AI in the legal world is not a sentient being. It doesn’t argue cases, it doesn’t replace lawyers, and it certainly doesn’t understand the law in the way the best lawyers can.
What it can do is process large amounts of text quickly and find patterns in ways that mimic certain kinds of legal work—especially the repetitive and time-consuming parts. It can:
- Summarize documents.
- Draft emails or memos in plain English.
- Spot irregularities in contracts.
- Retrieve relevant case law.
Think of it as a very fast, very literal junior associate who never sleeps and has no billing rate.
And just as important: you don’t need to understand how it works to use it. If you can use Google, you can use most AI tools. You—or better yet, a competent assistant–-ask questions in plain English, and the machine gives you a draft response or suggested research. You review it, improve it, and decide what’s worth keeping—just like you always have.
You’ve practiced through more than one technology cycle, and you’ve seen the promises outrun the performance. “User-friendly” systems that required hours of training. “Seamless” integrations that never quite integrated. “Efficiency tools” that created new inefficiencies.
You also didn’t enter this profession to become your own IT department. You chose law because you valued reasoning, advocacy, and judgment—not because you wanted to troubleshoot email servers.
But here’s the thing: you’ve adapted before. You didn’t retreat when research moved from books to databases. You didn’t leave the field when filings went digital. You adjusted, selectively and thoughtfully. That’s exactly the same approach to use with AI.
More at article AI In High-Stakes Litigation: The Critical Role of Experienced Attorneys.