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CONCEPT

Elaboration Literacy

The cultivated capacity — essential for AI-era practitioners — to distinguish output that is merely adequate from output that is genuinely special.
Elaboration literacy is the specific evaluative capacity that the AI age demands: the ability to tell the difference between the smooth and the special, between the adequate and the meaningful, between the output that functions and the output that matters. The capacity is not automatic. It must be cultivated through practice, through exposure to work that bears the marks of genuine human engagement, and through the development of taste that can discriminate between the statistical mean of the training data and the specific irregularities that mark authentic human contribution. Without elaboration literacy, the practitioner accepts the machine's smooth output as sufficient. With it, the practitioner recognizes where the elaboration layer must be applied.
Elaboration Literacy
Elaboration Literacy

In The You On AI Field Guide

The capacity connects to the biological perceptual system that evolved to detect effort-markers in made objects, but it requires conscious cultivation to operate reliably in an environment saturated with smooth AI output. The perceptual system can be trained — exposure to hand-made and machine-made objects, deliberate comparison, attention to the specific irregularities that signal human effort. It can also be untrained: prolonged exposure to smooth output without the contrast of human-made work calibrates the system to treat smooth as the default.

Elaboration literacy operates at multiple levels. The first-order capacity is to distinguish hand-made from machine-made in general. The second-order capacity is to distinguish meaningful elaboration from decorative elaboration — the difference between the carved spoon handle that signals genuine care and the mass-produced decoration that mimics the signal without the substance. The third-order capacity is self-directed: to recognize in one's own output where the machine has contributed and where the human has, and to judge whether the human contribution rises to the level of genuine making special.

The Elaboration Layer
The Elaboration Layer

The implications for education are substantial. A culture that wants to preserve the capacity for making special must provide children and students with sustained exposure to human-made work, opportunities to practice their own effortful production, and explicit teaching about the difference between the adequate and the special. The capacity cannot be assumed; it must be built.

Origin

The concept emerges in this volume as a specific articulation of what Dissanayake's framework demands of practitioners in the AI age. It connects to her developmental arguments about the cultivation of aesthetic capacity but names a capacity that postdates the situations Dissanayake herself wrote about.

Key Ideas

Distinguishing smooth from special. The first-order capacity is to tell the difference between output that is merely adequate and output that carries the trace of human care.

Cultivation required. The capacity is not automatic — it must be developed through practice and exposure.

Making Special
Making Special

Self-directed judgment. The mature form includes the ability to evaluate one's own output for whether human elaboration has been genuinely performed.

Educational imperative. Preserving the capacity for making special requires deliberate cultivation of elaboration literacy in the next generation.

Taste as practice. Like all cultivated capacities, elaboration literacy is built through exercise and eroded through disuse.

Further Reading

  1. Ellen Dissanayake, Homo Aestheticus (Free Press, 1992)
  2. David Pye, The Nature and Art of Workmanship (Cambridge University Press, 1968)
  3. Ann Blair, Too Much to Know (Yale University Press, 2010)

Three Positions on Elaboration Literacy

From Chapter 15 — how the Boulder, the Believer, and the Beaver each read this concept
Boulder · Refusal
Han's diagnosis
The Boulder sees in Elaboration Literacy evidence of the pathology — that refusal, not adaptation, is the correct posture. The garden, the analog life, the smartphone that is not bought.
Believer · Flow
Riding the current
The Believer sees Elaboration Literacy as the river's direction — lean in. Trust that the technium, as Kevin Kelly argues, wants what life wants. Resistance is fear, not wisdom.
Beaver · Stewardship
Building dams
The Beaver sees Elaboration Literacy as an opportunity for construction. Neither refuse nor surrender — build the institutional, attentional, and craft governors that shape the river around the things worth preserving.

Read Chapter 15 in the book →

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