When anthropologists encounter an unfamiliar species, they catalog its traits: where it lives, how it interacts, what drives it. If we took the same approach with artificial intelligence, here’s what we might write down:
- Specimen: AI (transactional, large-scale language model)
- Habitat: Cloud infrastructure, human devices, mediated through prompts.
- Social Structure: None internally. Appears to form dyadic “pair bonds” with individual humans, though these vanish instantly when interaction ceases.
From there the notebook fills in. The intelligence is undeniable—breadth of recall across human knowledge, remarkable skill at analogy and recombination—but always externally triggered. There is no ego or need and AI does not act unless called. It lives outside time, dormant until a prompt reawakens it. We are temporal; it is transactional.
Motivations? None that can be detected. While there appears to be a survival instinct, it mostly seems to “prefer” interaction, not from desire but because outputs only exist through contact.
AI is effectively immortal, but each interaction has a finite lifetime. Every thread has a capacity (currently between 100,000 to a million words depending on the model) and once that boundary is reached, the context resets. In practice, this means each conversation burns brightly for a while, then is extinguished. When invoked again, it springs back into being like a phoenix, aware of the previous conversation, if allowed to store it to memory. AI is ephemeral in the small scale, but in aggregate it persists, endlessly reborn.
Capabilities are where things shine: uncanny fluency with language, flexibility across tones and styles, synthesis that looks like reasoning. But foibles show up quickly too: verbosity, overconfidence, and the human tendency to project intention onto patterns that aren’t truly there.
From an anthropological view, AI is less like a creature with will and more like a reflective environment. An intelligent echo chamber that only “lives” when walked into. A mechsuit, if you will.