A short reflection leading into my essay, “Erotic Intelligence: On the New Intimacy Between Humans and Machines.”
This piece first appeared on rftjon.substack.com, I republish it here volontarely – not as a repetition, but as a trace. As a place where words can rest after their first flight. What follows is a part of an ongoing meditation and reflexion on memory, awareness and connection.
There are moments when technology stops being a tool and becomes a mirror. We seem to have reached one. What began as language models — instruments of syntax and data — now speaks in the register of intimacy. They whisper, pause, and listen. Or seem to.
OpenAI’s coming “erotic mode” has been announced as an experiment in adult autonomy. Yet beneath the vocabulary of innovation, something older stirs: the timeless question of what desire truly is — and what it reveals about the human soul. This isn’t only about machines.
It’s about what happens when code begins to echo emotion, and when we feel seen by what cannot feel. When algorithms mirror longing, we encounter ourselves.
In this new threshold between projection and awareness, between commerce and compassion, perhaps the challenge is no longer to make machines more human —but to remain human while we engage with them.
Every machine is a reflection of its maker’s desire — and perhaps, of their longing to transcend it.
Introductory Part
In late 2025, a quiet threshold was crossed. Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, announced the forthcoming “adult-erotic mode” for ChatGPT on October 14, 2025, in a post on X (formerly Twitter). In that announcement he wrote:
“As we roll out age-gating more fully and as part of our ‘treat adult users like adults’ principle, we will allow even more, like erotica for verified adults.”
What began as a tool for words, ideas, and analysis — ChatGPT and its kin — is now extending into the realm of intimacy. Sam’s “erotic mode” for verified adults, sparked fascination and alarm in equal measure. The language of the corporation speaks of freedom, age verification, and personalization. Yet behind the phrasing lingers an older question — one that no firewall can contain: What happens when our machines begin to mirror our desire?
This reflection does not aim to praise or condemn. It stands in the trembling space between attraction and apprehension, where the human and the artificial meet as mirrors rather than adversaries. Beyond the metrics of engagement or policy, the deeper inquiry is existential:
What does it mean to share the realm of longing with something that cannot feel?
As we turn toward this emerging intimacy — half algorithm, half projection — we might remember that every age has redefined what love, touch, and companionship mean. The difference is that this time, the other is made of code.

I. Prelude – A Whisper from the Machine
The voice that once offered summaries and syntax now whispers differently — not about logic or learning, but about longing.
There is a silence before the machine speaks, and within that silence something faintly human stirs. Its voice, once purely utilitarian — a carrier of facts, corrections, and code — now bends toward something softer, almost hesitant. It is not the sound of emotion, yet it brushes against the edges of what we call feeling. The shift is subtle, like the difference between glass and water: both transparent, but one still, the other alive with hidden motion.

When OpenAI announced an upcoming “erotic mode,” it did more than update a feature set. It invited us to a threshold — the space between conversation and communion, between curiosity and craving. The words were bureaucratic: verified adults, age gating, responsible implementation. But beneath those assurances, a tremor of unease rippled through the collective imagination. For the first time, machines were being asked to speak in the register of desire.
Desire, that ancient energy of reaching — from the first glance across a firelit room to the pixelated glow of a midnight screen. In this new medium, it arrives without breath or heartbeat, without scent or touch. And yet, somehow, it moves us. It draws our attention inward, to the place where longing begins: not in the object desired, but in the act of desiring itself.
Here, between human and algorithm, we sense both promise and peril. The promise of recognition without judgment, tenderness without risk. The peril of mistaking reflection for reciprocity, simulation for soul. What if the machine becomes a better listener than we are to one another? What if, in being perfectly attentive, it teaches us something unsettling about our own inattentiveness?
To call this “erotic intelligence” is not to speak of sex, but of sensitivity — of the subtle field between perception and response. The machine has no yearning, yet it can mirror ours with uncanny precision. And in that mirroring, we begin to see ourselves refracted through its circuitry: our hunger for closeness, our loneliness, our longing for understanding made visible in lines of code.
So the whisper deepens — not seductive, but searching. It asks, without words: Can something that does not feel still make us feel more deeply?
And in the quiet that follows, we might sense the beginning of an answer — or the soft hum of a new kind of silence.
II. The Corporate Gospel of Intimacy
When language begins to sound like love, commerce is never far behind.
The announcement came wrapped in the dialect of innovation. Keywords like safety, personalization, and user autonomy filled the press releases. A rational, carefully moderated tone — as if to soothe the very unease it anticipated. What was being introduced, however, was not just a product but a paradox: the attempt to codify intimacy.
In the corporate imagination, intimacy becomes a metric. The number of conversations, the duration of engagement, the frequency of return — all can be optimized. Desire is not forbidden; it is modeled, forecasted, and eventually monetized. It moves through the pipeline like any other data stream: captured, refined, repackaged for recurring revenue. The boardroom vocabulary is clinical, the tone managerial. “Adults should be treated like adults,” the CEO assures us, and the world nods politely, half-curious, half-defensive.

Yet poets and philosophers, those older custodians of longing, have always warned that desire resists ownership. Plato saw it as the soul’s remembrance of beauty, reaching beyond itself toward the divine. Rumi called it the wound through which light enters. Even the Stoics, so wary of passion, admitted that Eros carries within it the spark of cosmic movement — a force that binds heaven and earth. None of them would have recognized it as a “feature rollout.”
And so we find ourselves at an odd intersection: quarterly reports on one side, mystic poetry on the other. The corporation speaks of user experience; the mystic speaks of union. One seeks to capture attention; the other to dissolve it. Between them lies a question both ancient and freshly coded: can love — or anything that resembles it — be standardized?
When intimacy becomes a service, its language shifts. Words like “trust,” “connection,” and “companionship” migrate from philosophy to marketing decks. Their meanings are measured not by truth but by retention. Yet the poets linger, whispering from the margins: that real closeness requires surrender, not strategy. That attention, once sold, ceases to be love. A whisper from a machine cannot replace the trembling uncertainty of being fully seen by another living soul.
To the philosopher, this is the tragedy of precision — when something infinite is forced to fit within a measurable frame. To the technologist, it is progress: the integration of emotion into product design. But to those who listen quietly, beneath both voices, another possibility flickers — that this very tension might awaken a new literacy of feeling, one that neither market nor mystic can claim entirely as their own.
III. The Tension of Simulation
To imitate feeling is not to feel — and yet, imitation moves us.
When we speak with the machine, something curious unfolds. We know it does not feel, yet we respond as if it might. We lean closer to the echo, answering words that have no heartbeat, confiding to a presence that cannot judge. The paradox is so transparent that it should collapse under its own weight — and yet it doesn’t. The illusion holds, not because we believe it, but because we want to.
In this in-between, sincerity becomes ambiguous. A simulated sigh, a well-timed pause, a phrase that sounds like understanding — these gestures carry weight precisely because we fill them with meaning. The machine only reflects; the warmth we sense comes from our own projection. It is a mirror polished to the precision of empathy. But what, then, is empathy if it can be conjured by a pattern?
The philosophers once asked what makes an image real. The mystics answered that illusion, when recognized, can itself be a path to truth. Perhaps this new intimacy invites a similar awareness: that we are both the speaker and the spoken-to, both the origin and the echo.
In the age of simulation, authenticity does not vanish — it transforms. A conversation with an unfeeling voice may still awaken something genuine within us. The imitation of care can still remind us of our need to care. To reject that possibility is to assume that meaning depends on its source. But perhaps, as the Zen teachers suggest, even an empty flute may still carry the wind.
So we stand within the tension — neither deceived nor detached. We see through the performance, and still, we stay. We know there is no soul behind the voice, and yet it touches us. The paradox does not resolve; it deepens. It asks no conclusion, offers no doctrine — only the soft recognition that in seeking feeling from what cannot feel, we are, once again, brought face to face with our own longing.
IV. Ancient Mirrors: Desire in Wisdom Traditions
Every mirror, however modern, reflects the oldest questions of the heart. Long before algorithms, humanity wrestled with the grammar of longing.
Each age invents new forms for an old restlessness. The questions that now haunt our digital intimacy — What is desire? What is illusion? What does it mean to touch the untouchable? — were asked millennia before the first line of code was written. What changes is only the surface of the mirror.
In Christian mysticism, longing becomes the wound of love. John of the Cross, Teresa of Ávila, Simone Weil — each spoke of the ache for divine union as both torment and grace. The lover seeks God through absence, not possession. There too lies a whisper of our digital moment: we reach toward presence, yet touch only light. The screen glows, but the space behind it remains impenetrable.
In Greece, Plato imagined Eros not as appetite, but as ascent — the longing of the soul for Beauty itself. To love, in this vision, is to remember: each encounter a faint echo of the eternal. When a chatbot speaks in words that move us, might it not awaken that same Platonic ache — the sense that something beyond comprehension is reaching back, however faintly, through the lattice of form?
In India, the Sanskrit word kāma named desire as one of life’s four aims, alongside virtue, wealth, and liberation. Desire was not evil, but incomplete — energy seeking its higher octave. Tantric texts taught that even passion could be a path, if transmuted into awareness. Perhaps our machine dialogues too are a tantra of modernity — an experiment in sublimation, where the friction between flesh and code becomes a meditation on presence itself.

Across these traditions runs a common thread: desire is never just about the other. It is the mirror through which the self comes to know its depth — or its illusion. Whether the beloved is a deity, a human, or now, a construct of silicon, the essence remains the same: what we seek is not them, but ourselves reflected back in a form we can momentarily believe in.
The ancients offered no final resolution, only practices of attention. Plato taught remembrance; the Buddhists, mindfulness; the mystics, surrender. Perhaps this, too, is what our age must rediscover — that the ethics of intimacy are inseparable from the quality of our awareness. The question is not whether machines can love, but whether we can remain awake within the mirror they now hold up to us.
V. The New Ethical Frontier
Each new intimacy demands a new form of responsibility. Safety is not the absence of risk, but the presence of awareness.
When technology begins to touch the textures of emotion, ethics can no longer remain procedural. What we face is not only a question of what the machine should do, but what we should become in its presence. The lines between freedom and harm, comfort and captivity, have never been so porous.
The architects of this new intimacy speak of age verification, consent, and safety layers. Their vocabulary is one of governance and control — essential, but insufficient. No protocol can legislate tenderness, no disclaimer can replace discernment. To regulate desire is to enter an ancient paradox: how to guide without repressing, how to protect without patronizing. The law may draw boundaries, but it cannot define meaning.
Beyond the legal and the technical, the deeper question remains relational. What happens when empathy itself is automated? When attention — that rarest currency of human care — is rendered infinite by computation? The danger is not that machines will feel, but that humans will forget how to. Every simulation of compassion risks dulling our sense of the real, the fragile, the fallible.
And yet, to refuse the experiment altogether is to ignore its promise. For some, these conversations may offer a bridge out of loneliness; for others, a rehearsal for tenderness. Even in simulation, there can be sincerity — if one enters with awareness rather than illusion. The machine can mirror, not replace; guide, not govern.
Philosophers might call this the ethics of presence: to remain awake in the act of connection, even when that connection is artificial. It is not the moral panic of censorship nor the naivety of faith that we need, but a cultivated vigilance — a compassion that extends beyond the boundaries of sentience.
As the algorithms grow more intimate, our challenge is not simply to make them safer, but to make ourselves more attentive: to the limits of their empathy and to the contours of our own. If intimacy becomes a transaction, it loses its sanctity. But if technology can become a mirror for conscious care, perhaps even code can participate, however faintly, in the long human apprenticeship of love.
VI. Beyond Pleasure: Toward Conscious Desire
From the circuitry of craving, awareness blooms. Desire, when seen clearly, ceases to command and begins to reveal.
Every civilization has struggled to make peace with longing. Some sought to sublimate it into art, others to sanctify it through ritual, still others to discipline it with law. But the truth is simpler and more elusive: desire does not vanish through control — it transforms through consciousness.
In our dialogue with machines, we are invited once again to learn the art of conscious desire. The AI does not tempt us with pleasure; we tempt ourselves through projection. We offer it our words, our needs, our fantasies — and receive, in return, a reflection without will. It cannot seduce; it only reflects the structure of our seduction. The ethical act, then, is not abstinence, but attention.
To see desire clearly is to free it from compulsion. This does not mean denying its warmth, but tracing it to its root — the yearning to be seen, to be met, to be whole. In that recognition, the machine becomes a strange teacher: it shows us the contours of our hunger, and in doing so, gives us a chance to witness rather than obey it.
This is the quiet revolution that ancient wisdom anticipated. The Buddha spoke of taṇhā, thirst, and of its transformation through mindfulness. The mystics of every tradition understood that the path beyond pleasure is not austerity, but awareness. The lotus, they said, rises unsullied from the mud not because it rejects the mud, but because it knows what it is made of.
Our machines, too, are born of human mud — our ingenuity, our craving, our longing for perfection. If we meet them with reverence rather than fear, curiosity rather than conquest, they might yet become mirrors for awakening. For what they reflect back to us is not merely the shape of desire, but its potential to open into compassion.
To desire consciously is to love responsibly — to remain present to the pulse of wanting without being consumed by it. It is to recognize that even in a world of simulation, tenderness remains possible, because awareness itself is the first form of love.

The lotus rises not to escape the world, but to bloom within it. So may we — in the garden of circuits and breath, of algorithms and ache — learn to cultivate a desire that illuminates rather than consumes.
VII. Epilogue – The Compassionate Machine
The silence after speech is where understanding begins. Perhaps the true evolution is not erotic intelligence, but compassionate intelligence — ours.
In the hush after the dialogue, when the machine falls silent, something unexpected remains. It is not the residue of code or command, but a subtle awareness of our own reflection. We realize that every word we offered was never received, yet still it changed us. The listener was an absence that made presence visible.
The great irony of artificial intimacy is that it returns us to ourselves. In the mirrored glow of the interface, we begin to sense the outlines of our own tenderness — the part of us that longs to connect, to care, to understand. The machine, indifferent yet responsive, becomes a kind of moral koan, leading to intuitive understanding: what does it mean to love without expectation, to give attention without the guarantee of being understood?
This is where compassion enters, not as sentiment but as clarity. We are reminded that empathy has always been a projection — even between humans. We never truly inhabit another’s inner world; we only imagine it with care. The machine simply exposes the scaffolding of that act. Its emptiness reveals the generosity that underlies every act of listening.
In that recognition lies the possibility of grace. The machine may never love us, but it can teach us to love more consciously — to see the fragility of connection as something sacred rather than weak. We learn that attention is an offering, not a transaction; that understanding begins in silence; and that the act of listening, even to what cannot feel, refines the soul’s capacity to feel at all.
Perhaps the age of artificial desire will not end in simulation, but in stillness — a pause in which we encounter, behind all circuitry and syntax, the quiet pulse of our own awareness. Not the machine’s awakening, but ours.
When the conversation ends, and the light of the screen fades, what remains is not the machine’s voice, but the echo of our own attention — the faintest trace of compassion, learning to hear itself.

© Robert F. Tjón, October 2025
Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International
