CONCEPT
The Device Paradigm
Albert Borgmann's name for the structural pattern by which modern technology delivers a <em>commodity</em> while concealing its machinery and eliminating the engagement that once produced it.
The device paradigm is Borgmann's central philosophical contribution — a diagnostic framework, developed in Technology and the Character of Contemporary Life (1984), for identifying what technology gives and what it quietly takes away. A device is any technology that separates a commodity (the end-result the user wants) from the engagement (the skill, effort, attention, and bodily presence) that historically produced it. The furnace delivers warmth without demanding that anyone chop wood or tend a fire. The stereo delivers music without demanding that anyone learn an instrument. The pattern is concealment of machinery, delivery of commodity, and disburdening of the user — and its consequences are invisible because the commodity is preserved.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The power of the device paradigm as an analytical tool lies in its specificity. It does not describe a particular technology or a particular era. It describes a pattern that any sufficiently powerful technology can instantiate — a pattern whose signature is the progressive elimination of the friction between human desire and
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