The cycle's amplifier metaphor—AI carries your signal further without evaluating its content—is the most democratic reading of the human-AI relationship. Flusser's apparatus concept is its necessary correction. An amplifier is passive; the signal passes through unchanged. An apparatus transforms the signal according to its own program. What emerges from the AI interaction is not your intention made louder; it is your intention as processed by a system whose statistical tendencies, training biases, and architectural constraints were set by others. The smooth, coherent, rhetorically compelling passage that [YOU] on AI describes almost keeping—the one about democratisation that sounded better than it thought—is the apparatus's program operating at full efficiency. The discipline of rejection—recognising that passage, deleting it, retreating to a notebook—is the player position. The cycle proposes it as a practice. Flusser would add: it is the only practice that keeps the human from becoming the apparatus's best functionary.
His meta-program concept gives the cycle's account of concentrated power its most precise formulation. The developer in Lagos can prompt the model in her own language; she does not govern the training data, the architecture, or the optimisation objectives that determine the range of what the model can say. More people than ever can travel the road; fewer than ever determine where the road goes. The Vatican's encyclical Magnifica Humanitas calls the same concentration a violation of the universal destination of goods. Flusser calls it the condition of every apparatus operator who does not know she is one: she believes she is directing the tool, and she is, within a parameter space she did not set and cannot see.
The post-history diagnosis—the apparatus learns to produce linear text without linear thought, decoupling the form of argument from the experience of having argued—is the most structurally original contribution Flusser makes to the cycle's account of the AI transition. The Deleuze error the cycle describes is not a bug in the model; it is the apparatus's program producing a statistically plausible connection that happens to rest on a misreading that only sustained linear engagement with the text could detect. The reader equipped with the tools of critical analysis encounters what appears to be argument. Those tools appear to apply. But the instrument was built to measure a different property than the one the output was produced by. The crisis of linear thought is circular: the apparatus that most demands critical reading most erodes the capacity for critical reading.
Vilém Flusser was born in Prague in 1920 into a Jewish family. When Germany invaded in 1939 he fled with his future wife Edith to London, then to Brazil, where he spent most of his adult life and became one of the central figures in Brazilian intellectual culture—always as the immigrant, always writing from the edge of belonging. He taught philosophy at the University of São Paulo and at the Instituto Brasileira de Filosofia, and he published prolifically in Portuguese, German, French, and English, often deliberately varying the same text across languages, treating translation as a form of thought rather than reproduction. The multilingualism was the structural condition of his philosophy: he located the thinker at the boundary between codes, never fully inside any one of them.
In the 1970s he turned to what he called media philosophy, and the results—Towards a Philosophy of Photography (1983), Does Writing Have a Future? (1987), Into the Universe of Technical Images (assembled posthumously)—are the work for which he is now remembered. He built the apparatus concept and the three-revolution framework in response to the camera and the computer as he understood them in 1983. He died in November 1991, returning to Prague for the first time since the occupation, in a car accident. He was seventy-one. The internet, the smartphone, social media, the large language model: he saw none of them. He described all of them structurally.
His biography is the method. Exile as epistemology: belonging to no program completely, he could see every fishbowl from outside. The person who has never been entirely inside any apparatus is the person most capable of seeing the apparatus's program—which is why the player position is, for Flusser, not merely a tactic but an existential stance, and why the most useful critics of any technology are often those who came to it from outside.
Three cognitive revolutions. The cave image gave rise to mythical, circular, pattern-repeating consciousness. Writing linearized consciousness, making science, philosophy, law, and cumulative knowledge possible by arranging events into causal sequences subject to critique. The technical image—apparatus-generated output—is undoing the linearization. AI completes this third revolution by producing outputs in the very medium of linear thought, natural language, without the linear process. The form of argument decouples from the experience of having argued.
Apparatus versus tool. A tool extends a human organ and remains subordinate to the human who wields it. An apparatus generates symbols according to its own program; its operator is a functionary, not a master. Flusser stated this explicitly in 1983 about all computational systems. The large language model is the apparatus concept's fullest instantiation: its program was set by training data and architecture decisions that no individual user controls, and its outputs are generated within a parameter space whose boundaries were drawn by a small number of institutions.
Functionary versus player. The functionary prompts, receives, accepts, and ships. The work converges toward the statistical center of the program: smooth, coherent, and recognisably the kind of thing the apparatus produces. The player recognises the apparatus's defaults, refuses them, and pushes toward the low-probability outputs where the collision between human intention and the program's tendencies produces something neither party could have generated alone. Playing against the program is harder with AI than with a camera, because the camera's defaults are visible—the standard exposure, the predictable composition—while the AI's defaults arrive in the same language as insight.
The meta-program as the locus of power. The meta-program is the level of decision-making that sets the apparatus's program: training data, architecture, optimisation objectives. The functionary explores the program; the meta-programmer wrote it. Flusser's most uncomfortable political claim is that access to the apparatus is not self-governance. The developer who prompts the model in her own language still operates within a parameter space whose shape was determined by a handful of institutions. The democracy of functionaries is not the democracy of programmers.
Post-history and the crisis of critique. Post-historical consciousness does not analyse; it processes. It does not argue; it generates. The apparatus that produces the most fluent, coherent, sequential-looking text is also the apparatus that most undermines the reader's capacity to detect that the sequence was generated probabilistically rather than argued linearly. The crisis is circular: the tool that most demands critical evaluation most erodes the skill of critical evaluation.