am I? Humanity in the Age of AI Abundance is a philosophical and civilisational inquiry into a world where scarcity no longer defines life. It explores what becomes of identity, purpose, dignity, ethics, culture, and responsibility when survival is assured by intelligent systems and abundance replaces necessity as the organising force of society. Moving beyond predictions and hype, this book examines the deeper implications of a post-work civilisation. It traces how economies of abundance emerge, how education must transform from job preparation to meaning-centred learning, how governance and resource allocation evolve under intelligent systems, and how human psychology responds to comfort, freedom, and the absence of external pressure. It asks whether abundance leads to wisdom and maturity, or distraction and dissolution, and what determines the difference. At its core, this is not a book about machines. It is a book about humans. It confronts the quiet, unsettling question that abundance makes unavoidable: when nothing is demanded of us for survival, who do we choose to become? Written for thinkers, technologists, educators, policymakers, and reflective readers, Who Am I? Humanity in the Age of AI Abundance offers a measured, deeply human exploration of the future we may be approaching, and the inner work required to meet it with clarity, humility, and purpose.What happens to humanity when work is no longer necessary?