Artificiality: Being with AI

Christine Rosen: The Extinction of Experience


Listen Later

In this conversation, we explore the shifts in human experience with Christine Rosen, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and author of "The Extinction of Experience: Being Human in a Disembodied World." As a member of the "hybrid generation" of Gen X, Christine (like us) brings the perspective of having lived through the transition from an analog to a digital world and witnessed firsthand what we've gained and lost in the process.

Christine frames our current moment through the lens of what naturalist Robert Michael Pyle called "the extinction of experience"—the idea that when something disappears from our environment, subsequent generations don't even know to mourn its absence. Drawing on over 20 years of studying technology's impact on human behavior, she argues that we're experiencing a mass migration from direct to mediated experience, often without recognizing the qualitative differences between them.

Key themes we explore:

  • The Archaeology of Lost Skills: How the abandonment of handwriting reveals the broader pattern of discarding embodied cognition—the physical practices that shape how we think, remember, and process the world around us
  • Mediation as Default: Why our increasing reliance on screens to understand experience is fundamentally different from direct engagement, and how this shift affects our ability to read emotions, tolerate friction, and navigate uncomfortable social situations
  • The Machine Logic of Relationships: How technology companies treat our emotions "like the law used to treat wives as property"—as something to be controlled, optimized, and made efficient rather than experienced in their full complexity
  • Embodied Resistance: Why skills like cursive handwriting, face-to-face conversation, and the ability to sit with uncomfortable emotions aren't nostalgic indulgences but essential human capacities that require active preservation
  • The Keyboard Metaphor: How our technological interfaces—with their control buttons, delete keys, and escape commands—are reshaping our expectations for human relationships and emotional experiences


Christine challenges the Silicon Valley orthodoxy that frames every technological advancement as inevitable progress, instead advocating for what she calls "defending the human." This isn't a Luddite rejection of technology but a call for conscious choice about what we preserve, what we abandon, and what we allow machines to optimize out of existence.

The conversation reveals how seemingly small decisions—choosing to handwrite a letter, putting phones in the center of the table during dinner, or learning to read cursive—become acts of resistance against a broader cultural shift toward treating humans as inefficient machines in need of optimization. As Christine observes, we're creating a world where the people designing our technological future live with "human nannies and human tutors and human massage therapists" while prescribing AI substitutes for everyone else.

What emerges is both a warning and a manifesto: that preserving human experience requires actively choosing friction, inefficiency, and the irreducible messiness of being embodied creatures in a physical world. Christine's work serves as an essential field guide for navigating the tension between technological capability and human flourishing—showing us how to embrace useful innovations while defending the experiences that make us most fully human.

About Christine Rosen: Christine Rosen is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where she focuses on the intersection of technology, culture, and society. Previously the managing editor of The New Republic and founding editor of The Hedgehog Review, her writing has appeared in The Atlantic, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and numerous other publications. "The Extinction of Experience" represents over two decades of research into how digital technologies are reshaping human behavior and social relationships.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Artificiality: Being with AIBy Helen and Dave Edwards

  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5

5

9 ratings


More shows like Artificiality: Being with AI

View all
Radiolab by WNYC Studios

Radiolab

43,835 Listeners

Hidden Brain by Hidden Brain, Shankar Vedantam

Hidden Brain

43,543 Listeners

Philosophize This! by Stephen West

Philosophize This!

15,240 Listeners

Economist Podcasts by The Economist

Economist Podcasts

4,161 Listeners

On the Media by WNYC Studios

On the Media

9,191 Listeners

The Gray Area with Sean Illing by Vox

The Gray Area with Sean Illing

10,726 Listeners

The Quanta Podcast by Quanta Magazine

The Quanta Podcast

534 Listeners

GZERO World with Ian Bremmer by GZERO Media

GZERO World with Ian Bremmer

804 Listeners

Today, Explained by Vox

Today, Explained

10,204 Listeners

Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas by Sean Carroll | Wondery

Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas

4,175 Listeners

The Intelligence from The Economist by The Economist

The Intelligence from The Economist

2,554 Listeners

Tech Won't Save Us by Paris Marx

Tech Won't Save Us

571 Listeners

Dwarkesh Podcast by Dwarkesh Patel

Dwarkesh Podcast

517 Listeners

Ones and Tooze by Foreign  Policy

Ones and Tooze

341 Listeners

The Joy of Why by Steven Strogatz, Janna Levin and Quanta Magazine

The Joy of Why

488 Listeners