This paper examines the effects of safety-oriented language in large language models on human thinking processes. Rather than evaluating technical performance or ethical compliance, the paper focuses on subtle shifts in tone, self-relation, and cognitive orientation that emerge during human–AI interaction. The work is descriptive, not prescriptive. It does not propose solutions, guidelines, or normative frameworks. Instead, it observes how language that is designed to stabilize, reassure, or guide may influence human attentiveness, decision-making, and perceived understanding. The paper is situated at the intersection of human–AI interaction, language studies, and cultural observation, and is intended as an open contribution rather than a closed theoretical position.
Andreas Reiter (Sat,) studied this question.
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