CONCEPT
Disburdening
Borgmann's technical term for what a <em>device</em> does to a user: relieves her of the skill, effort, attention, and understanding that the pre-device version of the activity required — an operation experienced as liberation and structurally invisible as loss.
Disburdening (the English rendering of Borgmann's German-inflected philosophical vocabulary) names the specific operation at the heart of the device paradigm. A device disburdens its user of everything the pre-device version of the activity demanded: the axe work of the woodcutter, the fire-building of the hearth-tender, the instrument practice of the musician, the syntax-wrangling of the programmer. The disburdening is not a side-effect of the device — it is the point. A device that demanded equivalent engagement would have failed as a device. Disburdening feels like liberation because it is liberation — from effort, from difficulty, from the friction between intention and commodity. Borgmann's insight is that it is also the mechanism by which the focal practice that produced the engagement's internal goods is dismantled.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The experience of disburdening is almost always positive in the moment. No one misses chopping wood when the furnace works. No one misses the labor of handwriting when
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