The universal mechanism through which techniques of the body pass from one generation to the next — proximity, participation, duration, and sociality.
Across every society Mauss studied — from the Melanesian islands to the Pacific Northwest, from ancient Rome to contemporary France — he found the same fundamental mechanism of cultural transmission: the sustained, embodied, social process of learning by doing alongside someone who has already mastered the technique. This is apprenticeship in the broad anthropological sense, not the narrow institutional sense of medieval guilds. It is the universal process through which competence (not information) passes between bodies. The chain has four essential features: proximity (physical presence with the master), participation (performance under guidance), duration (the time required for sedimentation), and sociality (embedding in a community of practice). When the economic rationale for a technique disappears, the chain breaks at both ends simultaneously — masters cease teaching, apprentices cease learning — and the technique vanishes within a generation.
The Chain of Transmission
In The You On AI Field Guide
The distinction between information and competence is central. Information can be transmitted through any medium — books, lectures, videos, databases. Competence requires practice, and practice requires