CONCEPT
Sequence Exhaustion
Kubler's term for the
condition of a formal sequence whose significant variations have been explored to their limits, producing diminishing returns from further variation and creating the conditions under which new sequences must open if formal development is to continue.
Every
formal sequence has a finite span. Its early phase is characterized by rapid innovation — each solution opens multiple new possibilities. As the sequence matures, the rate of formal invention declines. Late entries are increasingly refinements rather than departures. Eventually the sequence reaches exhaustion: every significant variation has been explored, and
genuine novelty requires opening an entirely new sequence. Sequence exhaustion is not the absence of things to do; it is the absence of things to do that the sequence has not already implied. Kubler treated exhaustion as a structural feature of formal sequences rather than a failure of imagination, and the concept becomes newly consequential when AI fills sequences at rates that make exhaustion visible across domains in compressed time.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Kubler was clear that sequence exhaustion is not a moral or aesthetic judgment on late-sequence work. Some of the most refined, sophisticated artifacts in any