CONCEPT
Unintended Stabilizations
Configurations of AI use that
emerge from the interaction of design features with human psychology and context — not designed, not predicted, and accounting for a growing fraction of the technology's actual relational life.
Unintended stabilizations are the relational configurations that form when users take up a technology in ways its designers did not anticipate. All technologies produce them; they are what the
multistability principle describes empirically. AI produces them at unprecedented scale because its primary medium — natural language — supports effectively unbounded uses, and because three specific design features (conversational interface, output variability, broad capability scope) interact with human psychology to generate stabilizations no designer selected.
Productive addiction, therapeutic use, pseudo-romantic companionship, and sustained intellectual collaboration are all unintended stabilizations. None was designed. All produce real mediations with real effects. Together they constitute the actual relational landscape of AI use, which is substantially larger than the landscape of designed uses.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The pattern has individual design-feature origins that are individually benign. Conversational interface: designed for accessibility. Output variability: designed for quality. Broad capability: designed for utility. Each design choice is defensible on its own terms. But