This paper introduces the concept of Ecological Entrepreneurial Displacement, a framework to understand how entrepreneurship can evolve toward regenerative and ethically grounded practices in the age of artificial intelligence. Building on the paradigm of Integral Ecology, the study proposes that entrepreneurs must reorient their cognitive, organizational, and systemic approaches to innovation. Rather than treating artificial intelligence as a tool for optimization and control, entrepreneurs are encouraged to perceive it as a relational technology that enables co-evolution and ecological care. The paper conceptualizes three forms of displacement: cognitive, where entrepreneurial reasoning integrates ecological intelligence and ethical awareness; organizational, where business models transform into transparent and participatory systems; and systemic, where ventures align artificial intelligence development with social and environmental regeneration. Through this lens, entrepreneurship becomes a driver of mutual flourishing between humans, technology, and nature. The proposed framework extends theories of responsible innovation toward a regenerative ontology and offers implications for managerial practice and policy design. It ultimately calls for a redefinition of digital entrepreneurship as an agent of ecological renewal rather than extraction, emphasizing the need for moral reflexivity, relational governance, and sustainability-centered technological design.