CONCEPT
Equality as Practice
Allen's foundational reframing: equality is not a pre-existing condition government protects but an <em>ongoing practice</em> that must be actively constructed through institutions, norms, and the daily architecture of collective life.
Danielle Allen's reading of the Declaration of Independence in Our Declaration (2014) argues that 'all men are created equal' is not a descriptive claim about nature but a declaration of intent. The distance between the intent and its realization is the terrain democratic politics must traverse, generation after generation, without ever arriving at a final destination. This reframing transforms every subsequent question about democratic life: equality becomes a verb, a construction, a labor that institutions must be designed to perform. Applied to AI, the framework asks whether the technology expands or contracts the practice of equality—whether it creates conditions under which more people can participate as genuine equals in the construction of collective life, or whether it generates new forms of dependency that masquerade as participation.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Allen developed this framework in direct engagement with the American civic tradition, but she did not invent its terms. The insistence that equality is constructed rather than discovered runs through Mills's sociological
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