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[ARTICLE · art-19937] src=arxiv.org pub= topic=artificial-intelligence verified=true sentiment=· neutral

Chatbots Output Meaningful (but Problematic) Language

A new academic paper argues that AI chatbot outputs, such as Claude's answer "Madrid is the capital of Spain," are genuinely meaningful under existing theories of human language, contradicting some philosophers who claim otherwise. The authors contend that meaning does not require mental states, intentions, or rationality in the chatbot, and that this conclusion has significant implications for how society evaluates both human and synthetic text.

read1 min publishedJun 3, 2026

arXiv:2606.02973v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Are utterances by AI chatbots meaningful? Concretely, if a user asks, say, Anthropic's agent Claude, "What is the capital of Spain?" and Claude answers, "Madrid is the capital of Spain," does that sentence have its ordinary meaning -- and does it express a true proposition? Most ordinary users, as well as AI engineers, take the answer to be trivially "yes." However, many cognitive scientists, linguists, and philosophers of language argue that dominant intentionalist accounts of language and meaning deliver the opposite conclusion. Theorists more sympathetic to ordinary users' intuitions have therefore advocated a radical "de-anthropomorphization" of language, revising our understanding of mental states, intentions, and semantic content to capture the intuition that the outputs of LLMs are meaningful. We take a different approach. While we, too, argue that LLM outputs are meaningful, we contend that a proper theory of human language already applies, as is, to current chatbots. Meaning is a low bar: claiming that LLM outputs are meaningful does not require positing mental states, intentions, rationality, or the cognitive capacities requisite for communication in LLMs -- or, indeed, making any other anthropomorphic assumptions. People do have communicative intentions (typically successful ones), but nevertheless, even in humans, language production can depart from what the speaker has in mind. Our view has important consequences for how we should theorize about -- and critically engage with -- both human linguistic output and synthetically generated text. In particular, to say that chatbots produce meaningful text is not by any means to endorse what they output, or to assume that the technology is (or is not) good, powerful, appropriate, or useful.

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