CONCEPT
Trust in Embodied Intelligence
The deliberate allocation of authority from the conscious analytical mind to the body's learning system — not a feeling of confidence but a cognitive posture that allows Self 2 to operate without Self 1's supervision.
Trust, in Gallwey's framework, is not an emotion but a practice — the practice of allowing the embodied learning system to perform without the analytical mind's interference. It is not the warm confidence that comes from past success or the optimism of a person who has never failed. It is a cognitive posture, a deliberate choice to let the body operate from the intelligence it has accumulated through years of direct experience. The tennis player who trusts Self 2 does not think about her stroke during the point. The musician who trusts Self 2 does not monitor her fingers during the performance. The builder who trusts Self 2 does not evaluate every line of code as it is written. In each case, the trust is not passive. It is the active practice of refraining from interference — noticing the impulse to instruct, correct, or evaluate, and choosing not to act on that impulse. AI makes this trust harder to develop