CONCEPT
Luddite Disengagement
The rational withdrawal of experienced practitioners from AI discourse and transformation — not irrationality but the structural response to a collective action problem they cannot solve individually, producing a loss the discourse cannot afford.
Luddite disengagement is this volume's Olsonian reinterpretation of the phenomenon popularly called the
Luddite response to AI. Experienced practitioners — senior architects, master craftspeople, deep-expertise professionals — are withdrawing from engagement with AI-related discourse, transformation, and advocacy at a rate that cannot be explained by individual technophobia or failure of adaptation. The withdrawal is rational: the cost of engagement is borne individually while the benefits are diffuse and uncertain. Collective goods cannot be produced by individual sacrifice, and no institutional infrastructure currently exists that would make sustained engagement rational for these practitioners. Their disengagement deprives the collective conversation of precisely the perspectives — long view, commitment to depth, critical sensibility — that it most urgently requires, creating a self-reinforcing pattern in which the absence of institutional infrastructure produces the disengagement that would otherwise build it.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The original Luddites of 1811–1816 have been systematically misunderstood for two centuries. They were not enemies of technology in