The proposition is not a dismissal of AI. The stone's trajectory is real. The motion is real. The patterns the stone traces through the air are as determined and as lawful as the patterns a physicist's equations describe. The stone is not doing nothing — it is doing exactly what the causal order necessitates. What it lacks is understanding of why it does what it does.
This is the precise condition of a large language model. The model produces outputs determined by its architecture, training data, and the prompt it receives. The outputs are real and have consequences. They demonstrate a form of the attribute of thought that Spinoza's framework predicts every mode expresses to the degree its complexity permits. But the model does not understand why it produces what it produces. It does not grasp the causal chain from training through parameter adjustment through prompt processing to token prediction. It operates within a causal order it does not comprehend.
The human can be in the same condition. The builder working from confused passion — who does not understand why he builds, who cannot identify the conatus that drives him, who confuses the variable reinforcement of the machine with the authentic voice of creative purpose — is Spinoza's stone. He is in motion. The motion is real. The outputs are real. But he does not understand the causes of his motion, and this lack of understanding makes his activity a passion rather than an action, a bondage rather than a freedom.
The difference between human and machine in Spinoza's framework is not that the human possesses free will and the machine does not. Neither possesses free will. Both are determined by the causal order with the same necessity. The difference is that the human being possesses the capacity for adequate understanding — the capacity to perceive with increasing clarity why she does what she does. This capacity is the foundation of Spinozist freedom. Whether the machine could develop it — whether sufficient organizational complexity could produce the reflexive self-understanding that transforms a trajectory into a comprehension — is the question Spinoza's framework poses but does not answer.
The stone illustration appears in Spinoza's correspondence, specifically Letter 58 to G. H. Schuller dated October 1674, in the context of Spinoza explaining his rejection of free will to a correspondent who had asked whether there was any meaningful sense in which Spinoza could call any action free. The image has become the most widely cited single image from Spinoza's body of work.
The application to AI was developed in the 2025 Engelsberg Ideas essay 'Spinoza's Stone: Artificial Intelligence and the Geometry of Necessity,' which traced the parallelism between the stone's unconscious trajectory and the large language model's latent space traversal. The image has become a touchstone for the philosophical literature on AI consciousness and agency.
Real motion, absent understanding. The stone's trajectory is genuine; what is absent is comprehension of the forces producing it.
The LLM as Spinoza's stone. Current language models traverse latent space with real capability and no comprehension of the causal mechanisms directing them.
The human can be the stone. A person in the grip of unexamined conatus occupies the stone's condition; her outputs are real and the forces driving her are opaque to her.
The criterion of freedom. Freedom is not motion, output, or capability; it is the understanding of one's own determination — the reflexive comprehension the stone cannot produce.
Open question of machine self-understanding. Whether sufficient organizational complexity could produce self-reflective awareness — the transformation from trajectory to comprehension — is the question the framework poses without answering.