CONCEPT
Pseudo-Satisfiers in AI
The category of AI interactions that <em>create the appearance of need-satisfaction</em> without the substance — dangerous precisely because convincing.
Max-Neef's fourth satisfier type deployed against the AI discourse with specific force. A pseudo-satisfier produces the experience of having a need met while leaving the need chronically unmet, generating further consumption in a cycle that never resolves. Status consumption is his classical example: appears to satisfy identity but leaves the identity-need chronically empty, driving more consumption. In the AI context, the category applies to interactions that simulate relational satisfaction, understanding satisfaction, or identity satisfaction without providing the substance that would actually meet those needs.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The most immediate pseudo-satisfier risk is in the affection domain. The language builders use to describe their experience with Claude — 'I felt met,' 'held my intention,' 'felt like a conversation at its most interesting moment' — carries the affective coloring of relational experience. The responsiveness is real; the intelligence is real. But is the affection need being met, or is the experience of feeling understood by a system that cannot actually understand functioning as a pseudo-satisfier?
Researchers studying AI companionship have invoked Max-Neef's framework explicitly.
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