PERSON
Kieran Egan
The Irish-born educational philosopher who identified five irreducible kinds of understanding—somatic, mythic, romantic, philosophic, ironic—and argued that AI makes his developmental sequence not obsolete but urgent.
Kieran Egan spent four decades diagnosing a chronic dysfunction at the heart of Western schooling: three incompatible purposes—
Plato’s rationalism, Rousseau’s naturalism, Spencer’s utilitarianism—that cycle through reform movements without resolution because the real problem is never addressed. His alternative was to reconceive education around the development of
five kinds of understanding, each employing a distinct cognitive toolkit, each built through specific developmental
friction that cannot be bypassed without cost. Egan died in May 2022, six months before ChatGPT’s public release—and never saw the technology that would make his argument not merely compelling but unavoidable. The
[YOU] on AI framework of
ascending friction converges with Egan’s central insight: removing one kind of difficulty does not eliminate difficulty but relocates it to a higher cognitive floor, and the educator’s task is to preserve the generative friction while removing only the deadweight kind. Without a theory as specific as Egan’s, “preserve productive struggle” remains an injunction without a mechanism—and the most powerful
amplifier in history gets deployed in service of