CONCEPT
Secure Attachment
The developmental foundation formed through sustained, responsive parental presence — the irreducibly human capital that no technology substitutes and whose production requires the one input AI cannot provide.
Developmental psychology is unambiguous: secure attachment in early childhood is produced by sustained, responsive presence — the repeated experience of a caregiver who is physically and emotionally available, who responds to distress with comfort and to curiosity with engagement. The production function for secure attachment has a time dimension that cannot be compressed. The deposits are made slowly, through thousands of small interactions, and the capital they build — the child's internal working model of whether the world is safe and whether people can be relied upon — depreciates rapidly when the deposits stop. A parent who is physically present but cognitively absorbed in an AI-assisted project is, in production function terms, providing a degraded input. The time is there. The presence is not. The commodity being produced — the child's experience of being seen, valued, and prioritized — is underproduced, because the parent's attention, the true non-substitutable input, has been reallocated.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Becker's framework does not moralize about this. It describes
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