CONCEPT
The Discourse as Class War
The Mannheimian reading of the AI discourse as a field of contending socially-situated ideologies — each rooted in material conditions, each partial, each presenting its view as the whole.
Segal's taxonomy of the AI discourse — triumphalists, elegists, and the silent middle — is sociologically acute. Mannheim's framework adds what the taxonomy does not: the identification of the class positions that produce each camp. The discourse is not a free exchange of ideas among disembodied minds. It is a field of contending ideologies, each rooted in the material conditions and social interests of the people who advance it. The triumphalist discourse maps onto ideology with uncomfortable precision: the narrative of inevitability naturalizes current trajectories, the celebration of productivity individualizes structural outcomes, the metrics of success measure output without measuring distribution. Each operation serves the material interests of the classes that advance it.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The triumphalists — the people posting productivity metrics, the solo founders shipping revenue-generating products, the executives celebrating twenty-fold multipliers — were overwhelmingly members of the class that stood to benefit most directly from the transition. Their celebration was not fabricated. The productivity gains were real.
Keep reading with YOU ON AI
Unlock the full book, 10,000+ field-guide entries, and a 1000+ thinker library. If you have a book code, register now — it takes a minute.