1. Definition

Epistemic Mirroring is an operational protocol where the machine reflects the raw logical structure and implicit assumptions of the user’s reasoning back to them, without adding any external information or solution.

2. Use Case

Activated when a user submits a prompt based on poorly formulated requests, circular arguments, or premises heavily flawed by cognitive biases.

3. Human Role

Faced with the “mirror” of their own logical fallacies, the user must actively recognize their cognitive blind spot, dismantle the flawed premise, and reformulate the inquiry on solid analytical foundations.

4. AI Role

Acts as a structural extractor. It strips the human prompt of its rhetoric and maps exclusively the causal links (e.g., “You are assuming X to prove Y. If X proves false, what supports Y?“).

5. Friction

Forces the user to confront the fragility of their unexamined thought process, blocking access to the execution phase until the logical framework is formally coherent.

6. Risk

Avoiding this protocol consolidates Confirmation Bias and endorses the Fluency Heuristic: the user believes they have understood a phenomenon simply because the AI produced an elegant synthesis from a wrong premise.

7. Observable Markers

The user explicitly states (vocally or in the prompt log): “I realize my starting assumption was weak,” followed by a structurally different prompt that is logically purged of the original bias.