CONCEPT
Educated Attention (Ingold)
Perceptual capacity developed through sustained material engagement — the cabinet maker sees affordances in lumber that novices cannot see, not through superior vision but through an
educated perceptual system.
Educated attention is the ability to perceive meaning,
affordance, and possibility that uneducated perception cannot detect. The experienced cabinet maker surveys lumber and sees figure in grain, internal stress, moisture gradients — information arriving through hands and eyes in the act of inspection. This is not the application of stored knowledge to sensory input but the direct pickup of
affordances by a perceptual system shaped by decades of handling wood. The perception feels immediate and unreflective — the bow in the board is seen directly, the way redness is seen in an apple. But the immediacy is the product of education: the body's long history with material has restructured what the senses can detect.
In The You On AI Field Guide
James J. Gibson's ecological psychology demonstrated that affordances are real properties of the environment, perceivable by organisms with appropriate perceptual apparatus. Ingold extends Gibson by adding the temporal dimension: the perceptual apparatus itself evolves through practice. It is not a fixed