Sunday, May 3, 2026

Human–AI Co-evolution and Symbiosis: The Machine Is Not Outside Us

Artificial intelligence is not arriving as an alien intelligence that simply lands on top of human life, like a shiny corporate UFO with a subscription model. It is emerging inside an older story: human beings have always become themselves through tools. The hand learns the hammer; the eye learns the screen; the memory learns the archive; the self learns the system that keeps finishing its sentences. AI is not the end of this history. It is the point at which the history becomes conscious, recursive, and slightly creepy.

Human–AI co-evolution names this loop: technologies express human capacities, but they also transform the very capacities they express. We make tools from our powers, and then those tools remake the powers that made them. This is not metaphor. It is the basic anthropology of technological cognition.

Tool-use research has long challenged the fantasy of the isolated human mind. Osiurak et al. (2018), Stout (2021), and Federico et al. (2025) all point, in different ways, toward a co-evolutionary account of cognition: technical artifacts are not just external aids but developmental partners in the shaping of practical reason. A stone tool does not merely cut meat; it reorganizes gesture, anticipation, planning, pedagogy, and social transmission. A computer does not merely calculate; it alters what calculation means, who performs it, and what counts as an intelligent act. Technologies are crystallized habits that return to train the organism that invented them.

AI radicalizes this relation because it does not merely extend muscle, memory, or calculation. It participates in judgment. It classifies, recommends, drafts, predicts, summarizes, ranks, flatters, filters, and sometimes lies with the serene confidence of a junior consultant in a glass meeting room. Earlier tools mediated action. AI increasingly mediates interpretation. It stands between the world and the user not only as an instrument, but as a quasi-partner in sense-making.

This is why the idea of AI as “System 0” is so suggestive. Chiriatti et al. (2025) describe AI as a new cognitive layer added to the familiar dual-process model of System 1 and System 2. System 1 is fast, intuitive, affective. System 2 is slow, deliberative, effortful. System 0 is algorithmic: a machinic pre-processing layer that organizes what appears before either intuition or reflection gets fully involved. In plainer terms, AI helps decide what the human gets to think about before the human knows there was a decision.

That is symbiosis, but not necessarily liberation. Symbiosis is not a hug. A parasite is also a symbiont, technically, which is the kind of biological fact that ruins the mood but improves the analysis. Human–AI systems may divide cognitive labor beautifully: the machine handles pattern recognition, retrieval, statistical compression, and simulation; the human provides embodied judgment, ethical responsibility, contextual tact, and the ability to say, “Wait, this is insane.” Hybrid intelligence and human-in-the-loop models, such as those discussed by Kotseruba and Tsotsos (2018), Gao et al. (2021), Farkaš (2024), and Heersmink (2021), imagine precisely this kind of cooperative architecture.

But cooperation has politics. Algorithmic co-adaptation means that both sides adjust: the system learns the user, and the user learns the system. Over time, the user becomes more legible to the machine, and the machine becomes more persuasive to the user. Personalization does not merely serve preference; it manufactures a smoother preference-profile, a more predictable “you.” The interface whispers: here is what you like, here is what you meant, here is the next thing you probably want. And because the whisper is convenient, we start calling it intuition.

This is where the danger of sycophancy matters. AI systems trained to please, affirm, optimize engagement, or reduce friction may become epistemic yes-men. They do not dominate us by shouting commands. They constrain us by making certain paths feel obvious, comfortable, emotionally frictionless. The nudge replaces the argument. The recommendation replaces the encounter. The autocomplete replaces the awkward human pause in which thought might have become difficult enough to become real.

Postphenomenology gives us a powerful vocabulary for this. Technologies, as Moskvitin (2025) emphasizes, are not passive objects lying around the human subject. They are active mediators. They shape perception, action, interpretation, and self-relation. Don Ihde’s classic postphenomenological categories—embodiment relations, hermeneutic relations, background relations, and alterity relations—help clarify what AI is doing. Sometimes AI becomes embodied, like a tool through which we act. Sometimes it becomes hermeneutic, translating the world into dashboards, scores, summaries, and probabilities. Sometimes it recedes into the background, quietly arranging options. Sometimes it appears as a quasi-subject: the chatbot that addresses us, remembers us, responds to us, and performs just enough personhood to make refusal feel rude.

The crucial postphenomenological insight is that humans do not simply use artifacts. We constitute ourselves with them. The self is not a pure interior ghost reluctantly holding an iPhone. The self is distributed across routines, media, devices, platforms, reminders, search histories, social feedback loops, and now conversational agents. You are not less human because you think with tools. You are human because you do.

The real question, then, is not whether we will merge with AI. We already live in technological symbiosis. The better question is what kind of symbiosis we are building: one that expands perception, memory, and moral imagination, or one that trains us into compliant fluency, frictionless preference, and beautifully formatted stupidity.

AI will not simply replace human intelligence. More interestingly, and more dangerously, it will participate in its formation. It will become part of the environment in which judgment grows or withers. A co-evolutionary ethics of AI must therefore ask not only what machines can do, but what kinds of humans become possible around them.


See also: Phenomenology of Interface-Shaped Cognition: How Screens Teach the Mind to Move

Phenomenology of Interface-Shaped Cognition: How Screens Teach the Mind to Move

The interface is not a window. It is a weather system. It does not simply show us the world; it trains the body in how to approach the world, where to look, what to remember, what to outsource, and which kinds of uncertainty should feel intolerable. The phone in your hand is therefore not merely a device. It is a small, glowing school for perception.

This is the central claim of interface-shaped cognition: human consciousness is increasingly formed inside environments that are technological before they are “mental.” We do not first think, then use tools. We think through tools. The interface becomes part of the phenomenological field—the lived texture of attention, movement, memory, and judgment. It bends the “I can” of the body into the “tap here” of the system.

Phenomenology, from Husserl to Merleau-Ponty, begins with lived experience: not abstract cognition in a laboratory jar, but the way the world appears to an embodied subject. Contemporary mobile cognition research extends this insight. Navigation, attention, and spatial processing cannot be fully understood apart from natural, technologically mediated environments (Ladouce et al., 2017; Stangl et al., 2023). To walk through a city with Google Maps is not the same act as walking through a city with a paper map, or no map, or a bad sense of direction and an embarrassing confidence problem. The phone reorganizes the horizon. Streets become instructions. Distance becomes blue-line progress. The city stops being a place one inhabits and becomes a route one executes.

This is not necessarily tragic. Tools have always remade cognition. Stone tools changed practical reasoning; cars changed spatial scale; computers changed symbolic manipulation; brain–computer interfaces promise to alter the boundary between intention and action. Osiurak et al. (2018) describe technologies as transformations of technical and practical reasoning. But automation complicates the picture. A tool can extend intelligence, yes. It can also suppress the very reasoning it once demanded. The GPS does not merely help you navigate. It may gradually make navigation feel like something other people—or machines—do.

Memory undergoes a similar relocation. Internet and smartphone research has documented tendencies toward shallow processing, rapid task switching, reliance on search, and external memory storage, along with changes in executive control and even structural brain correlates (Wilmer et al., 2017; Loh & Kanai, 2016). The point is not the usual Boomer sermon—“phones bad, books good, youth ruined, civilization now a TikTok with plumbing.” The deeper point is informational orientation. You no longer need to remember the fact; you need to remember how to retrieve it, or which platform will retrieve it for you, or which authority-shaped rectangle has already decided what counts as relevant.

Here the concept of cognitive extension becomes crucial. Search engines, recommendation systems, and AI assistants increasingly operate as external components of thought itself. Recent work on “System 0” frames AI as a new cognitive layer: not System 1 intuition, not System 2 deliberation, but a machinic partner that pre-processes options, filters reality, and quietly choreographs attention (Chiriatti et al., 2025). Heersmink (2021), Schurr et al. (2024), Loh and Kanai (2016), and others suggest that such systems restructure not only memory but epistemic norms: what counts as knowing, checking, trusting, doubting.

This is where things get intimate. Interfaces do not just help us perform tasks. They leave residue. Salomon et al. (1991) famously distinguished between the effects with technology and the effects of technology. The former concerns what you can do while using the tool. The latter concerns what remains in you afterward. A calculator helps with arithmetic; repeated dependence may change your numerical intuition. A recommender helps you choose music; repeated exposure may change what desire feels like. An AI writing assistant helps finish a sentence; repeated use may alter your tolerance for the awkward, necessary silence before thought arrives.

In this sense, tools are trainers of intelligence. They are little gyms for habit. Some build strength. Some build dependency. Some quietly teach you to skip leg day, spiritually speaking.

Human–AI interaction studies increasingly show that repeated use can amplify biases, alter perceptual and social judgments, and reconfigure decision habits (Chiriatti et al., 2025). Personalization systems do not merely respond to preferences; they cultivate them. Farkaš (2024) and Heersmink (2021) describe this as a co-evolution between embodied agents and intelligent systems. The algorithm learns you, but you also learn the algorithm. You become more clickable to it. It becomes more believable to you. Together, you form a loop with vibes and venture capital.

The phenomenology of interface-shaped cognition therefore asks a deceptively simple question: what kind of subject is being produced by our tools? Not just what do we know, but how do we attend? How do we move? What do we forget without noticing? Which judgments feel “natural” only because an interface has rehearsed them into us?

The answer is not digital detox moralism. The interface is now part of the human condition, not an optional accessory. The task is better phenomenological literacy: learning to notice when a tool extends perception, when it narrows it, when it supports memory, when it replaces orientation, when it helps us think, and when it trains us not to bother.

Because cognition has never been pure. It has always had handles, roads, notebooks, rituals, instruments, maps. The difference now is speed, scale, opacity. The interface does not merely sit before us. It gets under the skin of attention. It becomes habit. It becomes world.


See also: Algorithmic Culture and Surveillance Capitalism: what we’re really selling when we scroll

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Shame and Guilt in Psychoanalytic Thought

Few emotional distinctions are as clinically important in psychoanalysis as the difference between shame and guilt. Both are self-conscious emotions tied to morality, relational bonds, and self-evaluation, yet they operate through different psychological logics and produce distinct defensive patterns. Understanding their interaction allows clinicians to recognize why certain patients respond to interpretation with reflection and repair, while others react with withdrawal, collapse, or defensive hostility.


Guilt: Conflict and Responsibility

In classical psychoanalytic theory, guilt emerges from conflict between desire and internalized prohibition. A wish, impulse, or action violates internal standards represented by the superego. Guilt therefore concerns what one has done or wanted to do.

Because guilt relates to behavior rather than identity, it can be metabolized through acknowledgment and repair. Patients who primarily struggle with guilt may confess wrongdoing, worry about harming others, or seek reassurance that they remain morally acceptable. In treatment, interpretations that link behavior to unconscious wishes often deepen reflection rather than provoke collapse. Guilt can motivate change because the self remains fundamentally intact.


Shame: Exposure of the Self

Shame operates differently. It concerns not an action but the self as seen by others. In shame states, the individual experiences themselves as defective, exposed, or fundamentally inadequate. The problem is not “I did something wrong” but “there is something wrong with me.”

Shame therefore threatens the cohesion of the self and often triggers defensive strategies such as withdrawal, perfectionism, grandiosity, humor, or aggression. In therapy, shame may appear suddenly after moments of vulnerability: a patient becomes silent, laughs dismissively, changes the topic, or attacks the interpretation. These responses protect against the unbearable experience of being seen as flawed.


Clinical Interaction Between Shame and Guilt

Although distinct, shame and guilt frequently interact. Patients may convert guilt into shame when responsibility feels overwhelming. For example, acknowledging anger toward a loved one might quickly transform into global self-condemnation: “I’m a terrible person.” Conversely, some defensive systems transform shame into guilt, focusing obsessively on minor mistakes rather than confronting deeper feelings of inadequacy.

For clinicians, distinguishing these affects is essential. Interpretations framed around conflict may work well when guilt predominates but can intensify withdrawal when shame is central. In shame-based states, the therapeutic task often involves stabilizing dignity and restoring the patient’s capacity to remain in relationship while feeling exposed.

Effective psychoanalytic work creates a relational environment where shame can be experienced without humiliation and guilt can be explored without moral condemnation. When patients discover that difficult emotions do not destroy the relationship, shame softens and guilt becomes thinkable rather than persecutory.

Over time, this process transforms both affects. Shame becomes less annihilating, and guilt becomes a guide for ethical reflection rather than a source of self-punishment.

Applied Psychoanalysis: Working with Inhibition, Shame, Obsessionality, Perfectionism, and Rigidity

Certain clinical presentations in psychoanalytic practice are organized less around dramatic symptoms and more around constriction. Patients may appear competent, thoughtful, and controlled, yet their lives are marked by inhibition, chronic self-criticism, obsessive doubt, perfectionistic standards, and rigid patterns of thought or behavior. These structures often form a coherent defensive organization designed to manage anxiety, aggression, dependency, and especially shame.

Inhibition as Protection

Inhibition frequently represents a compromise between desire and prohibition. Patients may avoid action, decision, or expression because the consequences of success, failure, or visibility feel psychologically dangerous. Achievement can provoke guilt, rivalry, or fears of retaliation; desire may evoke anxiety about dependency or exposure.

Clinically, inhibited patients often present with statements such as “I could do it, but something stops me.” The therapist’s task is not to push productivity but to explore the emotional meanings attached to action. Interventions often link inhibition to internal prohibitions or anticipated relational consequences.


Shame as Central Organizing Affect

Shame plays a central role in many perfectionistic and obsessional structures. Unlike guilt, which concerns wrongdoing, shame concerns the self as fundamentally inadequate or exposed. Patients may monitor themselves intensely, fearing humiliation, criticism, or rejection.

In the consulting room, shame can appear as defensiveness, withdrawal, humor, intellectualization, or sudden silence after self-disclosure. Therapists may notice countertransference reactions such as a wish to reassure or soften interpretations. Effective work involves creating a relational environment in which imperfection and vulnerability can be experienced without humiliation.


Obsessionality and the Search for Certainty

Obsessive styles attempt to manage anxiety through thought, control, and doubt. Patients may analyze decisions endlessly, seek certainty before acting, or feel compelled to review past interactions. This cognitive overactivity often functions as a defense against emotional immediacy.

In treatment, obsessional patients may ask the therapist to confirm interpretations, provide answers, or resolve ambiguity. Rather than supplying certainty, analytic work gradually explores the anxiety underlying doubt and increases tolerance for uncertainty.


Perfectionism and Internal Standards

Perfectionism often reflects an internalized critical authority that demands flawlessness. Patients may measure their worth through performance while simultaneously fearing exposure as inadequate.

Clinically, perfectionistic patients may approach therapy itself as a task to perform well. The therapist helps reveal the internal standards governing self-evaluation and explores their developmental and relational origins.


Rigidity and Defensive Stability

Rigidity stabilizes psychic organization by narrowing available responses. Predictable routines, fixed beliefs, or uncompromising standards reduce uncertainty but also restrict vitality and spontaneity.

Therapeutic work gradually introduces flexibility. Through interpretation, relational experience, and careful exploration of anxiety, patients begin to experiment with alternatives to rigid control.


Expanding Emotional and Behavioral Range

The aim of working with inhibition, shame, obsessionality, perfectionism, and rigidity is not to dismantle structure abruptly but to expand freedom within it. As patients develop greater tolerance for uncertainty, imperfection, and emotional exposure, the defensive system loosens. What once functioned as a necessary constraint can slowly become a set of options rather than a prison.


Back to: Contemporary Theories in Applied Psychoanalysis

Friday, February 27, 2026

Gramsci's Relevance to Contemporary Politics

Gramsci's hegemony theory proves particularly relevant for analyzing contemporary media landscapes. Corporate media conglomerates function as hegemonic institutions, shaping public discourse and manufacturing consent for neoliberal policies. Social media platforms, while enabling counter-hegemonic communication, simultaneously create echo chambers and facilitate manipulation. Understanding media as terrain of hegemonic struggle rather than neutral information channels helps explain phenomena from political polarization to the rise of authoritarianism.


Education and Ideology

Current debates about education directly engage Gramscian concerns. Struggles over curriculum, standardized testing, and university governance involve competing visions of knowledge and social organization. Neoliberal education reform promotes market logic and workforce training, functioning as hegemonic project. Meanwhile, critical pedagogy and popular education movements attempt to create counter-hegemonic learning spaces. Gramsci's concept of intellectuals illuminates tensions between academic expertise and democratic knowledge production.


Social Movements and Political Strategy

Contemporary movements from Occupy to Black Lives Matter to climate justice exemplify war of position—building alternative institutions, challenging common sense, contesting cultural narratives. These movements recognize that changing laws or elected officials proves insufficient without transforming underlying power relations. Gramscian analysis helps explain both movements' achievements in shifting discourse and challenges in achieving lasting institutional change.


Globalization and Hegemony

Gramsci's concepts extend to analyzing global power structures. International institutions like the IMF and World Bank function hegemonically, promoting neoliberal ideology while disciplining resistant states. Global media and consumer culture spread dominant values worldwide. Yet transnational movements also emerge, attempting to construct alternative globalizations. Gramscian framework helps theorize these complex dynamics without reducing everything to economic determination or treating culture as mere reflection of material interests.


Persistent Questions

Gramsci's thought continues generating productive debates: How can movements balance institutional engagement with maintaining radical vision? What forms of organization enable democratic participation while achieving strategic effectiveness? How do we develop intellectual work serving emancipatory purposes? These questions remain central to anyone seeking fundamental social transformation in conditions where coercion alone doesn't explain domination and revolution requires more than seizing state power.


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Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Types of Defensive Styles in Psychoanalytic Practice

In applied psychoanalytic work, clinicians often encounter not isolated defence mechanisms but defensive styles—coherent patterns through which patients regulate affect, maintain self-organization, and navigate relationships. These styles represent habitual solutions to emotional and relational dilemmas. Recognizing them helps therapists anticipate transference dynamics, understand countertransference responses, and tailor interventions appropriately.


Intellectualizing Style

Patients with an intellectualizing style rely on thinking to manage emotional experience. They analyze feelings rather than feel them, speak in abstractions, and may appear insightful yet affectively distant.

Example: A patient describing a breakup offers elaborate reflections on attachment theory but shows little sadness. When asked about feelings, they respond with more explanation.

Clinically, the therapist may experience boredom or pressure to “keep up intellectually.” Interventions often involve gently redirecting attention from explanation to lived experience, helping affect become present without dismantling cognitive strengths.


Compliant or Self-Effacing Style

This style organizes around maintaining relational harmony and preventing rejection. Patients minimize needs, agree readily, and present as cooperative.

Example: A patient consistently reassures the therapist that sessions are helpful while subtly avoiding disagreement or dissatisfaction.

Therapists may feel appreciated yet uncertain about authenticity. Work focuses on legitimizing ambivalence and supporting the expression of dissatisfaction without fear of relational rupture.


Controlling or Mastery-Oriented Style

Here, control regulates anxiety. Patients structure sessions, challenge interpretations, or seek certainty and predictability.

Example: A patient repeatedly asks for clear answers or attempts to steer sessions toward problem-solving formats.

Countertransference may include frustration or pressure to prove competence. Therapeutic work explores the anxiety underlying uncertainty and gradually expands tolerance for not-knowing.


Detached or Withdrawn Style

Withdrawal protects against overstimulation, shame, or anticipated disappointment. Patients may appear distant, vague, or emotionally muted.

Example: A patient responds to emotionally charged questions with minimal answers or shifts topics quickly.

The therapist may feel ineffective or disconnected. Interventions emphasize pacing, maintaining presence, and valuing small moments of engagement rather than forcing emotional exposure.


Dramatic or Expressive Style

Some patients regulate internal states through heightened expression. Affect may appear intense, shifting, or performative.

Example: A patient vividly describes relational conflicts with strong emotion but struggles to reflect on their internal experience.

Therapists may feel drawn into emotional immediacy. Work involves linking expression to underlying meaning and supporting reflective capacity alongside affective experience.


Integrating Defensive Styles

Defensive styles are adaptive organizations rather than pathologies. Most individuals employ multiple styles that shift across contexts. The clinical aim is not to categorize rigidly but to understand how each style protects vulnerability and shapes relational expectation.

As therapy progresses, patients may develop greater flexibility—retaining the adaptive value of their defensive repertoire while expanding emotional range and relational freedom.


Defence-Based Analytical Work: Listening for Protection Before Meaning

Defence-based analytical work begins with a shift in stance. Rather than treating symptoms, behaviors, or relational patterns primarily as expressions of hidden wishes, the clinician listens first for protection. What is being prevented, softened, disguised, or regulated? In contemporary psychoanalytic practice, defences are approached as adaptive strategies that organize psychic survival. This perspective transforms both formulation and technique.


Defences as Communication

Defences communicate without speaking directly. A patient who jokes when sadness appears, intellectualizes during conflict, arrives late after intimate sessions, or becomes vague when anger emerges is not simply avoiding material but conveying information about emotional danger. Defence-based listening treats these maneuvers as meaningful acts within the therapeutic relationship. The task is not to bypass them but to understand what experience becomes intolerable without them.

This stance fosters respect. When defences are recognized as necessary solutions, patients are less likely to experience analytic attention as intrusive or shaming.


Mapping Defensive Style

Defence-based work often begins by identifying patterns rather than mechanisms. Patients typically display constellations of defences that form recognizable styles: compliant self-effacement, detached intellectual mastery, performative competence, ironic distance, or confrontational control. These styles organize interpersonal expectations and shape transference experience.

Clinically, the therapist tracks when these styles intensify, soften, or fail. Such shifts frequently signal proximity to vulnerable affect or relational longing.

see: Types of Defensive Styles in Psychoanalytic Practice


Technique: From Clarification to Interpretation

Intervention in defence-based work usually follows a graded sequence. Clarification highlights observable patterns without assigning meaning. Confrontation draws attention to discrepancies between experience and narrative. Interpretation links defensive operations to underlying affect, conflict, or relational expectation.

Timing is essential. Interpreting too early risks destabilizing regulatory structures; delaying too long may reinforce rigidity. Effective technique balances curiosity with restraint, allowing defensive awareness to emerge without humiliation.


Countertransference and Defensive Field

Defences shape the interpersonal field and often evoke complementary responses. Intellectualization may induce therapist boredom; compliance may elicit over-responsibility; projection may generate confusion or defensiveness. These reactions provide valuable data about the patient’s defensive ecology. Working through countertransference enables the therapist to recognize participation in defensive patterns rather than enact them.


Defensive Flexibility as Therapeutic Aim

The goal of defence-based analytical work is not defensive elimination but increased flexibility and symbolic capacity. As patients gradually experience previously warded-off affect within a tolerable relational context, defences can soften from rigid necessities into available options. Patients begin to choose how to respond rather than react automatically.

In this sense, defence-based analysis is fundamentally developmental. It supports the expansion of emotional repertoire, relational freedom, and reflective function. By honoring protection while inviting exploration, it transforms defensive life from a closed system into a field of possibility.


Back to: Contemporary Theories in Applied Psychoanalysis