CONCEPT
Inner Silence
The absence of stimulation in the mind's internal theater—not emptiness but the fertile void from which autonomous thought emerges, now colonized by AI.
Inner silence is
Citton's term for the cognitive condition of having no external input demanding attention—no notification, no suggestion, no
voice (human or algorithmic) offering options or alternatives. It is not the silence of a quiet room (external
noise can be blocked with headphones) but the silence of the mind's own processes operating without interference: the state in which thought arises from internal resources rather than external prompts, where ideas form through autonomous association rather than algorithmic suggestion. Inner silence is uncomfortable—it produces boredom, anxiety, the feeling that time is being wasted. And this discomfort is precisely what makes it valuable: it is the pressure that forces the mind into
floating attention, the mode from which creative insight emerges. Citton's diagnosis is that AI tools have
colonized inner silence—filled every gap with generated content, every
pause with suggestions, every moment of potential boredom with algorithmically optimized stimulation. The colonization is welcomed by users because it eliminates discomfort. The
ecological cost is the destruction of the habitat that autonomous creative thought requires.