CONCEPT
The Sacred and the Profane
Durkheim's most fundamental analytical distinction — not a division of content but a division of <em>social treatment</em>, organizing every human society into what is set apart and what is available for ordinary use.
Every society, whether it worships gods or not, divides the world into the sacred and the profane. The division is not optional, not cultural decoration, not a residue of superstition. It is a structural feature of collective life itself. The sacred is not defined by its content but by how the community treats it: with prohibitions, rituals, reverence, and the shared sense that casual handling would constitute violation. The sacralization is a collective act, and the community invests objects, practices, and bodies of knowledge with significance that transcends their utilitarian function. Applied to the AI transition, this framework diagnoses what is happening to deep expertise with diagnostic precision. Expertise was sacred — set apart, earned through sacrifice, surrounded by implicit prohibitions against casual appropriation — and the AI transition is profaning it, moving it from the domain of the set-apart to the domain of the ordinary.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Profanation is a specific operation, not the same
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