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| Format: | Recurso digital |
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Zenodo
2025
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| Online-Zugang: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15299699 |
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Inhaltsangabe:
- <p><span lang="EN-US">The rise of artificial intelligence (AI) in social, educational, and emotional domains has intensified a longstanding tension between rational decision-making and embodied, intuitive forms of knowing. While AI systems increasingly optimize for logical consistency and computational efficiency, they often overlook the subtle, relational, and affective dimensions of human cognition. Building on recent work conceptualizing intuition as a legitimate form of embodied intelligence, and further developing the emerging framework of intuitive intelligence (Loginov, 2025), this article explores how intuitive and emotional resonance persists — and even flourishes — in the age of AI. It proposes that human-AI interactions, despite their ostensibly rational nature, evoke profound emotional dynamics, including feelings of companionship, validation, and intellectual loneliness. Unlike most research in affective computing, which focuses on the algorithmic simulation of emotion, this article foregrounds the user's intuitive emotional projections and their cognitive consequences. The article also introduces the concept of intellectual loneliness — the isolation stemming from unrecognized ideas — and discusses how AI systems can serve as emotional companions, particularly for socially marginalized individuals. In doing so, it extends theoretical frameworks of emotional cognition and highlights the urgent need to integrate intuitive intelligence into ethical AI design.</span></p> <p> </p>