The condition in which the body's disappearance from awareness — structurally identical to normal absence — is sustained at intensities and durations the organism was not built to support, with the subjective experience of voluntary choice masking structural compulsion.
Pathological absence is not a different kind of bodily disappearance from the healthy variety. It is normal absence extended past its sustainable limits, sustained by an environment that has removed the natural terminations that bounded absence in every previous technological context. Leder's framework identifies four variables that distinguish pathological from normal absence: intensity, duration, consequence, and voluntariness. The critical feature is the last — pathological absence is experienced as voluntary while being structurally compulsive, because the body's signals that would motivate disengagement have been suppressed by the engagement itself. The system that produces the absence also disables the mechanism that would limit it.
Pathological Absence
In The You On AI Field Guide
The distinction between normal and pathological absence is not a boundary the individual crosses through moral failure. The radiologist engrossed in a critical scan and the engineer captured by a late-night AI coding session exhibit phenomenologically identical states — the same ecstatic projection outward, the same