CONCEPT
Permanent Loss
The honest ecological accounting that some things destroyed during release do not return — specific forms of embodied knowledge, satisfaction, and collegial bond that the new configuration cannot replicate.
The adaptive cycle is sometimes misread as lossless renewal: what is destroyed returns in new form, resources are recaptured, the cycle is ultimately conservative. This reading is comforting and false. After a boreal crown fire, the specific mycorrhizal networks that connected root systems for decades are destroyed. New networks form, but they are not the same networks. Old-growth characteristics that required centuries to develop are not reproduced on any timescale relevant to the organisms that depended on them. The ecological framework insists on naming permanent losses, because failing to account for them produces distorted analyses that lead to distorted interventions.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The AI transition involves at least three categories of permanent loss that the framework demands be named honestly. The first is a specific form of embodied knowledge — the architect who felt a codebase 'the way a doctor feels a pulse' developed that understanding through years of friction-rich engagement with implementation. That engagement is the mechanism through which the understanding was