CONCEPT
The AI Comparison Engine
De Botton's diagnosis extended to the AI age: a technology that makes professional output globally visible, stripped of protective context, turning Rousseau's amour propre into a continuous, quantified verdict on human worth.
Status anxiety,
Alain de Botton argues, is fuelled by comparison—and comparison is fuelled by visibility. For most of professional history, expertise was sheltered by opacity: the senior engineer's six-month estimate was intelligible only to people who shared her domain knowledge, and the comparison between her estimate and a junior colleague's weekend sprint required contextual fluency few managers possessed. Artificial intelligence dissolved that opacity in a single threshold crossing. When a junior developer ships in a weekend what a senior colleague estimated at six months—using the same AI tools available to anyone with a subscription—the comparison becomes legible to everyone: the CEO, the board, the customer. What was once protected by the difficulty of the craft is now exposed by the availability of the tool. The result is what de Botton's framework, extended to the AI moment, would call the AI comparison engine: a technology that has made the output of
status competition globally visible, continuously available, and stripped of the contextual knowledge