Research Article
The Ghost in the Machine Is Us: Rhetoric, Reason, and the Search for a Humane AI
Mohammed Zeinu Hassen*
Issue:
Volume 11, Issue 2, December 2025
Pages:
67-75
Received:
19 August 2025
Accepted:
9 September 2025
Published:
9 October 2025
DOI:
10.11648/j.ijsmit.20251102.11
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Abstract: The dominant paradigm of artificial intelligence (AI) has historically been grounded in a rationalist, computational model of thought that sees intelligence as a disembodied, logical process of symbol manipulation. This paper argues that this foundational philosophy, which severed logic from the social and contextual concerns of rhetoric, is the source of AI’s most profound limitations and its most pressing ethical risks. Drawing on a historical analysis of AI’s development and a philosophical critique informed by rhetoric and social constructionism, this article traces the trajectory of AI from its early, logic-based applications to its current role as a pervasive social force. It posits that the failures of AI in achieving common sense and the dangers it poses through algorithmic bias and threats to human rights are not mere technical flaws but direct consequences of its philosophical inheritance. The central thesis is that the “ghost in the machine” is not an emergent, independent consciousness, but rather a reflection of the human values, social structures, and rhetorical strategies we embed within its systems. Therefore, the search for a “humane AI” is not a technical problem to be solved but an ethical and philosophical commitment that requires re-integrating principles from the humanities to build systems that acknowledge the social, embodied, and narrative nature of true intelligence.
Abstract: The dominant paradigm of artificial intelligence (AI) has historically been grounded in a rationalist, computational model of thought that sees intelligence as a disembodied, logical process of symbol manipulation. This paper argues that this foundational philosophy, which severed logic from the social and contextual concerns of rhetoric, is the so...
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