I agree that from the perspective of the implementation of async code, it is in many ways an application doing its own threading and context switching. However, your Parent comment is written from the perspective of the dev writing and reasoning about the code. In that case, from the devs perspective, async is there to make concurrent code ‘look like’ (since it certainly is not actually) sequential code.
I think this type of confusion (or more likely people talking past one another in most cases) is a fairly common problem in discussing programming languages and specific implementations of concepts in a language. In this case the perceived purpose of an abstraction based on a particular “view point”, leads to awkward discussions about those abstractions, their usefulness, and their semantics. I don’t know if there is way to fix these sorts of things (even when someone is just reading a comment thread), but maybe pointing it out can serve to highlight when it happens.
I think this type of confusion (or more likely people talking past one another in most cases) is a fairly common problem in discussing programming languages and specific implementations of concepts in a language. In this case the perceived purpose of an abstraction based on a particular “view point”, leads to awkward discussions about those abstractions, their usefulness, and their semantics. I don’t know if there is way to fix these sorts of things (even when someone is just reading a comment thread), but maybe pointing it out can serve to highlight when it happens.