CONCEPT
Free Attention
Crary’s name for the mode of attention that is neither scattered (the feed) nor concentrated (the
flow state) but undirected—the window-staring, the boredom, the apparently purposeless wandering that activates
the default mode network and is the cognitive substrate of creative insight, moral reflection, and the integration of learning.
The discourse about AI and attention has been structured around a false opposition: the scattered, fragmented attention of the social media feed on one side, and the deep, sustained, productive concentration of the AI-assisted flow state on the other.
Jonathan Crary’s analysis of
24/7 capitalism and the history of attentional management reveals a third mode that this opposition systematically excludes. Free attention is the capacity to attend without a predetermined object—the attention of the person who stares out the window not looking for anything, the child who is genuinely, uncomfortably bored and in that boredom discovers an interest that no curriculum could have predicted. Neuroscientists describe the neural substrate of this mode as the default mode network, the brain’s activity during apparently purposeless rest, which turns out to be the site of self-reflection, creative insight, and the consolidation of learning. Free attention is not a luxury