CONCEPT
Concordance-Discordance
Ricoeur's structural analysis of narrative as the synthesis of concordance (unity, coherence, resolution) and discordance (the unexpected, the reversal)—the dialectic that makes stories transformative, and that AI-optimized creation threatens by favoring concordance.
Every narrative, Ricoeur argued, is a synthesis of two opposing forces: concordance—the drive toward unity, coherence, and closure—and discordance—the intrusion of contingency, the unexpected event, the reversal that threatens to break the story apart. Concordance alone produces a schedule, not a story. Discordance alone produces chaos. The synthesis is where narrative meaning lives: the story that accommodates the unexpected without collapsing into incoherence, that finds unity
through rather than
despite the reversals. AI-accelerated creation tends to favor concordance. The tool is designed to produce coherent output: code that compiles, prose that flows, designs that conform to established patterns. Discordance—the unexpected failure, the discovery that forces reconception, the reversal that produces the
aha moment—is minimized because the tool's optimization rewards smoothness. The result is a creative process that is more efficient and narratively thinner—lacking the dramatic structure that gives professional life its transformative power.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Ricoeur developed the concept through close reading of Aristotle's analysis of peripeteia (reversal) and anagnorisis