In conventional making, the transition from imagined to real is achieved through the maker's sustained engagement with material resistance. The craftsman imagines the chair and then encounters the wood's grain, hardness, and tendency to split. The encounter forces revision. The imagined chair is modified by the material's demands. The final artifact carries the record of this negotiation, and the maker's mental model of the artifact has been thickened by the material's feedback, approaching the density of the real.
AI-mediated making attenuates this negotiation. The builder describes the imagined product in natural language. The AI generates an artifact that approximates the description. The material resistance that conventional making imposes — the resistance of wood, of code syntax, of structural engineering constraints — is largely handled by the tool rather than encountered by the builder. The builder's imagination crosses into reality without the sustained friction of material engagement that, in Scarry's framework, transforms the thin imagined into the dense real.
The consequence is a gap that did not exist in the same way before: the AI-generated artifact may possess material density — it runs, it functions, it has properties the builder did not anticipate — while the builder's understanding of the artifact retains the thinness of the imagined. The builder has not negotiated with the material. The builder has not been educated by resistance. The builder's mental model of the artifact remains closer to the imagined flower — possessing only the properties the builder actively assigned — than to the perceived flower, which exceeds the perceiver's anticipation.
Bridging this gap requires the fidelity check: the sustained, attentive examination of the generated artifact against the imagined one. Walking around the real object. Examining it from angles the imagination did not construct. Discovering the properties the imagination did not assign. This is the labor that only the consciousness with intention can perform, and it is the specific discipline that Scarry's framework identifies as indispensable to responsible AI-mediated building.
The asymmetry is developed from Jean-Paul Sartre's analysis of imagination in L'Imaginaire (1940). Scarry extends and applies the framework most systematically in Dreaming by the Book (1999), where it becomes the foundation for understanding how literary language produces vividness.
Imagined is thin. The imagined object possesses only the properties the imagining consciousness actively constructs; it has no independent existence to exceed its construction.
Perceived is dense. The perceived object exceeds perception at every level; it is laden with properties the perceiver did not anticipate and cannot exhaustively catalogue.
Material engagement thickens. Conventional making thickens the maker's understanding through material resistance; the negotiation with the material reveals properties the imagination did not contain.
AI attenuates engagement. When the material resistance is handled by the tool, the builder's understanding may remain thin even as the artifact achieves density — producing a gap Scarry's framework identifies as epistemologically consequential.
The fidelity check bridges. Sustained examination of the generated artifact against the imagined intention is the labor that restores the thickening the material engagement historically provided automatically.