CONCEPT
Praxis
The unity of reflection and action that produces transformative understanding — the inseparable joining of thinking and doing that AI threatens to split.
Praxis is Freire's term for the unified engagement of reflection and action, each informing the other in continuous cycle. Reflection without action is verbalism — eloquent analysis changing nothing. Action without reflection is activism — energetic output without direction. Only when the person who thinks about what to build also builds it, and when building feeds back into thinking, does genuine transformation occur. The programmer who writes, watches fail, analyzes failure, and rewrites possesses understanding forged in the encounter between intention and resistance — qualitatively different from understanding absorbed through explanation. AI threatens this unity by splitting praxis between entities: the machine acts (generating code, producing implementations), the human reflects (evaluating outputs, judging whether they meet needs). The split produces judgment disconnected from embodied knowledge that only direct engagement with material resistance builds.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Freire developed praxis in the context of political liberation, but its application to AI is immediate. The most important structural consequence of AI-assisted work is the tendency to delegate action to the machine while retaining