Physical environment: high ceilings, natural light, views of distant horizons, access to nature, spaces combining openness with privacy. The windowless open-plan office is the wrong physiological environment for encountering vastness. Design of workspaces for the AI age should incorporate awe research as deliberately as it incorporates ergonomics.
Temporal structure: the awe response requires time to complete its physiological and cognitive cycle. Environments that fill every minute with tasks and deadlines prevent accommodation from completing. The ecology requires deliberate provision of unstructured time — pauses in which the worker attends and reflects rather than producing.
Social structure: awe is amplified by sharing and stabilized by social confirmation. Social porosity — structures that facilitate sharing across hierarchy, department, and specialization — activates the collective awe mechanism and transforms individual accommodation into collective accommodation.
Narrative structure: awe requires meaning. An environment that narrates the AI transition solely in terms of efficiency and competitive advantage deprives the encounter with vastness of the meaning that transforms it from overwhelming to productive. The ecology requires narrative depth — stories that situate the transition within the larger arc of human history.
Awe diversity: cultivation of multiple sources of awe so that the capacity is exercised across domains and does not depend on a single source. An environment in which the only source of awe is the AI tool itself is vulnerable to habituation and to the reductive equation of wonder with technology. Multiple sources — nature, art, music, moral exemplars, human relationship — keep the capacity supple.
The ecology-of-wonder framework synthesizes Keltner's empirical findings across two decades with the ecological metaphor explicitly. It draws on Durkheim's concept of collective effervescence, the research on workplace design and psychological flourishing, and contemporary work on environmental psychology.
Relational, not individual. Awe capacity is sustained by environment, not possessed independently.
Five components. Physical, temporal, social, narrative, and diversity.
Cannot be optimized. Optimization's drive toward efficiency degrades the ecology's essential redundancy.
Tendable. Like a forest or reef, the ecology requires ongoing cultivation and adjustment.
The civilizational stake. Whether the AI transition produces flourishing depends on whether the ecology is maintained at civilizational scale.