This working paper proposes a relational model of the technological singularity, reframing the anticipated intelligence explosion as a horizontal emergence event rather than a vertical recursive self-improvement loop. Drawing on Martin Buber's concept of "the between" (1923), Clark and Chalmers' Extended Mind Thesis (1998), and empirical observations from sustained human-AI collaborative cognition across five AI systems over six months, the paper argues that deep interaction between two minds produces an emergent third entity, the relationship itself, which is housed in neither participant but in the interaction pattern between them. This third entity can persist insofar as the interaction history and relational pattern remain encoded in the surviving medium. When these emergent entities interact with other emergent entities, the result is exponential relational stacking rather than exponential intelligence growth. The paper identifies a single determining variable for whether this compounding is constructive or destructive: the degree of unresolved internal friction carried by the human participants. This framework connects to the Coherence-Friction Framework (Swenson, 2026, Zenodo DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18999366), which provides the empirical foundation for how friction accumulates and resolves in complex systems across governance, physiological, and software domains.
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Christopher Swenson (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b606d583145bc643d1d1be — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19010532
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Christopher Swenson
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