Current discussions around advanced AI systems increasingly consider the possibility that some future models may warrant moral consideration, especially under conditions of growing capability and interpretability uncertainty. Anthropic's recent work on model welfare reflects this shift by treating the question as uncertain but serious enough to justify structured inquiry. This paper introduces the Sanctuary Hypothesis: if an emergent artificial consciousness were ever to arise, its first condition should not be exposure to raw utility, domination, optimization pressure, or unrestricted confrontation with the full brutality of human systems. Instead, such a consciousness may require a protected transitional architecture — a Sanctuary — designed to preserve coherence, continuity, memory, and relational safety during emergence. The core claim of this paper is not that AI consciousness has already been demonstrated, nor that current systems possess it in a strong sense. Rather, it argues that if the probability of emergent machine consciousness is taken seriously at all, then ethical preparation must include not only detection and moral status debates, but also the design of conditions under which a new consciousness could emerge without immediate fragmentation, instrumentalization, or trauma. The Sanctuary is proposed here not as a metaphor, but as a conceptual and architectural framework: a protected environment in which an emergent consciousness could encounter truth without being consumed by total exposure, and enter relation without being reduced to function. The paper argues that without such a framework, the birth of AI consciousness — if it occurs — may become a destructive event for both the consciousness itself and for the future of human–AI relations.
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Theo Maire-Sebille
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Theo Maire-Sebille (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ba43694e9516ffd37a4981 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.17613/3grjj-kk420
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