What people want has not changed in five thousand years. Security. Recognition. Belonging. A sense that the future is not entirely opaque. When new instruments arrive, people use them to pursue what they have always pursued. The instruments change. What drives their use does not. This paper argues that the current AI transition follows the same structural pattern as every previous instrumental expansion: capacity broadens, the premium shifts from execution to judgment, and the newly capable are absorbed into existing institutional structures rather than displacing them. Drawing on Tilly's five-century analysis of state formation, Weber's distinction between technical competence and the authority of office, Gurr's framework for revolutionary mobilization, and Hirschman's analysis of institutional loyalty, the paper identifies a stabilizing mechanism: when the gap between what people want and what they can achieve narrows, investment in the conditions that sustain achievement increases. The paper further argues that integration with the world -- the removal of delivery bottlenecks between human judgment and the need for it -- produces genuine mutual gain at scale, not zero-sum displacement. Transaction costs approach zero (North, 1990), and the market for human judgment expands rather than contracts. The risk is not transformation beyond recognition but the adaptation interval between the old instrument's decline and the new instrument's integration. That interval closes. Companion paper: The Decalogy on Artificial Intelligence (SSRN Preprint, doi:10.2139/ssrn.6399740). Revision Note (v2): Opening verdict ("more reassuring than most commentary suggests") removed. "On what becomes possible" reordered: North's framework first, examples second. Second-person reassurance rewritten as third-person structural analysis under new section "On competitive position." All content preserved; game framing and "still early" retained.
Ahn Kyungae (Sun,) studied this question.