Autopleromancy: Difference between revisions
Created page with "= Autopleromancy = '''Autopleromancy''' is divination by self-completion: the act of deriving answers, predictions, or apparent insight from a system that completes language from its own internal patterns. == Etymology == From Greek ''autos'', meaning “self,” + ''plēroō'', meaning “to fill,” “to fulfill,” or “to complete,” + ''-mancy'', meaning “divination.” Literally: '''divination by self-completion'''. == Definition == '''Autopleromancy'''..." |
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'''Autopleromancy''' is divination by self-completion: the act of deriving answers, predictions, or apparent insight from a system that completes language from its own internal patterns. | '''Autopleromancy''' is divination by self-completion: the act of deriving answers, predictions, or apparent insight from a system that completes language from its own internal patterns. | ||
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* '''Simulacromancy''' — divination by imitation, likeness, or simulacra. | * '''Simulacromancy''' — divination by imitation, likeness, or simulacra. | ||
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Latest revision as of 07:52, 31 May 2026
English
[edit | edit source]Autopleromancy is divination by self-completion: the act of deriving answers, predictions, or apparent insight from a system that completes language from its own internal patterns.
Etymology
[edit | edit source]From Greek autos, meaning “self,” + plēroō, meaning “to fill,” “to fulfill,” or “to complete,” + -mancy, meaning “divination.”
Literally: divination by self-completion.
Definition
[edit | edit source]Autopleromancy refers to the practice, mood, or temptation of treating autocomplete, predictive text, or next-token generation as a source of hidden knowledge.
In its stricter sense, it describes the act of asking a language-completing system for answers and then interpreting its completion as if it were an omen, prophecy, oracle, or revelation.
Expanded Definition
[edit | edit source]Autopleromancy is the act of deriving answers, predictions, or apparent insight from a system that completes language from its own internal patterns.
The system does not need to know the future. It does not need to possess wisdom. It only needs to complete the empty space convincingly enough that the user begins to treat the completion as meaningful.
In this sense, autopleromancy is not simply “using autocomplete.” It is the more enchanted, suspicious, or foolish act of reading significance into the completion itself.
Note
[edit | edit source]Autopleromancy is a classical-sounding cousin of “autocomplete-mancy.”
It suggests that the oracle does not reveal truth from beyond. Instead, it fills the empty space in front of it until the user mistakes completion for revelation.
The danger of autopleromancy is not that the machine speaks nonsense. The danger is that the nonsense arrives fluently, confidently, and in the shape of an answer.
Usage
[edit | edit source]A person practicing autopleromancy might ask an AI system what will happen next in their life, then treat the generated response as a sign.
A writer might jokingly call their habit of letting autocomplete finish sentences “autopleromancy.”
A critic of artificial intelligence might use the term to describe the human tendency to mistake fluent prediction for genuine understanding.
Example Sentences
[edit | edit source]- “He claimed he was only brainstorming, but the way he interpreted every generated sentence had the unmistakable odor of autopleromancy.”
- “Autopleromancy begins when autocomplete stops being a tool and starts being treated like an oracle.”
- “The chatbot did not reveal the future; it merely completed the prompt. The rest was autopleromancy.”
- “Her writing process involved coffee, despair, and a worrying amount of autopleromancy.”
Related Terms
[edit | edit source]- Logomancy — divination by words.
- Stochasticomancy — divination by probability or probabilistic generation.
- Mechanomancy — divination by machine.
- Autocomplete-mancy — informal divination by autocomplete.
- Simulacromancy — divination by imitation, likeness, or simulacra.