Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Johanna Dorris's avatar

This captures something I’ve been trying to name in my own work: the difference between optimizing for output and designing for meaning. The way you trace the arc from craft to compliance to performance is felt. Especially now, when so many of us are navigating systems that move faster than care.

What you’re offering is a reminder that judgment, presence, and care aren’t luxuries. They’re the baseline for anything worth building next.

Thank you. I'm trying to teach systems to reflect this level of humanity.

Expand full comment
Mike Monday's avatar

Your description of the connection from the technology industrial revolution to AI is beautiful. It illuminated something I'd felt but not articulated.

I've got an alternative theory about Craft...

It's not that Craft is dying, instead we're losing Art. If you look at a streetlamp from 100 years ago, the beauty was in its Art. Why did they invest that time and effort making a functional object so gorgeous? Because...?

Craft is focused on "HOW?" - the function of the output. This is the realm of automation as progressively AI takes on more and more of the "how-ing".

Art is focused on "WHY?" and "WHAT?" The purpose of the output and what could deliver this purpose. At this point, an AI has no reason to do anything, so it can't decide what to make, what is good without a human.

But any human can use AI to augment and expand what's possible - and automate what stops them creating the previously impossible.

Expand full comment
18 more comments...

No posts