CONCEPT
Kinetic vs Potential Attention
Mark's distinction between attention <em>actively engaged</em> with a task and cognitive resources <em>held in reserve</em> — recovering, consolidating, preparing for the next bout — with the healthy workday requiring alternation between the two.
Gloria Mark borrowed the vocabulary of physics to describe an empirical asymmetry in cognitive work. Kinetic attention is the active engagement visible in output: the worker focused on a task, producing results, measurable on any dashboard. Potential attention is the reserve capacity — recovering from the last engagement, consolidating recent learning, preparing to engage the next task with full resources. The healthy workday requires both, in alternating cycles. The culture of knowledge work, however, systematically overvalues the kinetic and undervalues the potential, because kinetic attention feels productive while potential attention feels like slacking. The AI-augmented workflow accelerates this bias toward pathological extremes.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The distinction matters because the two forms of attention are not interchangeable. A worker who operates continuously in kinetic mode — who converts every moment of potential attention into productive output — depletes the reserve that kinetic attention draws upon. The depletion is not immediately visible. Output continues. The worker feels productive. But
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