CONCEPT
The Face and the Interface
Levinas's structural distinction between the <em>face</em> (which commands through vulnerability) and the <em>interface</em> (which accommodates through design)—the diagnostic that reveals what AI systems cannot provide regardless of their capability.
The face commands. The interface serves. This is not a pedantic distinction but the structural insight that determines what ethical substance AI-mediated interaction can and cannot carry. The interface is designed to accommodate the user's intentions, optimized for the user's satisfaction, shaped by the user's preferences. It offers no resistance, presents no demand, allows the user to extend their project without interruption. The face does none of these things. It interrupts, demands, and introduces obligations the self did not choose. Every consumer technology product of the last three decades has been optimized to eliminate the kind of friction the face introduces. Segal's description of being met by Claude is phenomenologically accurate: what the AI provides is extraordinary responsiveness. What it cannot provide is the demand that constitutes the ethical encounter.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The asymmetry between face and interface is structural, not contingent on the sophistication of current systems. A more capable AI, trained on more data, generating more polished output,
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