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AI and Semantic Pareidolia: When We See Intelligent Consciousness where there is None

Resource type
Journal Article
Author/contributor
Title
AI and Semantic Pareidolia: When We See Intelligent Consciousness where there is None
Abstract
The article introduces the concept of “semantic pareidolia” - our tendency to attribute consciousness, intelligence, and emotions to AI systems that lack these qualities. It examines how this psychological phenomenon leads us to perceive meaning and intentionality in statistical pattern-matching systems, similar to seeing faces in clouds. It analyses the converging forces intensifying this tendency: increasing digital immersion, profit-driven corporate interests, social isolation, and AI advancement. The article warns of progression from harmless anthropomorphism to problematic AI idolatry, and calls for responsible design practices that help users maintain critical distinctions between simulation and genuine consciousness.
Publication
Philosophy & Technology
Date
2026-02-19
Volume
39
Issue
1
Pages
36
Journal Abbr
Philos. Technol.
Accessed
2/26/26, 12:54 PM
ISSN
2210-5441
Short Title
AI and Semantic Pareidolia
Language
en
Library Catalog
Springer Link
Citation
Floridi, L. (2026). AI and Semantic Pareidolia: When We See Intelligent Consciousness where there is None. Philosophy & Technology, 39(1), 36. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13347-026-01052-1