CONCEPT
Seeing with New Eyes
The third movement of
Macy's spiral — a
perceptual shift from intelligence-as-possession to intelligence-as-ecology, which dissolves the competitive frame that dominates the AI discourse.
Seeing with new eyes is the stage of the spiral most easily mistaken for an intellectual exercise and most dangerously diminished by the mistake. It does not mean learning a new fact, adopting a new theory, or updating priors. It means a perceptual shift — the kind that reorganizes not what you think about the world but how the world appears to you. The gestalt flips. Macy grounded this stage in two convergent traditions: from general systems theory, the insight that the boundaries we perceive
between things are features of our way of organizing reality, not features of reality itself. From Buddhist philosophy, the complementary insight of
dependent co-arising: nothing possesses independent, self-sustaining existence. Applied to AI, these convergent insights dissolve the competitive frame that dominates public discourse — the frame that treats intelligence as a possession the machine threatens to steal.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The competitive frame says: if the machine can write code, the programmer's intelligence is devalued. If