PERSON
Marcel Mauss
The French anthropologist who showed that the gift creates what the commodity cannot, that the body is the first and most natural technical object, and that every important social phenomenon must be understood as a total fact engaging every dimension of human life simultaneously—the thinker who reveals what AI is doing to professional knowledge that economics cannot see.
Marcel Mauss is the anthropologist of the irreducible. His career was a sustained demonstration that the phenomena most worth understanding—the gift, the sacrifice, the bodily technique, the feast—resist every single-lens analysis, that the moment you try to explain them through economics alone, or law alone, or psychology alone, you have already lost what makes them what they are. He called the most important of these phenomena total social facts: events that engage the economic, legal, moral, religious, and bodily dimensions of social life simultaneously, and that can only be understood when all dimensions are held in view at once. The AI transition is a total social fact in this precise sense. It is an economic restructuring, a legal challenge, a moral question, a cultural shift, and—the dimension that every other lens misses—a bodily displacement. The techniques of the