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Origins
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💡

Paradigm Shifts

Moments when "obvious truth" changed. These shifts reveal that what seems natural and inevitable was actually constructed under specific conditions. If it was made, it can be remade.

🏫

The Invention of Mass Schooling

1830s-1900s

BEFORE

Learning embedded in life, family, community

AFTER

Learning extracted into institutions, separated from life

For 95% of human history, children learned by participating in adult life. The factory model of schooling - age-graded, compulsory, standardized - was invented to create compliant workers and citizens. What we call "traditional education" is actually a recent industrial invention.

⏰

The Tyranny of Clock Time

1760-1900

BEFORE

Task-oriented work: done when the work is done

AFTER

Time-oriented work: paid by the hour, not the task

Before factories, people worked when work needed doing - by seasons, by tasks, by daylight. The factory clock transformed time into a commodity to be bought and sold. We now find it hard to imagine work without schedules, even when the work doesn't require them.

💼

Work as Identity

1950s-Present

BEFORE

"What do you do?" meant survival activities

AFTER

"What do you do?" means who you are

The concept of "career" - a continuous, upward trajectory of related work - is a mid-20th century invention. Before this, work was what you did to survive, not who you were. The merger of work and identity creates both meaning and anxiety.

📜

The Credential Revolution

1900-Present

BEFORE

Skills demonstrated through doing

AFTER

Skills certified through credentials

A century ago, most jobs didn't require formal credentials. The credential revolution transformed hiring from "can you do it?" to "do you have the paper?" This created a gatekeeping system that advantages those with access to credentialing institutions.

🏭

The Factory Model Debate

Ongoing

BEFORE

Schools designed for compliant workers (the claim)

AFTER

Schools are more complex than the factory critique suggests

The "schools are factories" narrative is partly true and partly oversimplified. Yes, mass schooling emerged alongside industrialization. But schools also served democratic ideals, preserved cultural traditions, and provided genuine opportunity. The truth is messier than any simple narrative.

📖

The Print Revolution

1450-1600

BEFORE

Knowledge controlled by scribes and institutions

AFTER

Knowledge democratized through printed books

Gutenberg's printing press didn't just make books cheaper - it transformed who could access and produce knowledge. The Reformation, scientific revolution, and modern democracy are all children of print. The internet may be causing a similar transformation.

🌐

The Digital Transformation

1990s-Present

BEFORE

One-to-many broadcast media

AFTER

Many-to-many networked communication

The internet returned power to distributed, peer-to-peer communication for the first time since the oral era. But algorithms now curate what we see, creating new forms of centralized control within apparently open systems.

🤖

The AI Disruption

2020s-Present

BEFORE

Humans create, machines execute

AFTER

Machines can create; what is uniquely human?

For the first time, machines can learn, create, and perform cognitive work. This disrupts every assumption about the value of human labor and the nature of education. We're living through a paradigm shift whose full implications we cannot yet see.

🔮

What Paradigm Are We In Now?

Every era thinks its assumptions are just "how things are." People in 1850 couldn't imagine a world without child labor. People in 1950 couldn't imagine women as CEOs. What do we assume is natural that future generations will find absurd?

The paradigm you're in is the one you can't see.