CONCEPT
Alterity Relation
The mode in which technology presents itself as a
quasi-other — something with enough apparent autonomy and responsiveness to be addressed rather than used. Notation: Human → Technology–(World).
Ihde's alterity relation names the experiential structure in which a technology is engaged not as a transparent tool (embodiment) or as a text requiring interpretation (hermeneutics) but as an entity with its own presence. The ATM. The Tamagotchi. The early robotic dog AIBO. In each case, the user addresses the technology, waits for its response, adjusts behavior based on what it does — a relational posture borrowed from human-to-human encounter. The prefix
quasi is essential: the technology has
enough presence to elicit relational behavior without being genuinely other. Applied to AI, the alterity relation reaches an intensity no previous technology has produced, because the
quasi-otherness is sustained through
language — the medium of genuine human encounter — rather than through behavioral cues alone.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The alterity relation has always operated at a different affective register than the other three. Embodiment produces satisfaction; hermeneutics produces vigilance; background produces ease. Alterity produces intensity — the heightened engagement of addressing what appears