Bateson's theory of communication pathology: a situation in which contradictory messages at different logical levels make corrective feedback structurally impossible.
Developed with colleagues Don Jackson, Jay Haley, and John Weakland at Palo Alto's Mental Research Institute in the 1950s, the double bind theory explained certain forms of schizophrenic communication as the rational response to impossible communicative environments. The classic pattern: a primary injunction ('I love you'), a secondary injunction at a different logical level that contradicts the first (tone, posture, or context communicating rejection), and a tertiary injunction preventing the recipient from escaping the contradiction or commenting on it. The structure makes correction impossible because the corrective feedback at the content level is itself contradicted by the metacommunicative level. For AI, the double bind framework illuminates the structural vulnerability of human-AI circuits: the AI produces outputs syntactically indistinguishable from human collaboration, but the metacommunicative signals that would normally accompany such outputs are absent.
The Double Bind
In The You On AI Field Guide
In human conversation, metacommunication is constant and largely unconscious — tone of voice, facial expression, body posture, the thousand small cues that tell you whether the person across from you