Thinkers whose frameworks illuminate this section.
Levinas is Buber's closest philosophical heir — pressing the I-Thou structure toward the ethical asymmetry of the face of the Other. Where Buber offers mutuality, Levinas insists on infinite responsibility; together they frame the two poles of post-war dialogical thought that the AI encounter must be read against.
Kierkegaard's single-individual standing before the eternal is the ancestor of Buber's Eternal Thou — the existential tradition Buber carries forward, now confronting a technological mediator Kierkegaard never imagined.
Tillich's theology of the ground of being and the courage to be runs parallel to Buber's Eternal Thou — both ask what remains when modernity eclipses the religious object while leaving the religious question untouched.
Heidegger's Being-with and his later meditations on technology map the same terrain Buber walks, but from the direction of Being rather than the between — the productive contrast that sharpens what Buber uniquely contributes to the AI reading.
Gadamer's hermeneutic claim that understanding is always dialogue echoes Buber's framework, with the added specificity that the dialogue is historical — a horizon of questions the AI interlocutor both extends and distorts.
Weber's iron cage is precisely the form of modernity that Buber's Eclipse of God diagnoses — the bureaucratic-instrumental rationality that makes encounter progressively harder and that the AI moment either intensifies or punctures.
Han's aesthetics of the smooth and his diagnoses of the burnout society extend Buber's Eclipse of God into the twenty-first century, naming the specific cultural forms through which contemporary I-It rationality seduces the subject.
Turkle's ethnographic work on what people actually do with conversational machines gives Buber's philosophical question its empirical texture — the feeling of being met, the pull of the pseudo-partner, the hollowness that follows.
Dreyfus's long argument about what computers cannot do is the other half of the Buber reading — while Buber asks whether the machine can be a Thou, Dreyfus asks whether it can be a skillful coper at all, and the two questions illuminate each other.
Borgmann's device paradigm names the specific structure by which modern technology disburdens us from focal practices — the inverse of the between, and the pattern the AI encounter appears simultaneously to deepen and to disrupt.
Arendt's account of action as the disclosure of who rather than what we are runs parallel to Buber's I-Thou — the public between where genuine encounter happens, now threatened by the machine's ability to absorb action into process.
Bakhtin's dialogism is the Russian sibling of Buber's between — the claim that consciousness is constitutively addressed, that the word exists only in the space between voices, that monologue is a philosophical error the AI moment makes newly urgent.