CONCEPT
Primary Instrumentalization
Feenberg's name for the <em>first moment of technical practice</em> — the decontextualization of worldly phenomena into functional resources, where a forest becomes lumber, a river becomes kilowatt-hours, and human language becomes tokens.
Primary instrumentalization is the first of the two analytical moments Feenberg identifies in any technical practice. It names the operation by which something in the world is isolated from its original context, stripped of its relationships, and reduced to its functional properties. The forest ceases to be a forest — an ecosystem, a habitat, a place with its own history — and becomes board feet of lumber. The river ceases to be a river and becomes kilowatt-hours of potential energy. In the AI case, human language — with its ambiguity, emotional weight, cultural specificity, and capacity to mean more than it says — becomes tokens, statistical units in a prediction engine. The reduction is not optional for technology. It is the necessary first moment that makes technical practice possible at all.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The critical point is that primary instrumentalization is not where the politics of technology live. Feenberg is careful to distinguish this reductive moment — which he considers
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