CONCEPT
Entrepreneurial Discernment
The faculty—irreducible to training, automation, or imitation—of perceiving accurately what the world needs before a market can reveal it: Jean-Baptiste Say’s core claim about what the entrepreneur contributes, and the capacity whose scarcity becomes most acute when the cost of production approaches zero.
When Jean-Baptiste Say insisted that the
entrepreneur is not a variant of the laborer or the capitalist but a distinct economic function, the word he used to describe that function was not “management” or “organization” but “perception”—the ability to see, in the current configuration of available inputs, a combination that serves a genuine human need and that no one else has yet seen. Entrepreneurial discernment is this faculty taken seriously as an economic category: not a personality trait, not a skill set, but the
irreducible residue of the entrepreneurial function when every automatable contribution has been automated. The cost of
AI-assisted production has collapsed to the cost of a conversation; what this exposes is the degree to which production costs once performed a disciplinary function, punishing misjudgment and rewarding accurate perception by imposing real capital risk on those who built things no one needed. When production costs approach zero, the punishment disappears and