Embodied Explainability and Ontological Obstacles: Why We Struggle to Explain the Answers of Large Language Models (LLMs)
Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 06:52 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Explainability claims for large language models should apply only to designs that give users ways to probe, coordinate, and repair behavior in actual practice.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The paper claims that an embodied view of explainability shows why internal accounts of large language model answers encounter obstacles: surrogates import external abstractions that can be mistaken for the model's abstractions, and a focus on internal reasoning misses the participatory character of understanding. As a result, many explanations in current practice are misnamed, which skews their purpose and can increase overreliance. Embodied explanations instead reorganize sense-making by making relevant elements publicly available for action, so that explainability claims belong only to designs supplying affordances to probe, coordinate, and repair behavior in situated practice.
What carries the argument
The embodied account of explainability, in which understanding arises through action on affordances in shared practice, which carries the argument by exposing the limits of internal extraction methods.
If this is right
- Explanations limited to model internals should not receive the label of explainability.
- Misnamed explanations can distort their purpose and increase overreliance on model answers.
- Embodied explanations make what matters publicly available so users can act on it.
- Explainability applies only to designs that supply affordances for probing, coordinating, and repairing behavior in practice.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Designers could test whether adding explicit probe and repair actions to an interface lowers overreliance more than adding static internal explanations.
- The same distinction between surrogate and embodied accounts could be checked in domains outside language models, such as image or sensor-based systems.
- Teams working together might show different patterns of coordination when explanations are made available as shared actions rather than private internal reports.
Load-bearing premise
Any surrogate explanation necessarily imports external abstractions that can be mistaken for the model's own abstractions, and attention to internal reasoning always misses the participatory nature of understanding.
What would settle it
An experiment in which users receive either an internal surrogate explanation or an embodied design and show no difference in their ability to distinguish imported abstractions from model behavior or in their rate of overreliance on model answers.
read the original abstract
Explainability is often framed as a property of an AI model, with explanations extracted from its internals and shown to users. In this argument paper, we instead provide an embodied account of explainability based on Dourish and enactivist cognition: understanding is created in use as people act on affordances in shared practice. Using demonstrations and conceptual analysis, we reveal ontological obstacles when "looking inside" large language models: surrogates import external abstractions that can be mistaken for the model's, and focusing on internal reasoning misses that explainers participate in their own understanding. We discuss these obstacles in XAI practice, arguing that many explanations are misnamed, which skews their purpose and can increase overreliance. Finally, we highlight how embodied explanations reorganize sense-making by making what matters publicly available for action, and argue that explainability claims should be reserved for designs that provide affordances to probe, coordinate, and repair behaviour in situated practice.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims that explainability for LLMs should be understood through an embodied, enactivist account (drawing on Dourish) rather than by extracting internal surrogates from the model. It identifies two ontological obstacles—surrogates import external abstractions that can be mistaken for the model's own, and internal focus misses participatory sense-making—and uses demonstrations plus conceptual analysis to argue that many current explanations are misnamed, which can increase overreliance. The normative conclusion is that explainability claims should be reserved for designs providing affordances to probe, coordinate, and repair behaviour in situated practice.
Significance. If the argument holds, the paper offers a coherent conceptual reframing of XAI within HCI that shifts emphasis from internal model inspection to situated action and publicly available affordances. It explicitly credits and builds on established prior philosophical work (Dourish, enactivist cognition) without circularity, free parameters, or invented entities, and advances a falsifiable normative claim about appropriate naming of explanations.
minor comments (3)
- The abstract is information-dense; consider splitting the description of the two ontological obstacles into separate sentences to improve readability for readers outside enactivist traditions.
- In the discussion of XAI practice, the claim that explanations 'skew their purpose' would benefit from one additional sentence clarifying the mechanism by which misnaming leads to overreliance, even if only conceptually.
- Ensure the demonstrations referenced in the abstract are explicitly signposted with section numbers in the main text so readers can locate the concrete illustrations of the obstacles.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the accurate summary of our argument paper, the positive assessment of its significance, and the recommendation for minor revision. No specific major comments appear in the report, so we have no points requiring direct rebuttal or revision at this stage.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The paper advances a conceptual reframing of explainability as embodied and participatory, grounded in external philosophical sources (Dourish, enactivist cognition) rather than any internal equations, fitted parameters, or self-referential definitions. Its derivation proceeds via demonstrations and analysis to identify ontological obstacles and recommend affordance-based designs; this chain does not reduce by construction to its own inputs or to a load-bearing self-citation chain. The argument remains self-contained within its stated philosophical framing.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Understanding is created in use as people act on affordances in shared practice (Dourish and enactivist cognition)
Reference graph
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