CONCEPT
The Two-Component Model of Awe
Keltner and Haidt's 2003 formulation: awe requires <em>perceived vastness</em> plus the <em>need for accommodation</em> — the simultaneous encounter with what exceeds the framework and the cognitive rebuilding that encounter demands.
The two-component model, published by Dacher Keltner and Jonathan Haidt in Cognition and Emotion in 2003, established the empirical foundation for studying awe as a functional rather than decorative emotion. Vastness alone produces spectacle; accommodation alone produces ordinary learning. Awe is what happens when both fire simultaneously — when the mind encounters something too large for its current architecture and must rebuild that architecture in real time. The model operationalized what Burke, Kant, and William James had described philosophically, giving it empirical specificity and measurable consequences. For the AI transition, the model functions as a diagnostic: it distinguishes productive wonder from overwhelming spectacle and specifies the conditions under which the encounter with machine capability produces growth rather than collapse.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The theoretical lineage of the two-component model runs through Edmund Burke's 1757 treatise on the sublime, Kant's distinction between the mathematical and dynamic sublime, and William James's analysis of religious experience. What Keltner and Haidt added was not
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