by Dwight Furrow
We have slid almost imperceptibly and, to be honest, gratefully, into a world that offers to think, plan, and decide on our behalf. Calendars propose our meetings; feeds anticipate our moods; large language models can summarize our desires before we’ve fully articulated them. Agency is the human capacity to initiate, to be the author of one’s actions rather than their stenographer. The age of AI is forcing us to answer a peculiar question: what forms of life still require us to begin something, rather than merely to confirm it? The best answer I’ve been able to come up with is that we preserve agency by carving out zones of what the philosopher Albert Borgmann called focal practices—activities whose meaning lies in their doing, that integrate thought and action, that resist the drift toward frictionless consumption. Cooking and eating, when pursued as focal practices, are exemplary test cases. They can be (and increasingly are) colonized by devices and algorithms. Yet they also contain native antibodies to that colonization—rhythms, resistances, irreducible sensuous details—that make them stubbornly human. The task is to protect and cultivate those antibodies.
“Agency” is often misdescribed as the mere ability to choose among options. That definition flatters the marketplace and leaves us docile, turning us into consumers of choices rather than authors of ends. The more precise mark of agency is the power to set ends and learn through doing—to craft a trajectory, absorb the world’s feedback, adjust, and continue. This is what the crafts teach: not only that we can do things, but that the things we do can teach us back.
By contrast, the contemporary “device paradigm” (to borrow once again a concept from Borgmann) seeks to deliver goods while obscuring the world of engagement that once produced them. Central heating without a hearth; playlists without musicianship; complete dinners in boxes with QR codes. AI intensifies that device paradigm: it can now plan an entire week of meals, generate a shopping list, adapt to your nutrition targets, propose substitutes for your missing fennel, and teach you knife skills—without you ever acquiring a hand’s memory for the knife or a nose’s discernment for fennel. You can “cook” by executing the plan’s plan, outsourcing the learning that makes cooking more than caloric logistics. Read more »






When promoting her new book in September, Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett stated in an interview as quoted in Politico : “I think the Constitution is alive and well.” She went on – “I don’t know what a constitutional crisis would look like. I think that our country remains committed to the rule of law. I think we have functioning courts.”
During covid, amid the maelstrom that was American healthcare, a miracle happened. State medical boards suspended their cross-state licensure restrictions.


There has long been a temptation in science to imagine one system that can explain everything. For a while, that dream belonged to physics, whose practitioners, armed with a handful of equations, could describe the orbits of planets and the spin of electrons. In recent years, the torch has been seized by artificial intelligence. With enough data, we are told, the machine will learn the world. If this sounds like a passing of the crown, it has also become, in a curious way, a rivalry. Like the cinematic conflict between vampires and werewolves in the Underworld franchise, AI and physics have been cast as two immortal powers fighting for dominion over knowledge. AI enthusiasts claim that the laws of nature will simply fall out of sufficiently large data sets. Physicists counter that data without principle is merely glorified curve-fitting.
The smallest spider I’ve ever seen is slowly descending from the little metal lampshade above my computer. She’s so tiny, a millimeter wide at most, I have to look twice to make sure she isn’t just a speck of dust. The only reason I can be certain that she’s not is that she’s dropping straight down instead of floating at random.
Naotaka Hiro. Untitled (Tide), 2024.
In a previous essay, 
Isn’t it time we talk about you?


To be alive is to maintain a coherent structure in a variable environment. Entropy favors the dispersal of energy, like heat diffusing into the surroundings. Cells, like fridges, resist this drift only by expending energy. At the base of the food chain, energy is harvested from the sun; at the next layer, it is consumed and transferred, and so begins the game of predation. Yet predation need not always be aggressive or zero-sum. Mutualistic interactions abound. Species collaborate when it conserves energy. For example, whistling-thorn trees in Kenya trade food and shelter to ants for protection. Ants patrol the tree, fending off herbivores from insects to elephants. When an organism cannot provide a resource or service without risking its own survival, opportunities for cooperative exchange are limited. Beyond the cooperative, predation emerges in its more familiar, competitive form. At every level, the imperative is the same: accumulate enough energy to maintain and reproduce. How this energy is obtained, conserved, or defended produces the rich diversity of strategies observed in nature.