The Platform: Coordinating Attention Toward Its Own Ends
256 words, about 2 minutes.
The great digital platforms solved the problem of discovery — the challenge of finding, among billions of potential sources, the information, people, and content that a given person was looking for. These are genuine technical achievements that transformed how human beings navigate an information environment of previously inconceivable scale.
What they broke is now understood by almost everyone. The platform business model — the conversion of attention into advertising revenue — created inexorable pressure to maximize engagement, which required the maximization of emotional arousal, which in practice meant the maximization of outrage, fear, and tribalism. The platform's deepest failure is philosophical. It understood human beings as attention-generating nodes in an advertising network. It optimized for what it measured — clicks, views, shares, time-on-platform. The things that actually matter — the quality of thought, the depth of relationship, the development of wisdom — are not measurable by the platform's instruments and therefore, by its logic, do not exist.
The platform measured attention and got a civilization optimized for distraction. The deepest question this volume asks is whether we can build a coordination device that measures presence — and thereby produces a civilization optimized for genuine encounter.
What must be preserved: the insight that discovery — the capacity to find, among vast possibility, what is genuinely relevant and genuinely valuable — is a coordination function of immense importance. The question is whether that function can be built around a different understanding of what human beings are and what they are for. It is to that question that the rest of this volume is devoted.