CONCEPT
Ecology of Change
The conceptual extension from Toffler's shock metaphor — organism hit by discrete wave — to the <em>co-evolutionary framework</em> of organism living in continuous river, which names the principles that must govern construction of adaptive structures.
The ecology of change names the conceptual extension that the AI transition has forced. The shock metaphor implied discrete events: organism encounters disruption, experiences shock, recovers or doesn't. That metaphor was adequate when technological disruptions arrived episodically, separated by stability periods during which previous shock could be processed before the next arrived. The AI transition has rendered the metaphor insufficient: the disruption is continuous, stability periods have compressed to zero, the organism is not recovering from a single event but living inside an ongoing process. The ecological reframe treats the relationship between humans and technological environment not as collision between entity and external force but as co-evolutionary dynamic in which organism and environment continuously reshape each other.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The ecology of change begins with the recognition that the relationship between humans and their tools is constitutive, not merely instrumental. The printing press was designed to reproduce text; it produced the Reformation, scientific revolution, and modern