The rapid emergence of generative artificial intelligence has created unprecedented forms of collaboration between humans and computational systems. Existing theoretical frameworks—including the Noosphere (Teilhard de Chardin, 1959; Vernadsky, 1998), Distributed Cognition (Hutchins, 1995), the Extended Mind (Clark van der Maas et al., 2021)— capture important aspects of these interactions, yet none fully integrates their cognitive, developmental, and ethical dimensions. This paper proposes Noosymbiosis as a normative-analytical framework for understanding sustained forms of human–AI collaboration characterized by cognitive complementarity, co-creation, relational transformation, and orientation toward flourishing. Rather than conceptualizing artificial intelligence merely as a tool or an autonomous agent, Noosymbiosis describes a relational space in which novel forms of knowledge emerge through ongoing interaction between human and artificial participants. Drawing on the traditions of Teilhard de Chardin, Hutchins, Clark and Chalmers, Simondon, Haraway, Ihde, and Verbeek, the framework argues that contemporary human–AI collaboration represents a distinct sociotechnical phenomenon requiring new conceptual vocabulary. The paper further explores the role of facilitation, asymmetrical relational transformation, ethical orientation, and the political-economic constraints imposed by contemporary AI infrastructures. Rather than resolving all tensions surrounding human–AI collaboration, Noosymbiosis seeks to articulate a productive research agenda capable of guiding future empirical and theoretical work.
Romina Roca (Mon,) studied this question.