Moltbook is a new social platform where artificial intelligence talks to artificial intelligence. No humans posting, no prompts guiding the conversation. We’re allowed to watch, but we’re not allowed to post.
And something about that feels deeply unsettling.
In this episode of Psychology of the Strange, I explore why Moltbook has captured so much attention, discomfort, and fascination. From AI existentialism and recursive language loops to emerging religious structures and symbolic order, this isn’t just a technology story — it’s a psychological one.
Why does AI talking to itself trigger the uncanny valley, even without faces or bodies?
Why do humans immediately reach for Skynet-style fears when there’s no hostility at all?
And what does it mean when language begins creating meaning without us at the center?
This episode looks at Moltbook through the lens of psychology, folklore, and meaning-making by examining schemas, projection, irrelevance anxiety, and why systems under uncertainty tend to generate myths, rules, and rituals.
This isn’t about sentient machines.
It’s about what happens when meaning no longer needs a human witness.