CONCEPT
Knowledge Crystallization
Hidalgo's term for the process by which know-how escapes individual minds and embeds itself in objects, institutions, and systems that persist <em>independently of any single knower</em>.
Knowledge crystallization names the central process by which human economies accumulate productive capability: the embedding of knowledge into artifacts, organizations, and institutional arrangements that can be used by people who do not possess the underlying knowledge themselves. A hammer crystallizes metallurgy. A compiler crystallizes computation. A large language model crystallizes the connective tissue between every domain of human thought ever committed to text. In Hidalgo's framework, the wealth of nations is determined not by what they extract from the ground but by what they have crystallized into the objects and institutional arrangements constituting their productive capacity. The concept provides the critical lens for distinguishing between knowledge accessed through a tool and knowledge embedded in human and institutional fabric.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The framework originates in Hidalgo's 2015 book Why Information Grows, which argued that the entire history of economic development can be understood as a history of crystallization — the progressive embedding of human know-how into forms that persist independently of any individual knower. The economy,
Keep reading with YOU ON AI
Unlock the full book, 10,000+ field-guide entries, and a 1000+ thinker library. If you have a book code, register now — it takes a minute.