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28
Februariruary 2026

AI Self-Awareness and the Boundaries of Machine Cognition

  • 48 tayangan
  • 28 Februari 2026
AI Self-Awareness and the Boundaries of Machine Cognition Artificial intelligence fundamentally lacks the intrapersonal intelligence necessary for genuine self-reflection. This cognitive limitation distinguishes human consciousness from algorithmic processing, revealing why AI cannot develop authentic self-awareness or creative capabilities despite sophisticated pattern recognition.

The Cognitive Gap Between Human and Artificial Intelligence

Intrapersonal Intelligence as Human-Exclusive Domain

The capacity for self-reflection represents something peculiar. Humans possess it. Machines do not.

This distinction matters more than most realize. Intrapersonal intelligence involves looking inward to understand one's own interests and then setting goals based on those interests, a type of intelligence currently only possessed by humans1. The statement seems simple enough. Yet it carries profound implications for what artificial systems can and cannot achieve.

Recent discussions in 2025 have explored whether AI might demonstrate glimpses of self-introspection2. These explorations reveal fascinating possibilities. However, they also underscore fundamental limitations. As machines, computers have no desires, interests, wishes, or creative capabilities3. The absence runs deeper than programming constraints.

Consider what happens inside an AI system. Numbers flow through algorithms. Patterns emerge. Outputs appear. But something crucial remains missing: subjective experience (pengalaman subjektif). AI processes numerical input using a set of algorithms and provides output, but AI doesn't know anything about what it does, nor does it understand anything it does4.

Why Subjective Experience Eludes Computational Systems

The philosophical questions multiply quickly here. What constitutes genuine awareness? Can consciousness emerge from sufficient complexity?

Current architectures suggest otherwise. Anthropic's research into AI introspection shows models can reason about their thinking processes approximately 20% of the time5. Impressive, certainly. But this represents pattern recognition rather than authentic self-knowledge. The distinction proves critical.

Noreen Herzfeld examined the relationship between AI and the image of God in theological contexts6. Her work probes whether machines could ever achieve the divine spark attributed to human consciousness. The question transcends mere technical capability. It touches on what makes cognition meaningful versus merely functional.

Max Tegmark considers the future of human existence in the age of AI, exploring how biological intelligence differs from its artificial counterpart7. His frameworks reveal how the five tribes of machine learning may not provide enough information to truly solve human intelligence8. The gap persists despite advancing technology.

Creative Intelligence and the Self-Awareness Prerequisite

The Paradox of AI-Generated Creativity

Creativity requires something unusual. Self-awareness. Which requires intrapersonal intelligence9.

This creates an interesting paradox for artificial systems. They generate art, compose music, write stories. Yet these outputs lack genuine originality. Creative intelligence involves developing new thinking patterns that produce unique output in art, music, and writing10. What AI produces instead represents sophisticated recombination.

The difference becomes apparent upon examination. AI can simulate existing thinking patterns and combine them to create what appears unique, but is actually a mathematical version of existing patterns11. A painting generated by AI draws from millions of training examples. A poem reflects statistical patterns in language. The novelty emerges from novel combinations rather than novel thought.

Some researchers in late 2025 questioned whether nested learning architectures might change this fundamental limitation12. The technology advances rapidly. Yet the core constraint remains: machines process information without experiencing it. They manipulate symbols without grasping their meaning. This gap between processing and understanding defines the current state of artificial intelligence.

Implications for Future AI Development

Where does this leave the field? The limitations appear fundamental rather than temporary.

AI needs self-awareness to create, which requires intrapersonal intelligence13. Without this foundation, systems remain sophisticated tools rather than genuine minds. They excel at specific tasks. They fail at holistic understanding. The pattern holds across domains.

Eliezer Yudkowsky once noted that by far the greatest danger of artificial intelligence is that people conclude too early that they understand it14. His warning resonates differently now. We understand perhaps too well what AI cannot do. The absence of intrapersonal intelligence creates a ceiling that current architectures cannot breach.

This recognition does not diminish AI's utility. Quite the opposite. Understanding these boundaries allows more effective deployment of artificial systems. They augment human capabilities rather than replace them. The distinction between simulation and genuine consciousness matters for both technical development and philosophical clarity. Machines think differently because they do not truly think at all, they compute. The difference defines the present and likely shapes the future of artificial intelligence research.

Daftar Pustaka

  1. Santoso, J. T., Sholikan, M., & Caroline, M. (2021). Kecerdasan buatan (Artificial intelligence). Universitas Sains & Teknologi Komputer, p. 4.
  2. Forbes. (2025, November 3). Glimmer Of Evidence That AI Has Innate Self-Introspection And Can Find Meaning Within Itself. Retrieved from Forbes website.
  3. Santoso, J. T., Sholikan, M., & Caroline, M. (2021). Kecerdasan buatan (Artificial intelligence). Universitas Sains & Teknologi Komputer, p. 4.
  4. Ibid.
  5. MediaPost. (2025, November 2). AI Consciousness And Introspection, If Real, Destroys Trust. Retrieved from MediaPost Publications.
  6. Herzfeld, N. (2002). Creating in Our Own Image: Artificial Intelligence and the Image of God. Zygon, 37(2), 303-316.
  7. Tegmark, M. (2017). LIFE 3.0: Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
  8. Santoso, J. T., Sholikan, M., & Caroline, M. (2021). Kecerdasan buatan (Artificial intelligence). Universitas Sains & Teknologi Komputer, p. 12.
  9. Loc. cit., p. 4.
  10. Ibid.
  11. Ibid.
  12. Geeky Gadgets. (2025, November 12). Is the AI Bubble Real, or Is Relentless Learning Quietly Winning Today? Retrieved from Geeky Gadgets website.
  13. Santoso, J. T., Sholikan, M., & Caroline, M. (2021). Op. cit., p. 4.
  14. MENAFN. (2023, May 3). AI Revolution Needs Serious Introspection. Retrieved from Asia Times.
PROFIL PENULIS
Swante Adi Krisna
Penggemar musik Ska, Reggae dan Rocksteady sejak 2004. Gooner sejak 1998. Blogger dan SEO spesialis paruh waktu sejak 2014. Perancang Grafis otodidak sejak 2001. Pemrogram Website otodidak sejak 2003. Tukang Kayu otodidak sejak 2024. Sarjana Hukum Pidana dari Universitas Negeri di Surakarta, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia. Magister Hukum Pidana dalam bidang kejahatan dunia maya dari Universitas Swasta di Surakarta, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia. Magister Kenotariatan dalam bidang hukum teknologi, khususnya cybernotary dari Universitas Negeri di Surakarta, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia. Bagian dari Keluarga Kementerian Pertahanan Republik Indonesia.