CONCEPT
AI as Environmental Transformation
The analytical frame that reclassifies artificial intelligence from
tool upgrade to
environmental regime shift — the category of change for which
Diamond's framework was designed and to which the adequate response is institutional adaptation rather than tool integration.
The central analytical move of this book is the reclassification of the AI transition from a tool upgrade (a change that makes existing practices faster) to an environmental
regime shift (a change that determines which practices are viable at all). The distinction is not semantic. It determines the appropriate institutional response. A tool upgrade calls for adoption — learn the tool, integrate it into workflows, continue. An environmental regime shift calls for the kind of structural adaptation that Diamond's framework was designed to analyze: recognition that conditions have changed, willingness to abandon identity-defining practices, and long-term investment in new practices suited to the new environment.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Diamond's collapsed civilizations failed because they treated environmental regime shifts as tool problems. The Norse did not need better shoes for their cattle; they needed to become something other than cattle farmers. The Maya did not need more efficient monument