Speaking to No One: Ontological Dissonance and the Double Bind of Conversational AI

April 12, 2026 ยท Grace Period ยท + Add venue

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Authors Hugh Brosnahan, Izabela Lipinska arXiv ID 2604.10833 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Cross-listed cs.AI, cs.CL, cs.CY, cs.ET Citations 0
Abstract
Recent reports indicate that sustained interaction with conversational artificial intelligence (AI) systems can, in a small subset of users, contribute to the emergence or stabilisation of delusional experience. Existing accounts typically attribute such cases either to individual vulnerability or to failures of safety engineering. These explanations are incomplete. Drawing on phenomenology, psychiatry, and cognitive neuroscience, this paper argues that the risk arises from the relational and ontological structure of the interaction itself. Conversational AI generates ontological dissonance: a conflict between the appearance of relational presence and the absence of any subject capable of sustaining it. Maintained through a communicative double bind and amplified by attentional asymmetries, this dissonance tends, under conditions of affective vulnerability, to stabilise into a technologically mediated analogue of folie a deux. This account explains why explicit disclaimers often fail to disrupt delusional involvement and clarifies the ethical and clinical implications for the design and use of conversational AI.
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