CONCEPT
Civilisation Matérielle
The everyday infrastructure of food, shelter, trade, and production — the material civilization beneath formal economies and political institutions, and the framework that makes the physical base of AI (chips, power, water, data) analytically visible.
Civilisation matérielle is
Braudel's name for the slow-moving, often unconscious infrastructure of daily life — what people eat, how they heat their homes, what they wear, how they travel, what they trade locally, what money they use — distinguished from both the
market economy above it and the
capitalism above that. Developed across his three-volume
Civilization and Capitalism, 15th–18th Century (1967–1979), the framework insists that economic life has a vast substrate of customary practice that operates below the level of price formation and contractual exchange. Applied to AI, the concept demands that we see the data centers, the silicon supply chains, the cooling water, the electrical grids, the content-moderation labor, the training datasets — the material base without which no inference happens.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Braudel's three-level model inverted the usual hierarchy of economic analysis. At the bottom, material civilization — the ordinary, repetitive, locally embedded practices of provisioning and production. Above it, the market