The remainder is not a hidden reserve waiting to be discovered. It is a structural feature of certain kinds of human experience — the experiences whose point is not output but presence, whose purpose is not measurable, whose value cannot be extracted without destroying the experience itself. Prayer, in Ellul's framework, is a paradigm case. Prayer cannot be optimized. It can be performed faster or slower, but the speed does not improve the prayer, because the prayer's purpose is not output but attention to something that exists outside technique's jurisdiction.
Edo Segal reaches for the remainder in You On AI without using Ellul's vocabulary. His candle metaphor — consciousness as the rarest thing in the known universe, the thing that wonders, that asks why, that cares — points toward a dimension of human experience that technique cannot produce. AI can generate answers. It cannot generate the question that arises from having stakes in the world, from being a creature that dies, that must choose how to spend finite time, that loves particular other creatures, that is capable of loneliness. The question is not a prompt. A prompt expects a particular kind of response. A genuine question opens a space that did not previously exist.
The remainder is not nostalgic. It is not a retreat to an imagined past before technique. It is a structural feature of the present that technique cannot reach, regardless of how much territory it colonizes. The developer at three in the morning who finds herself unable to stop building faces technique at its most complete. The same developer who, walking home, notices that the sky is lavender and feels — for no reason technique can register — that she is glad to be alive is experiencing the remainder. The sky's color is not useful. The gladness produces no output. Neither can be optimized, and neither needs to be.
For the AI moment, the remainder is not a solution but a location. It is where the capacity for meaning survives in a civilization whose institutions have otherwise been colonized. Whether that capacity can be institutionalized — built into structures that transmit across generations and create spaces where it can grow — is the question the remaining conceptual architecture of this book exists to ask.
The concept is implicit throughout Ellul's sociological works and explicit in his theological ones, particularly Hope in Time of Abandonment (1972) and the essays collected posthumously as Sources and Trajectories. Ellul insisted that the remainder was not a fragile exception to technique's rule but a structural feature of reality — something technique could marginalize but not eliminate because it was not of the same ontological kind.
The remainder is structural, not residual. It is not a shrinking reserve that technique will eventually colonize. It is a dimension of human experience that technique's logic cannot address, because the criteria technique applies do not apply to it.
Meaning cannot be produced by efficiency. Efficient processes, smooth surfaces, optimized outputs — these are what technique produces. Meaning arises from engagement with resistance, and technique eliminates resistance.
The capacity for meaning survives, but the conditions for its growth may not. Technique cannot eliminate the human capacity for meaning. It can eliminate the conditions — time, attention, friction — in which meaning spontaneously grows.
The sacred, secular or religious, names the remainder. For Ellul, the sacred was the Christian God. For readers without that framework, the remainder points to whatever grounds value outside efficiency — the irreplaceable specificity of persons, the reality of suffering and joy, the fact that some things matter in ways that cannot be measured.
Institutional cultivation of the remainder is the structural response. The remainder survives spontaneously but may not persist. Counter-technical institutions are the structures that protect and transmit what the remainder consists of.