Criterion Model Dimension
Speed is not wisdom because faster completion can reduce the pauses in which perception sharpens, interpretation deepens, and standards become explicit.
One of AI's great promises is speed. Draft faster. Decide faster. Summarize faster. Ship faster.
Sometimes that is exactly right. Other times the removed friction was the only thing protecting the work from premature closure.
The function of friction
Friction is not always inefficiency. Sometimes it is the interval in which a person notices what the first answer got wrong, remembers the missing stakeholder, or realizes the standard was never actually named.
What speed quietly changes
It changes not only output volume but editorial and cognitive posture. The person begins to trust completion as if it were understanding.
This is why speed can outrun standards before anyone notices that standards were what the friction was protecting.
A wiser use of speed
Use speed for first-pass expansion, comparison, and compression. Slow back down where criterion, telos, verification, and commitment begin.
Go deeper inside Modern Discernment
AI and Discernment
The main hub page for the relationship between machine output and human discernment.
CoreWhat Is Discernment?
The plain-language definition of discernment as a human faculty under uncertainty.
CoreHow Discernment Works
The full loop: perception, interpretation, criterion, telos, commitment, disposition, and calibration.
CoreAI and Discernment
Return to the main hub for the broader structural account.
Frequently asked questions
Is speed always bad in AI use?
How do I know when to slow down?
Is speed always bad in AI use?
No. It is excellent for compression and expansion. It becomes dangerous when it replaces scrutiny.
How do I know when to slow down?
Slow down when the standard is unclear, the stakes are high, or the output feels finished before the case feels understood.