CONCEPT
Electromagnetic Induction
Faraday's 1831 discovery that a <em>changing</em> magnetic field generates electric current—the principle underlying generators, transformers, and the transfer of creative energy in human-AI collaboration through iterative exchange.
On August 29, 1831, Faraday wound two coils around an iron ring, connected one to a battery and the other to a galvanometer, and observed that current appeared in the second coil only when the first coil's current was switched on or off—not while it flowed steadily. This anomalous result contradicted every existing theory (which predicted steady fields should produce steady effects) but revealed the principle of electromagnetic induction: changing magnetic flux generates electromotive force. The discovery was transformative for physics and technology—it's the mechanism behind every electrical generator and transformer—but its deepest implication is dynamical: stasis produces nothing; change produces everything. Creative energy is transferred not by field presence but by field transformation. Applied to AI collaboration, induction explains why the most productive human-AI interactions are iterative—each exchange induces a response that changes the field, which induces a further response, creating self-sustaining creative momentum.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Faraday's induction experiments occupied most of 1831 and filled hundreds of notebook entries as he systematically varied