Respectful Things: Adding Social Intelligence to 'Smart' Devices
Pith reviewed 2026-06-28 12:57 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Respect can serve as a strong design goal for personal smart devices by simulating four philosophical types.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The central claim is that the idea of devices respecting their end-users may serve as a strong design goal for highly personal and intimate smart devices. Respect is a natural and integral part of natural human relationships that shapes work and personal relations. In this vein, the characteristics of more complex respectful behaviours are distilled into four main types relevant to smart devices: directive respect, obstacle respect, recognition respect, and care respect. The implications of each of these kinds of respect for the future of smart personal devices are then discussed.
What carries the argument
Four types of respect distilled from philosophical analyses: directive respect, obstacle respect, recognition respect, and care respect.
If this is right
- Devices would anticipate needs while respecting user directives and avoiding overreach.
- Obstacle respect would lead devices to treat user limitations as signals rather than errors to override.
- Recognition respect would require devices to acknowledge user autonomy and preferences explicitly.
- Care respect would push devices to protect privacy and well-being as part of their operation.
- Overall design would move from pure utility toward relational social intelligence.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Design teams could use the four types as a checklist when reviewing new device features.
- Regulatory discussions around smart devices might begin referencing respect simulation as an evaluation criterion.
- Prototypes testing one respect type at a time could reveal which type most affects user trust.
- The approach connects to broader questions of how machines should model other social norms beyond respect.
Load-bearing premise
Good-faith simulation of the four philosophical respect types will directly translate into more user-friendly smart device interactions without needing empirical validation or user studies.
What would settle it
A user study measuring satisfaction, perceived intrusiveness, and data-sharing willingness on devices built to simulate the four respect types versus conventional devices, with no improvement or a decline in results.
read the original abstract
In this paper, we propose that the idea of devices respecting their end-users may serve as a strong design goal for highly personal and intimate smart devices. We ask what respect is, how it shapes interaction, and how good-faith simulation of respect might inform user-friendly smart device design. Respect is a natural and integral part of natural human relationships that is seen to shape work and personal relations. In a basic sense, this is the core purpose of smart things: we expect them to be ready and willing to help us. In this vein, we distil the characteristics of more complex respectful behaviours into 4 main types relevant to smart devices, drawing from philosophical analyses of the conceptual dimensions of respect: directive respect, obstacle respect, recognition respect, and care respect. We discuss the implications of each of these kinds of respect for the future of smart personal devices.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proposes that respect—distilled from philosophical analyses into four types (directive respect, obstacle respect, recognition respect, and care respect)—can serve as a strong design goal for highly personal smart devices. It asks what respect is, how it shapes interaction, and how good-faith simulation of these types might inform more user-friendly device design, framing the work as an exploratory discussion of implications rather than an empirical study.
Significance. If operationalized, the framework could offer an interdisciplinary lens for incorporating social intelligence into HCI design of intimate devices, drawing explicitly on external philosophical sources to move beyond purely technical considerations. The paper's exploratory framing and avoidance of unsubstantiated performance claims are strengths.
major comments (1)
- [abstract and discussion of the four types] The central claim that the four distilled respect types 'inform future design' (abstract) rests on assertion without any concrete mapping, example implementation, or design guideline in the manuscript; this is load-bearing because the paper positions the types as directly relevant to smart-device interaction yet provides no mechanism for simulation or translation.
minor comments (1)
- The manuscript would benefit from explicit section headings or numbered subsections to improve navigation between the philosophical background and the device-design implications.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their constructive review and recommendation for minor revision. We address the single major comment below, maintaining the paper's exploratory framing while strengthening connections to design.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [abstract and discussion of the four types] The central claim that the four distilled respect types 'inform future design' (abstract) rests on assertion without any concrete mapping, example implementation, or design guideline in the manuscript; this is load-bearing because the paper positions the types as directly relevant to smart-device interaction yet provides no mechanism for simulation or translation.
Authors: We agree the manuscript is conceptual and exploratory, distilling philosophical respect types to offer a framework rather than technical specifications or implementations. The discussion section already outlines implications for each type in device interactions, but we acknowledge the referee's point that more explicit translation mechanisms would better support the claim. In revision we will expand the discussion with brief hypothetical scenarios showing how each respect type could guide specific design choices (e.g., how obstacle respect might shape notification timing), while preserving the non-empirical scope. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The paper is a conceptual proposal that draws respect types from external philosophical literature and applies them as a design lens for smart devices. No equations, fitted parameters, self-citations, or internal reductions exist; the four respect types are presented as distilled from prior independent analyses rather than defined in terms of the paper's own outputs or prior author work. The central claim is an exploratory suggestion rather than a deductive derivation that collapses to its inputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Respect is a natural and integral part of natural human relationships that shapes work and personal relations.
invented entities (1)
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Four respect types (directive respect, obstacle respect, recognition respect, care respect) adapted for smart devices
no independent evidence
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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