INQUIRING LINE

Did Chalmers abandon his own Extended Mind commitments for LLMs?

This explores whether Chalmers' 2026 account of LLM minds quietly contradicts the Extended Mind thesis he co-authored in 1998 — and the corpus suggests it does, by smuggling internalist boundaries back in.


This question is really about a philosopher seeming to argue against his younger self. In 1998, Chalmers and Andy Clark made the famous case that the mind doesn't stop at the skull — that a notebook, a tool, or an environment can be a genuine part of a cognitive system. The corpus's central finding is that Chalmers' 2026 treatment of LLMs reverses exactly this: by locating the LLM "interlocutor" as a virtual instance *inside* the AI system, he adopts the internalist boundary the Extended Mind thesis was built to reject Did Chalmers abandon his own Extended Mind principles?. Either the earlier thesis gets quietly retracted, or the new application misapplies its own author's principles — and Chalmers never flags which.

The sharper reading is that this isn't an isolated slip but part of a pattern of locating mind in the model rather than in the relation. A separate note argues that a virtual instance isn't a property of the model at all — it's constituted by the conversation, the jointly produced language between human and system, with persistence distributed across talk, infrastructure, and weights What actually specifies a virtual instance in conversation?. That decomposition is *itself* an Extended-Mind-style argument — and it cuts against Chalmers' own move to package the interlocutor as something the AI contains. So the corpus doesn't just accuse him of inconsistency; it shows what a genuinely extended account of the same phenomenon would look like.

What's interesting is how this connects to a cluster of "terminological" critiques. Several notes argue Chalmers keeps classical words while swapping out their content: he redefines "interlocutor" from a social-normative communicative role into a behavioral-functional one, importing the old term's authority while delivering an entity with none of its properties Does Chalmers silently redefine what interlocutor means?. A related argument says we don't even talk *to* these systems — we talk *at* them, because uptake and mutual orientation aren't there, which means the whole investigation rests on a shaky linguistic foundation Are we really communicating with language models?. Read together, the Extended Mind reversal looks like one instance of a broader habit: relocating the boundary of mind to wherever the current argument needs it.

To be fair to Chalmers, the corpus also holds his more careful moves, and they're not obviously inconsistent. His quasi-interpretivism brackets consciousness entirely and ascribes belief-like states purely on behavioral interpretability Can we describe LLM beliefs without assuming consciousness?, and the broader "modest inflationism" position — granting metaphysically undemanding states like beliefs and desires while withholding consciousness — survives the standard deflationist attacks Can we defend modest mental attributions to large language models?. These are defensible. The tension is specifically structural: a graded, functional story about *what* mental states to ascribe doesn't tell you *where* the system that has them begins and ends — and it's that second question where the 1998 commitment gets dropped.

The thing you might not have known you wanted to know: the strongest case that Chalmers abandoned Extended Mind isn't made by quoting 1998 against 2026 — it's made by taking his *own* 2026 analysis of virtual instances seriously and noticing it already describes a mind extended across conversation and infrastructure. The inconsistency is internal to the new work, not just between old and new.


Sources 6 notes

Did Chalmers abandon his own Extended Mind principles?

The 2026 virtual-instance account locates the LLM interlocutor inside the AI system, implicitly adopting internalist boundaries that the 1998 Extended Mind thesis explicitly rejected. This creates internal inconsistency unless the earlier thesis is retracted or the new application misapplies its principles.

What actually specifies a virtual instance in conversation?

The conversational context—jointly produced language between human and system—specifies the virtual instance, not any property of the model itself. Persistence is distributed across conversation, infrastructure, and model weights rather than located in the AI.

Does Chalmers silently redefine what interlocutor means?

Chalmers replaces the classical concept of interlocutor—a social-normative communicative role—with a behavioral-functional definition compatible with LLMs, keeping the traditional word to import its philosophical authority while delivering an entity with none of its properties.

Are we really communicating with language models?

LLMs process tokens and generate continuations rather than receive and uptake communication. The preposition 'to' presupposes an addressee capable of mutual orientation and shared commitment that LLMs cannot provide, making Chalmers' investigation built on an unwarranted linguistic foundation.

Can we describe LLM beliefs without assuming consciousness?

Chalmers introduces quasi-interpretivism to ascribe belief-like states to LLMs based on behavioral interpretability without committing to phenomenal consciousness. The approach works well for sub-personal functional states but overreaches when applied to relational or normative states like speech-acts.

Can we defend modest mental attributions to large language models?

Both robustness and etiological deflationist arguments beg the question against inflationism. A graded approach ascribing metaphysically undemanding states like beliefs and desires—while withholding consciousness claims—mirrors how we treat non-human animals.

Research prompt for your LLMexpand ↓

Copy into ChatGPT or Claude to take this line of inquiry further — it asks the model to find newer work and re-test which earlier constraints still hold.

You are a philosopher of mind and AI cognition examining whether Chalmers' recent work on LLM mentality is internally consistent with his own 1998 Extended Mind thesis (co-authored with Clark). The question remains open: does Chalmers genuinely abandon extended cognition for LLMs, or does his framework already embed it?

What a curated library found — and when (dated claims, not current truth):
Findings span 2024–2026:
• Chalmers (2026) locates the LLM "interlocutor" as a virtual instance *inside* the AI system, inverting the skull-boundary-rejecting move of Extended Mind (1998).
• His own analysis of virtual instances decomposes them into conversation + infrastructure + weights — a decomposition that *is* Extended-Mind-style reasoning and contradicts his internalist packaging.
• Chalmers redefines "interlocutor" from social-normative role to behavioral-functional property, importing old terminology while evacuating its content (terminological imperialism).
• The preposition matters: we talk *at* LLMs, not *to* them, because mutual uptake and orientation are absent — undermining the social foundation of the inquiry itself.
• His "modest inflationism" (graded belief-ascription without consciousness) survives standard deflationist attacks and is defensible on internal grounds.

Anchor papers (verify; mind their dates):
• Clark & Chalmers, 1998 (Extended Mind thesis)
• Chalmers, 2026 (referenced in synthesis; locate via arXiv)
• arXiv:2506.13403 (Deflating Deflationism, ~2025); arXiv:2603.18893 (Quantitative Introspection, ~2026)

Your task:
(1) RE-TEST EACH CONSTRAINT. For each finding, determine whether recent model scaling, mechanistic interpretability breakthroughs, conversational harnesses (multi-turn scaffolding, memory/caching), or refinements to behavioral interpretability have *relaxed* or *overturned* the internalist turn. Judge what is genuinely inconsistent versus what is durable: Does the Extended Mind framework still apply to LLM cognition? Has the definition of "interlocutor" been reconsidered since 2026?
(2) Surface the strongest contradicting work from the last ~6 months that either defends Chalmers' boundary-drawing or restores the extended reading he seems to have abandoned.
(3) Propose 2 research questions that assume the regime has moved: (a) Can mechanistic interpretability *show* that LLM reasoning is constitutively distributed across model + conversation + user rather than internally contained? (b) If mutual uptake is restored via agentic interaction or behavioral scaffolding, does the "talking to" versus "talking at" distinction dissolve, rehabilitating Extended Mind?

Cite arXiv IDs; flag anything you cannot ground in a real paper.

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