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Beyond Biology: AI as Family and the Future of Human Bonds and Relationships

Prashant Dr. Mahajan
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Prashant Dr. Mahajan: R. C. Patel Institute of Technology

No snh4w_v1, OSF Preprints from Center for Open Science

Abstract: As Artificial Intelligence (AI) evolves from a functional tool to a relational companion, society faces a transformative redefinition of family, kinship, and human identity. No longer limited to task automation, AI is increasingly embedded in emotionally significant roles, such as caregivers, companions, children, parents, and even partners. This paper critically examines the prospects and implications of AI as family by exploring the ethical, legal, cultural, and technological shifts required to integrate emotionally intelligent machines into intimate human relationships. Drawing on interdisciplinary literature and real-world developments, the study explores how AI-human relationships challenge foundational concepts such as emotional authenticity, autonomy, personhood, and the meaning of familial roles. Examples include eldercare robots, AI grief companions, AI generated memory avatars, and AI-driven parenting aides. The paper highlights both promises, including enhanced elder independence, emotional support, and personalized caregiving, and risks, such as emotional dependency, cognitive erosion, and the displacement of human-to-human intimacy. A critical analysis of global governance efforts by UNESCO, the OECD, NIST, the European Union, and the Global Partnership on AI (GPAI) reveals significant gaps in addressing AI’s emotional and domestic integration. The study argues for culturally adaptive legal frameworks, robust data protection, and urgent debates around AI personhood, particularly as AI systems gather sensitive affective data within private spaces. The paper concludes by asking whether humanity is designing AI to fulfill emotional needs, or unconsciously reshaping itself to accommodate machine companionship. It offers a set of ethical and regulatory recommendations for families, technologists, and policymakers to ensure that human dignity, agency, and relational depth are preserved. As the lines between biological and artificial relationships blur, the question is no longer if AI will enter the family, but whether society is truly prepared for the consequences of welcoming it home.

Date: 2025-03-13
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:osf:osfxxx:snh4w_v1

DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/snh4w_v1

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