CONCEPT
Cognitive Derangement
The chronic malaise produced when the instinct of workmanship is denied adequate outlet — persistent restlessness without dramatic suffering.
Cognitive derangement is this volume's term for the psychological condition Veblen identified in displaced artisans and that now manifests in AI-era knowledge workers: the chronic, low-grade malaise produced when a biological drive (the instinct of workmanship) persists without adequate outlet. The derangement is not acute suffering but the particular restlessness of a caged animal — fed, sheltered, monitored, but denied the specific activity its organism was designed for. It presents as vague unease, a sense that something is missing from work that used to be there, a dissatisfaction that cannot be adequately explained by economic circumstances or capability loss. The skilled worker whose productive role has been automated may be employed, compensated, even engaged in 'higher-level' tasks, yet experience the derangement if those tasks deny the exercise of hands-on skilled production the instinct requires.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Veblen observed the pattern in displaced framework knitters and power-loom tenders of the industrial revolution. The factory operative was not idle. Was busy, often working harder physically and longer in hours than skilled weavers had worked. But
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