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CONCEPT

Grammatization

The historical process — adapted from Sylvain Auroux — by which continuous flows of human activity are broken into discrete, reproducible elements, from the alphabet to the large language model.
Grammatization is Stiegler's name for the fundamental operation that runs through every major epochal transformation: the reduction of continuous human activity to discrete units that can be stored, transmitted, and operated upon by systems lacking the understanding that produced the original. The alphabet grammatized speech. Musical notation grammatized performance. Industrial procedures grammatized craft labor. Data analytics grammatized consumer behavior. Each stage produced the same pharmacological dynamic: real gain in extension, real loss of the dimensions that cannot be captured in discrete form. AI represents a stage qualitatively different — the grammatization of cognition itself, the meta-capacity through which humans engage with the world.
Grammatization
Grammatization

In The You On AI Field Guide

Before alphabetic writing, language was continuous sound inseparable from the speaker's body, situation, and gesture. The alphabet broke this flow into discrete letters, combinable by rule, reproducing the sound independently of the speaker. The grammatization made language storable, transmissible, and accumulable across generations — without which there is no science, no law, no philosophy. The loss was the dimension that could not be captured: prosody, rhythm, the embodied accompaniment giving an utterance its full meaning.

Each subsequent stage extended the operation into new domains. Musical notation made composition possible independent of live transmission; industrial procedures made production possible independent of craft knowledge; data analytics made prediction possible independent of lived understanding of the predicted. Each stage produced the same pattern: gain in extension, loss in the ungrammatizable remainder, pharmacological inseparability of the two.

Pharmakon
Pharmakon

AI's grammatization is different in scope. The large language model takes the entire corpus of human textual production, breaks it into tokens, analyzes statistical relationships, and generates new sequences possessing the form of human thought without having been produced through the process of thinking. This is the grammatization of the meta-capacity through which all other grammatizations were performed — recursive in a way no previous stage achieved.

You On AI documents the phenomenology. Working with Claude restructures cognitive activity into the prompt-response cycle. The continuous flow of thinking — gradual development through reflection and revision — is reorganized into discrete exchanges. The thinker adapts to the system's tempo, just as the factory worker adapted to the machine's rhythm. The gain is extended capability; the loss is the dimension of thinking the prompt-response cycle cannot capture — the slow, associative, embodied quality of thought developing at its own pace.

Origin

Stiegler adapted the concept from linguist Sylvain Auroux's La Révolution technologique de la grammatisation (1994), which traced the historical grammatization of natural languages through dictionaries and grammars.

Stiegler generalized the operation beyond linguistics to encompass every externalization of continuous human activity into discrete technical elements, developing the framework across Technics and Time, Symbolic Misery, and Automatic Society.

Key Ideas

Before alphabetic writing, language was continuous sound inseparable from the speaker's body, situation, and gesture

Continuous to discrete. The operation reduces flowing activity to reproducible units — always a gain and always a loss.

Every epoch is grammatizing. The alphabet, notation, industrial procedure, analytics, AI — each extends the operation into new domains.

AI grammatizes cognition itself. Previous stages captured specific modalities; AI captures the meta-capacity, recursively.

The ungrammatizable remainder. What cannot be captured in discrete form is precisely what tends to be lost — embodied, tacit, relational dimensions.

Further Reading

  1. Bernard Stiegler, Symbolic Misery, Volume 1: The Hyperindustrial Epoch (2004)
  2. Sylvain Auroux, La Révolution technologique de la grammatisation (1994)
  3. Anne Alombert, "Reticulated Artificial Intelligence" (2024)
  4. Stiegler, "Artificial Stupidity and Artificial Intelligence in the Anthropocene" (Shanghai lecture, 2018)
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