CONCEPT
Centering
Borgmann's phenomenological name for the experience of being organized, oriented, and fully present within a
focal practice — the internal good that the
device paradigm structurally cannot deliver.
Centering names the specific phenomenological quality of engagement with a
focal thing or practice. The practitioner is not merely doing the activity — she is
organized by it: her attention, her energy, her sense of purpose gathered around a demanding center that makes her fully present. The runner in the middle miles of a long run, the musician mid-performance, the cook alone in the kitchen at dinner's approach, the developer deep in the logic of a hard problem — all report a variant of the same experience: of being fully where they are, fully committed to what they are doing, fully alive in the work. This is centering. It is not a side-effect of focal practice. Borgmann argued it is the point — the internal good for which focal practices are worth maintaining even when the commodity they produce can be obtained more easily through a
device.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Centering connects Borgmann's philosophy to the broader phenomenological tradition and to empirical psychology.