Berry's name for the unmeasured satisfaction of work well done—the craftsperson's joy in skill exercised—systematically destroyed when industrial metrics treat experience as irrelevant to output.
Wendell Berry's distinction between two economies most people never think to separate: the industrial economy (measuring productivity, output, efficiency, return) and the economy of pleasure (measuring satisfaction, meaning, the specific joy of skill exercised, work understood, difficulty mastered). The economies overlap when productive work is also meaningful work. They diverge when productivity increases while the quality of experience declines—a divergence invisible to industrial metrics, which count only what can be counted. Berry argues this divergence is the central unexamined cost of industrial production, and now of AI-augmented knowledge work. The developer debugging code experiences a specific pleasure in the moment when hours of struggle resolve into understanding—a satisfaction not reducible to the output (working code) but located in the process of earning it. AI eliminates the process, producing identical or superior output without the formative struggle. The industrial economy sees pure gain. The economy of pleasure sees a cost the culture has no vocabulary for and no mechanism to prevent.