Saturday, 31 January 2026

When Physicists Talk About Reality: 7 Ontological Responsibility After Quantum Mechanics

This series began with a simple observation: quantum mechanics works extraordinarily well as physics, yet leaves many physicists dissatisfied. Over the course of these posts, that dissatisfaction has been traced not to predictive failure, mathematical inadequacy, or experimental anomaly, but to a persistent confusion about what quantum mechanics ought to provide.

The confusion concerns ontology.

In this final post, we draw the threads together and ask what follows once that confusion is brought into view.


1. What Quantum Mechanics Has Shown Us

Quantum mechanics has not revealed that reality is unknowable, incoherent, or absurd. Nor has it demonstrated that the world defies explanation. What it has done is expose the limits of a long-standing expectation: that a physical theory should deliver a single, closed, perspective-free account of what ultimately exists.

The theory’s formal success is unquestionable. Its ontological openness is not a flaw to be repaired, but a condition to be understood.


2. The Cost of Ontological Denial

Much of the turbulence in quantum foundations arises from a refusal to acknowledge when physics gives way to ontology. Ontological commitments are made implicitly, defended passionately, and denied rhetorically. Philosophy is disavowed even as it is practised.

The result is not rigour, but confusion. Debates persist without resolution because their real terms are never stated. Interpretations multiply because no criteria for ontological choice are recognised as such.

This is the price of ontological denial.


3. From Ontology-as-Discovery to Ontology-as-Responsibility

A central shift is now required. Ontology must no longer be treated as something waiting to be discovered by physics, as though the right experiment or formal trick would finally reveal what reality really is.

Instead, ontology should be understood as a practice of commitment. To adopt an ontology is to choose a way of organising explanation, intelligibility, and possibility in light of a theory’s formal structure.

Such choices are not arbitrary. They can be more or less coherent, more or less fruitful, more or less aligned with our explanatory aims. But they are not forced upon us by experiment.

This is what ontological responsibility consists in: recognising when a choice is being made, and taking responsibility for it.


4. What Responsibility Requires

Ontological responsibility demands several disciplines:

  • Explicitness: making commitments visible rather than hiding them behind appeals to “reality.”

  • Comparability: assessing ontological proposals in relation to one another, rather than as rivals for an imagined final truth.

  • Restraint: refusing to attribute to physics conclusions that it does not license.

  • Pluralism without confusion: accepting multiple ontological construals without mistaking plurality for failure.

None of this diminishes physics. It clarifies its scope and protects its authority.


5. After Metaphysical Closure

Letting go of the demand for metaphysical closure does not leave us with emptiness. It leaves us with a different kind of intellectual maturity.

Quantum mechanics teaches us how to operate reliably within a domain of phenomena while remaining agnostic about the ultimate furniture of the world. This is not a weakness. It is a disciplined achievement.

The mistake has been to treat this discipline as a defect.


6. A Reoriented Task

The task ahead is not to complete quantum mechanics with a final ontology. It is to cultivate better habits of thinking about what theories do, what they do not do, and how ontological commitments arise alongside them.

Physics advances by experiment and formal innovation. Ontology advances by reflection, articulation, and comparison. Confusing the two does justice to neither.


7. A Different Satisfaction

Quantum mechanics does not leave us without a picture of reality. It leaves us without the illusion that there must be only one.

The satisfaction it offers is not metaphysical closure, but conceptual clarity: a clear view of where physics ends, where ontology begins, and what responsibility consists in when the boundary is crossed.

If there is a lesson to be drawn from quantum mechanics, it is not that reality has slipped beyond our grasp.

It is that grasping for too much was never physics to begin with.

When Physicists Talk About Reality: 6 The Demand for Metaphysical Closure

If the proliferation of interpretations is not a failure of quantum mechanics, then a further question presses: why is this plurality experienced as a problem at all? Why does the openness left by the theory provoke unease rather than acceptance?

The answer lies not in physics, but in a powerful and largely unexamined expectation: the demand for metaphysical closure.


1. What Closure Promises

Metaphysical closure is the expectation that a successful physical theory should deliver a single, settled account of what ultimately exists and how it fits together. A closed theory leaves no remainder. It does not merely predict; it tells us what the world is.

This expectation is rarely stated explicitly. It operates instead as a background norm—a sense of what a theory ought to provide if it is truly satisfactory.

When quantum mechanics fails to meet this norm, dissatisfaction follows.


2. How the Expectation Was Formed

The demand for closure is historically conditioned. Classical physics did not merely succeed empirically; it also offered an intuitively graspable picture of the world. Entities had determinate properties. Dynamics unfolded in time. Explanation meant tracing effects back to causes.

Over time, this picture hardened into an expectation about theory as such. The extraordinary success of classical frameworks made their ontological form seem not contingent, but necessary.

Quantum mechanics disrupts this inheritance. Its formalism does not yield a single, literal world-picture. Instead of prompting reflection on the expectation, the disruption is often attributed to the theory’s alleged incompleteness.


3. Closure as Comfort

Metaphysical closure offers more than intellectual satisfaction. It offers reassurance. A closed picture of reality promises that the world is, at bottom, orderly, intelligible, and fully articulable.

Ontological openness, by contrast, is unsettling. It suggests that no single description exhausts what can be said, and that understanding may depend on perspective, context, or mode of engagement.

The discomfort provoked by quantum mechanics is therefore not only theoretical. It is existential.


4. Why Physics Cannot Supply Closure

No amount of additional physics can satisfy the demand for metaphysical closure in quantum mechanics. The openness is not due to missing variables or incomplete data. It arises from the structure of the theory itself and the limits of empirical constraint.

As long as interpretations remain empirically equivalent, physics has nothing further to say. To insist otherwise is to ask physics to resolve questions that lie beyond its jurisdiction.

The demand for closure thus places physics in an impossible position: it is faulted for failing to do what it cannot, in principle, do.


5. The Cost of the Demand

Clinging to the demand for closure distorts foundational discourse. It turns ontological openness into a defect. It fuels endless debate framed as a search for the “true” interpretation, despite the absence of criteria for resolution.

More subtly, it prevents recognition of what quantum mechanics already offers: a disciplined way of organising expectations and possibilities without pretending to exhaust reality itself.

The price of insisting on closure is perpetual dissatisfaction.


6. Letting Go Without Giving Up

Relinquishing the demand for metaphysical closure does not entail abandoning realism, explanation, or seriousness of intent. It entails recognising that no single ontological story is mandated by the physics.

This recognition opens space for a different posture: one that treats ontological commitments as choices to be made and justified, rather than conclusions forced upon us.

Such a posture does not diminish quantum mechanics. It allows the theory to be appreciated for what it actually achieves.


7. Toward a Different Kind of Satisfaction

The dissatisfaction surrounding quantum mechanics arises from a mismatch between what the theory provides and what we expect it to deliver. Adjusting the expectation resolves the tension without altering the physics.

Quantum mechanics does not promise metaphysical closure.

It offers something else: a powerful, precise, and reliable way of navigating phenomena, while leaving open the question of how reality is ultimately to be construed.

In the final post of this series, we will draw these threads together and argue that the true task ahead is not to complete quantum mechanics with a final ontology, but to cultivate a discipline of ontological responsibility—one that acknowledges its commitments rather than hiding them behind the authority of physics.

When Physicists Talk About Reality: 5 Why Interpretations Proliferate

One of the most common complaints about quantum mechanics is that it has too many interpretations. The literature is crowded with wavefunction realism, hidden variables, many worlds, collapses, relational accounts, and more. This plurality is often taken as evidence that something has gone wrong—that physics has failed to converge on a coherent picture of reality.

This diagnosis is mistaken.

The proliferation of interpretations is not a pathology of quantum mechanics. It is the predictable outcome of asking a theory to do ontological work while refusing to mark the ontological terms involved.


1. What an Interpretation Is

An interpretation of quantum mechanics does not add new predictions. It does not refine the formalism to improve empirical adequacy. It leaves the physics intact.

What it does instead is answer a different kind of question: What must the world be like for this formalism to make sense?

That question is not answered by experiment. It is answered by making ontological commitments explicit—commitments about what exists, what counts as fundamental, and how explanation is supposed to work.

Once this is recognised, the existence of multiple interpretations ceases to be puzzling.


2. Empirical Equivalence and Ontological Freedom

Interpretations proliferate precisely because they are empirically equivalent. The formal structure of quantum mechanics underdetermines ontology. Multiple, incompatible world-pictures can be layered onto the same predictive machinery without affecting its success.

This underdetermination is not a temporary gap awaiting further data. It is structural. If an experimental difference emerged, the matter would no longer be interpretive.

The expectation that physics should nevertheless deliver a unique ontology is not grounded in physics itself. It is a philosophical demand placed upon the theory.


3. The Error of Treating Pluralism as Failure

Foundational debates often treat the lack of interpretive consensus as a sign that quantum mechanics is incomplete or conceptually defective. But this treats ontological convergence as a criterion of physical adequacy.

There is no reason to accept that criterion.

Physics aims at empirical constraint, not metaphysical closure. Expecting a physical theory to settle ontological disputes is like faulting a map for failing to choose a destination.

The mistake lies not in the plurality of interpretations, but in the belief that plurality should not exist.


4. Interpretations as Construals

Seen clearly, interpretations are not rival discoveries about hidden facts of the world. They are different ways of organising the same formal resources into intelligible accounts.

Each interpretation highlights certain features and suppresses others. Each brings with it a distinctive sense of what counts as explanation, simplicity, or coherence. These choices are not dictated by experiment. They reflect prior commitments about reality.

Disagreement persists because these commitments are rarely compared directly. Instead, interpretations are presented as if they were forced by the theory itself.


5. Why the Debate Never Ends

As long as interpretations are treated as candidates for the true description of reality, foundational debates will remain interminable. No amount of calculation can resolve disagreements whose source is ontological preference rather than empirical fact.

This is why the literature expands without converging. New interpretations do not replace old ones; they join them. Each offers a different way of satisfying the same unmarked demand.

What looks like stagnation is simply the absence of criteria for resolution.


6. A Different Way to Read the Proliferation

If, instead, interpretations are recognised as ontological construals layered onto a shared physical core, the situation looks very different.

Pluralism becomes intelligible rather than embarrassing. The question shifts from Which interpretation is true? to What commitments does this interpretation make, and what does it enable or foreclose?

Interpretations can then be assessed comparatively, rather than competitively. Their virtues and costs can be articulated without pretending that physics itself demands a verdict.


7. Toward Ontological Hygiene

The real problem is not that there are many interpretations, but that they are discussed without acknowledging what kind of work they are doing.

Once the ontological status of interpretations is made explicit, much of the heat drains from the debate. The expectation of a final, theory-mandated picture of reality can be relinquished without loss.

Quantum mechanics does not fail because it admits multiple interpretations.

It succeeds while leaving ontology open.

In the next post, we will examine why this openness is so often experienced as intolerable—and why the demand for metaphysical closure exerts such a strong pull, even when physics itself provides no grounds for it.

When Physicists Talk About Reality: 4 Reality as an Unmarked Term

By this point in the series, a pattern should be visible. Quantum mechanics functions impeccably as physics. The unease surrounding it arises when physicists ask what it says about reality. Ontological commitments are made without being acknowledged as such. Philosophy is practised while being disavowed.

In this post, we turn to one of the most powerful—and least examined—sources of confusion in these debates: the concept of reality itself.

“Reality” functions as an unmarked term. It is invoked constantly, relied upon heavily, and almost never analysed.


1. The Authority of an Undefined Word

In discussions of quantum foundations, appeals to reality carry immediate rhetorical force. To say that an interpretation is “about reality,” or that another “fails to describe reality,” is to claim decisive ground. The term appears to settle arguments before they begin.

Yet despite this authority, “reality” is rarely defined. Its meaning is assumed to be obvious, shared, and stable.

This assumption is false.


2. Sliding Senses of Reality

A closer look reveals that physicists routinely slide between different senses of reality without marking the transition. Among them:

  • Reality as measurement outcomes: what is actually observed and recorded.

  • Reality as mathematical structure: the formal entities of the theory treated as what truly exists.

  • Reality as underlying mechanism: a hidden process or structure producing observable phenomena.

  • Reality as observer-independent substrate: what exists regardless of any interaction or description.

Each of these senses carries distinct ontological commitments. None is forced by experiment. Yet debates routinely proceed as if “reality” named a single, determinate target.

When disagreement arises, it is often unclear whether the parties are even talking about the same thing.


3. The Myth of the View from Nowhere

Underlying many appeals to reality is the belief that there must be a single, perspective-free description of the world—a view from nowhere that captures what is really the case.

Quantum mechanics unsettles this belief. Its formalism ties predictions to experimental contexts in ways that resist detachment from conditions of measurement. Rather than prompting reflection on the belief itself, this resistance is often interpreted as a shortcoming of the theory.

The expectation of a perspective-free reality is not an experimental demand. It is a philosophical inheritance.


4. Reality as a Silent Arbiter

Because “reality” is left unanalysed, it functions as a silent arbiter in foundational debates. Competing interpretations are judged not by empirical success—they all share that—but by how well they align with an implicit picture of what reality ought to be like.

This picture is rarely articulated. It is felt.

As a result, arguments take on a familiar form: one interpretation is dismissed as “unreal,” “extravagant,” or “unsatisfactory,” while another is praised for being “closer to reality.” These judgments masquerade as conclusions, but they are expressions of prior commitments.


5. When Reality Does the Work of Argument

Treating reality as an unmarked term allows it to do argumentative work without scrutiny. It becomes a substitute for justification.

Instead of asking which ontological commitments are being made, or whether they are coherent, debate stalls at the level of intuition. Preferences harden into positions. Disagreement persists because its source is never identified.

What appears as deep metaphysical conflict is often simply a clash between different, unacknowledged construals of reality.


6. Marking the Term

The remedy is not to abandon talk of reality, but to mark it—to recognise that any appeal to reality already presupposes a way of carving up the world.

Once this is acknowledged, several consequences follow:

  • Ontological claims can be compared rather than asserted.

  • Disagreements can be located rather than endlessly rehearsed.

  • The demand that quantum mechanics deliver a single, literal picture of reality can be seen for what it is: a philosophical requirement, not a physical one.

Reality ceases to function as an unquestioned standard and becomes instead a topic of inquiry.


7. Preparing the Next Cut

If reality is not a neutral backdrop but a concept deployed within particular perspectives, then the question shifts. The issue is no longer which interpretation captures reality as it really is, but how different construals organise possibility, explanation, and understanding.

In the next post, we will examine how this shift reframes the proliferation of interpretations themselves—and why their persistence is not a failure to converge on reality, but a predictable outcome of leaving “reality” unmarked in the first place.

Quantum mechanics does not confront us with an unknowable reality.

It confronts us with our habit of treating a concept as if it were a given.

When Physicists Talk About Reality: 3 The Myth of “Just Doing Physics”

One of the most persistent refrains in discussions of quantum foundations is the claim that one can, and should, be “just doing physics.” Ontological questions, we are told, are distractions. Philosophy is optional. The responsible physicist calculates, predicts, and refrains from metaphysical speculation.

At first glance, this posture appears modest, even virtuous. It presents itself as a refusal to overreach, a disciplined focus on what can be tested. But this appearance is deceptive.

The claim to be “just doing physics” is not a withdrawal from ontology.

It is a way of doing ontology without admitting it.


1. The Rhetoric of Restraint

The phrase “just doing physics” functions rhetorically rather than descriptively. It signals seriousness, rigour, and epistemic humility. It draws a boundary between respectable work and idle speculation.

But the boundary it draws is not between physics and non-physics.

It is between explicit philosophical reflection and implicit philosophical inheritance.

By refusing to articulate ontological commitments, the physicist does not avoid them. They are simply taken over wholesale from prior theoretical frameworks—usually classical physics—where they were once reasonable, productive, and rarely questioned.

Determinism, separability, locality, observer-independence: these are not experimental results. They are background assumptions that once aligned comfortably with successful theories. When quantum mechanics strains against them, the strain is experienced as conceptual crisis.


2. Calculation Is Not Neutral

Even the injunction to “calculate” presupposes a view about what a physical theory is for. Calculation is not a brute activity; it is a practice embedded in a conception of explanation, relevance, and adequacy.

To treat a theory as merely a predictive device is already to take a stand on its relationship to the world. Instrumentalism is not the absence of ontology. It is an ontological position—one that construes theories as tools rather than descriptions.

The refusal to acknowledge this does not make instrumentalism safer or more rigorous. It makes it dogmatic.


3. Inherited Metaphysics in a Lab Coat

Much of what passes for “common sense” in physics is simply the metaphysics of earlier theories, naturalised through long success. Classical mechanics trained physicists to expect a world composed of well-defined entities with determinate properties evolving in time according to fixed laws.

Quantum mechanics does not conform to this picture. But rather than questioning the picture, physicists often treat the theory as defective for failing to reproduce it.

This inversion is telling. It reveals that the standard of adequacy is not experimental success, but conformity to an inherited image of reality.

What appears as metaphysical caution is, in practice, metaphysical conservatism.


4. The Fantasy of Philosophical Abstinence

Physicists sometimes suggest that philosophy is dispensable because it cannot be tested experimentally. The implication is that only experimentally testable claims deserve serious attention.

But this criterion cannot itself be tested experimentally.

The rejection of philosophy is therefore not a scientific result. It is a philosophical stance—one that denies its own status in order to present itself as methodological necessity.

This denial has consequences. Without philosophical reflection, questions about meaning, explanation, and reality do not disappear. They reappear as intractable disputes, entrenched intuitions, and endless arguments that no data can resolve.


5. Why the Myth Persists

The myth of “just doing physics” persists because it is useful. It protects practitioners from having to justify their ontological preferences. It allows foundational discomfort to be framed as a technical problem awaiting the right formal solution.

It also flatters the self-image of physics as uniquely rigorous: the discipline that alone resists speculation and remains tethered to reality.

But this self-image comes at a cost. It obscures the fact that physics, like any theoretical enterprise, operates within a conceptual framework that shapes what counts as explanation and understanding.

Ignoring that framework does not make it less influential. It makes it less visible.


6. The Price of the Myth

When ontological commitments are denied, debates stagnate. Interpretations proliferate without criteria for comparison. Disagreements harden because their real basis is never addressed.

The result is a peculiar spectacle: intense argument in a domain where no possible observation could force a decision.

This is not a failure of physics.

It is the predictable outcome of refusing to acknowledge the kind of questions being asked.


7. Clearing the Ground

Abandoning the myth of “just doing physics” does not require physicists to become professional philosophers. It requires only that they recognise when they have crossed a boundary—and that they take responsibility for the commitments they make on the far side of it.

Making ontology explicit does not weaken physics. It clarifies it.

It allows quantum mechanics to stand as what it already is: a theory of extraordinary power and scope, whose conceptual difficulties arise not from what it fails to predict, but from what we expect a theory to say about reality itself.

In the next post, we will examine one of the deepest sources of these expectations: the unexamined role of “reality” itself as a silent arbiter in foundational debates—and why treating it as neutral is a mistake.

When Physicists Talk About Reality: 2 Where Physics Ends and Ontology Begins

If the dissatisfaction with quantum mechanics is not caused by its physics, then it must arise elsewhere. The task of this post is to identify, as cleanly as possible, the point at which physics ends—and something else takes over.

That point is rarely marked. Indeed, much of the confusion surrounding quantum foundations can be traced to the fact that the transition is not recognised as a transition at all.


1. What Physics Actually Does

Physics constructs formal systems constrained by empirical adequacy. A physical theory proposes a mathematical structure, specifies how that structure connects to experimental procedures, and succeeds to the extent that its predictions align with observed outcomes.

Nothing in this description requires the theory to answer questions about what ultimately exists. Physics is answerable to experiments, not to metaphysical intuitions. Its authority extends precisely as far as empirical constraint extends—and no further.

Quantum mechanics fulfils this mandate with exceptional success. It tells us how to calculate probabilities for measurement outcomes under specified conditions. It does this reliably, repeatedly, and with astonishing precision.

This is the domain of physics proper.


2. Questions Physics Cannot Answer

Alongside this formal success, a different set of questions is routinely asked:

  • What is the wavefunction?

  • Does it represent a physical entity, information, or something else?

  • What really happens during measurement?

  • Is the universe fundamentally deterministic beneath appearances?

These questions have a distinctive feature: no experiment can decide between their competing answers.

Interpretations of quantum mechanics are constructed precisely to preserve empirical equivalence. If an experimental difference were available, the matter would cease to be interpretive and become physical. The fact that it does not is decisive.

When physicists argue about these matters, they are no longer doing physics.

They are doing ontology.


3. Ontology Without Admission

Ontology concerns what kinds of things there are, what counts as fundamental, and what sorts of explanations are acceptable. It does not proceed by experiment, because it is not about predicting outcomes. It proceeds by making commitments explicit and assessing their coherence, scope, and consequences.

Physicists often resist this description. They insist that they are merely extending physics, or making physics more complete. But the resistance itself is revealing.

The difficulty is not that ontology is being done. It is that it is being done without acknowledgement.

As a result, ontological commitments are treated as if they were forced by the theory, when in fact they are imposed upon it. Preferences for determinism, locality, realism, or observer-independence are smuggled in as if they were empirical requirements rather than philosophical expectations inherited from earlier frameworks.


4. Reality as a Demand Placed on Theory

A striking feature of foundational debates is the demand that quantum mechanics deliver a single, literal account of reality itself. The theory is treated as though it has failed unless it provides a clear answer to the question “what is really happening?”

But this demand is not itself grounded in physics.

It is grounded in a prior picture of what a satisfactory theory ought to do: namely, to mirror reality in a transparent and unambiguous way. That picture is rarely defended. It is assumed.

When quantum mechanics fails to meet this expectation, the failure is attributed to the theory rather than to the expectation.


5. The Illusion of a Neutral Standpoint

Much of the confusion turns on the notion of “reality” as an unproblematic reference point. Reality is treated as a single, determinate structure waiting to be described, rather than as something always encountered under a description, within a perspective.

Physicists slide between different senses of reality without noticing the shift: reality as measurement outcomes, reality as mathematical structure, reality as underlying mechanism, reality as observer-independent substrate. Each slide introduces a new commitment, but none are marked as such.

The result is a proliferation of disputes that cannot be resolved because they are not disagreements about facts, but about what counts as a satisfactory way of making sense of facts at all.


6. Why the Boundary Matters

Failing to distinguish physics from ontology does not make one more rigorous. It makes one less precise.

When ontological commitments are left implicit, they cannot be examined, compared, or revised. They harden into dogma while presenting themselves as methodological restraint. Debates become interminable because their terms are never clarified.

Recognising where physics ends does not diminish physics. It protects it.

It allows quantum mechanics to be acknowledged for what it is—a spectacularly successful physical theory—without burdening it with demands it was never designed to meet.


7. Looking Ahead

In the next post, we will turn to a particular self-image that sustains this confusion: the idea that one can be “just doing physics” while avoiding philosophy altogether. We will examine how this posture arises, what it conceals, and why it has proven so resilient in the culture of physics.

The boundary between physics and ontology is not a wall.

But it is a distinction—and failing to draw it has consequences.

When Physicists Talk About Reality: 1 Quantum Mechanics Works. So Why Are Physicists Unhappy?

Quantum mechanics is one of the most successful scientific theories ever constructed. Its empirical adequacy is extraordinary, its predictive power unmatched, and its technological consequences—semiconductors, lasers, MRI, atomic clocks—are so deeply woven into contemporary life that the theory has become infrastructural. By any ordinary scientific standard, it is a triumph.

And yet, physicists remain dissatisfied with it.

This dissatisfaction is not a marginal sentiment, nor a crankish minority position. It is voiced by Nobel laureates and graduate students alike, and it recurs with remarkable persistence across generations. Quantum mechanics, we are told, is incomplete, unsatisfactory, conceptually troubling, or in need of interpretation. It works—but something about it is said to fail to tell us what is really going on.

This series begins from a simple observation: that dissatisfaction does not arise from the physics.

It arises from something else entirely.


1. Success Without Satisfaction

There is no serious dispute about the empirical success of quantum mechanics. Competing theories have not outperformed it. No experiment has forced its abandonment. On the contrary, its formal apparatus has survived every empirical challenge placed before it, often with astonishing precision.

What troubles physicists, then, cannot be its predictive failures—because there are none. Nor can it be internal inconsistency in the mathematical formalism—because the formalism is exceptionally robust.

The unease appears only when a different question is asked:

But what does quantum mechanics say about reality?

This question marks a decisive shift. It is the moment at which physics quietly stops, and something else begins.


2. From Formalism to World-Picture

Quantum mechanics, as a physical theory, is a formal system constrained by empirical adequacy. It provides rules for generating probabilities of outcomes under specified experimental conditions. It tells us what to expect when certain procedures are carried out, and it does so with extraordinary reliability.

But nowhere in this description does the theory demand that it provide a picture of reality itself.

The move from formal success to ontological dissatisfaction occurs only when physicists begin to treat the theory as if it ought to answer questions of the following kind:

  • What entities really exist?

  • Are there particles, waves, fields, branches, or hidden variables?

  • Is the world fundamentally deterministic or indeterministic?

  • Does the universe split, collapse, or evolve unitarily?

These are not questions that can be settled by experiment—not because experiments are difficult or expensive, but because no conceivable experiment distinguishes the competing answers. Interpretations of quantum mechanics differ precisely in ways that make no empirical difference.

At this point, physics has exhausted its authority.

What remains is philosophy.


3. The Unacknowledged Transition

Curiously, this transition is almost never acknowledged as such. Physicists routinely insist that they are just doing physics, even while arguing passionately about the nature of reality, the meaning of existence, or the structure of the universe at its most fundamental level.

This insistence is often accompanied by a professed contempt for philosophy, typically on the grounds that philosophy does not test its claims experimentally. But this objection misses its target entirely.

Philosophy is not an experimental discipline. It does not compete with physics by proposing rival predictions. Its task is different: to make explicit the conceptual commitments that are already in play, whether they are acknowledged or not.

When physicists debate the reality of wavefunctions, the existence of many worlds, or the status of observers, they are not conducting experiments. They are articulating—often implicitly—ontological commitments. The fact that these commitments are untested does not make them optional; it merely makes them invisible.

The irony is sharp: physicists reject philosophy for failing to do what physics does, while unknowingly relying on philosophical assumptions that physics itself cannot test.


4. “Shut Up and Calculate”

The slogan “shut up and calculate” is sometimes offered as a way out of this predicament. If ontological questions are troubling, the suggestion goes, perhaps they should simply be ignored.

But this posture does not eliminate ontology. It merely drives it underground.

Even the decision to treat quantum mechanics as a mere calculating device presupposes a view about what kinds of questions are legitimate, what counts as explanation, and what it means for a theory to be about the world at all. These are not physical commitments; they are philosophical ones.

Refusing to articulate them does not make them disappear. It ensures only that they remain unexamined, inherited, and resistant to critique.


5. The Real Source of the Trouble

The persistent dissatisfaction with quantum mechanics is therefore not a signal that the theory has failed. It is a signal that physicists are uneasy with the ontological expectations they bring to it.

Quantum mechanics does not violate experimental constraints. It violates habits of thought formed under earlier physical theories—habits that smuggle in assumptions about determinism, separability, and observer-independence without acknowledging them as assumptions.

What is experienced as a crisis in quantum foundations is, more accurately, a crisis of unacknowledged philosophy.

Quantum mechanics works. What troubles us is not the theory, but the belief that a physical theory must also deliver a single, unambiguous picture of reality itself.


6. Where This Series Is Going

The posts that follow will examine this situation more closely: how physicists come to make ontological claims without recognising them as such; how the concept of “reality” functions as an unmarked term in foundational debates; and why contempt for philosophy often results in particularly poor metaphysics.

The aim is not to offer yet another interpretation of quantum mechanics. It is to clarify what kind of dissatisfaction is actually at work—and why no amount of new physics will resolve a problem that is not, at bottom, a physical one.

Quantum mechanics does not fail to describe reality.

It exposes our confusion about what we think “reality” must be.

What Becomes Possible: 6 Seeing in Action: A Methodological Reflection

Reflecting on how these relational cuts operate, and why they keep producing insight.


1. The pattern of the series

Across the applied series, we have examined:

  1. Intelligence without generality

  2. Coordination without control

  3. Ethics without foundations

  4. Learning without transfer

  5. Failure without error

A careful reader may notice the common move: each post performs a relational cut—a shift from a representational assumption to a relational perspective—and then observes the consequences. What once required cores, agents, universal principles, or error metrics is now understood as emergent from relational patterns.

This is not a mere critique. It is a consistent methodological posture.


2. Recognising the cut

A relational cut is a precise, controlled gesture:

  • Identify a foundational assumption (things, cores, agents, transferable knowledge, error as deviation)

  • Step back and consider what must be assumed for that framing to make sense

  • Re-frame the domain relationally, letting patterns, interactions, and re‑construal take explanatory weight

Notice that this is not replacing one dogma with another. The method does not assert universal truth. It observes consequences and opens new avenues of engagement.


3. Why it works repeatedly

Three features make this method generative:

  1. Systematic precision: each cut isolates one hidden assumption and examines it rigorously.

  2. Local explanatory power: the post-cut perspective explains phenomena that were puzzling or paradoxical under the old framing.

  3. Iterative amplifiability: the method can be applied to any domain where representational assumptions obscure relational dynamics.

Each post is thus a small experiment in seeing differently. The success of one cut is independent of preconceived outcomes; it is validated by explanatory clarity and new possibilities.


4. How to use this approach

A reader can apply this methodology as follows:

  1. Identify the domain and its taken-for-granted assumptions.

  2. Ask: which explanatory primitives are being imported uncritically? (agents, cores, universal laws, transferable objects, errors)

  3. Perform a relational cut: suspend the assumption and trace patterns, interactions, and situational dependencies.

  4. Observe the consequences: what phenomena are explained? what practices become visible? what new questions emerge?

This is a forensic, constructive, and generative method. It does not promise answers in the conventional sense but cultivates insight that is otherwise inaccessible.


5. Beyond the series

The methodological reflection is a lens for all subsequent inquiry. Once mastered, it allows one to approach AI, science, social systems, ethics, pedagogy, and innovation with the same clarity and generativity. It transforms problems that seemed intractable into questions of pattern, alignment, and relational adequacy.

In short, this is not a method for solving problems in the traditional sense. It is a way of seeing in action, a disciplined posture that preserves explanatory power while discarding the need for illusory foundations.


With this, the applied series reaches a natural close: a demonstration that relational insight is not domain-specific, but a transferable posture of inquiry itself.

What Becomes Possible: 5 Failure Without Error

What becomes possible when we stop treating mistakes as deviations from some underlying truth.


1. The conventional view of error

Science, engineering, and inquiry are often framed around the concept of error. A hypothesis fails, an experiment goes wrong, a design malfunctions, and we label it as a mistake. Implicitly, we assume that there is a correct path, a truth to be uncovered, or a proper method to follow. Failure is measured against this imagined benchmark.

But this framing has hidden costs. It encourages the search for a missing factor, a misstep, or a responsible agent. It can obscure the very dynamics that actually produce insight, adaptation, and robustness.


2. Error as a representational hangover

The idea that failure indicates deviation from truth comes from a representational mindset: the world is assumed to exist independently, and knowledge is assumed to be a map of that world. Any misalignment between the map and reality is treated as an error.

On this view, the value of an inquiry is often judged by whether it gets closer to an ideal representation rather than whether it produces functional, generative, or stabilising outcomes in context.


3. Failure as relational information

From a relational perspective, what we call “error” is better understood as information about alignment between actions, constraints, and context. Failures are signals: they tell us where patterns break, where assumptions do not hold, and where re‑construal is needed.

Key principles:

  1. Breakdown is informative: mismatches reveal relational structure.

  2. Patterns emerge iteratively: repeated engagement allows refinement without reference to an ideal blueprint.

  3. Robustness arises relationally: a system that survives misalignment is one whose interactions adapt and redistribute constraints effectively.


4. The replication crisis and framing

Recent debates in science, such as the replication crisis, illustrate this principle. Failures to replicate are often interpreted as methodological defects or researcher error. But from a relational view, replication is a sensitive relational achievement, dependent on context, procedural alignment, and construal ecology.

Failures reveal the boundaries of stability rather than violations of a universal truth. They provide precise guidance about where adjustments are needed, not evidence of incompetence or flawed theory.


5. Examples in practice

  • Engineering: stress tests often reveal failure points that are not mistakes but essential data for redesign.

  • Biology: mutations and misfires are not errors in a perfect plan; they are part of the exploratory dynamics that enable adaptation.

  • Scientific inquiry: unexpected results often generate new frameworks, hypotheses, or methodologies.

In each case, treating failure as informative rather than erroneous produces insight and robustness.


6. Implications for practice

Adopting a failure-without-error perspective allows us to:

  • Analyse breakdowns as diagnostic information rather than moral or methodological faults

  • Design systems, experiments, and organisations that learn from misalignment rather than punishing it

  • Understand robustness and resilience as emergent from relational patterns, not imposed from above

  • Encourage exploration, experimentation, and adaptation without fear of deviation


7. Reframing inquiry

Once failure is no longer tied to error, the entire landscape of inquiry changes:

  • Questions shift from Did we do it right? to What patterns are revealed by this misalignment?

  • Success is not convergence to a pre-existing truth but the stabilisation of patterns that function effectively within their construal ecology.

  • Knowledge, like competence, is not transported; it is co‑individuated in practice.


8. Closing the applied arc

Failure without error brings the applied series full circle. Intelligence, coordination, learning, and responsibility were all reframed as relational achievements. Here, inquiry itself is reframed in the same way.

The most powerful insight is subtle: nothing foundational is needed. What seemed to require cores, agents, or universal benchmarks can be understood entirely in terms of relational patterns, constraints, and re‑construal.

The series concludes not with a doctrine, but with a posture: a way of seeing, diagnosing, and engaging that works wherever explanation feels stuck, wherever practice is unfolding, and wherever we wish to understand the dynamics of complexity without illusions of centralised mastery or ultimate error.

What Becomes Possible: 4 Responsibility Without Agency

What becomes possible when we stop locating responsibility in a central agent or inner core.


1. The default assumption

Ethical discourse, law, and everyday morality presuppose that responsibility requires an agent with intention, awareness, and control. When outcomes go wrong, the first questions are usually:

  • Who is responsible?

  • Did they know what they were doing?

  • Could they have acted differently?

This framework is so entrenched that we rarely notice it. It underlies blame, praise, liability, and credit.

Yet, across organisations, social systems, and even personal interactions, this model often fails to explain the outcomes we observe.


2. Agency as a representational hangover

Locating responsibility in a discrete agent is a consequence of a representational ontology: agents are treated as independent centres, intentions as internal representations, and actions as outputs of plans.

From this perspective, moral evaluation becomes a matter of comparing internal representations to external events. Misalignment is failure; alignment is virtue.

But this view obscures how responsibility actually functions in practice. Systems, teams, and networks often achieve accountability and responsiveness without any single agent holding full control or awareness.


3. Responsibility as relational pattern

On a relational ontology, responsibility is distributed and emergent. It arises from patterns of interaction, mutual sensitivity, and shared constraints.

Three features illustrate this:

  1. Distributed awareness: no one individual knows everything, but awareness emerges through relational signalling.

  2. Constraint responsiveness: actions are constrained by the needs, expectations, and feedback of others.

  3. Iterative adjustment: responsibility is enacted through continuous adaptation, not one-time decisions.

These features suffice to produce accountable, responsive behaviour even when no single agent is in control.


4. Why the traditional model misleads

Blaming or crediting individuals often obscures the real dynamics. Consider:

  • Workplace failures: often attributed to managerial oversight, but deeper analysis reveals misalignments in communication, resources, and incentives.

  • Collaborative projects: success rarely hinges on a single person; it emerges from repeated coordination and relational sensitivity.

  • Legal responsibility: courts construct narratives around individuals, but the causal reality is distributed across actions, context, and consequences.

The traditional model makes responsibility appear as a discrete possession rather than a relational achievement.


5. Examples in practice

  • Software development: Bugs are rarely the fault of one programmer. They arise from interactions among code, tools, and multiple developers. Accountability is maintained through code review, automated tests, and collaborative protocols.

  • Healthcare: Patient outcomes depend on doctors, nurses, protocols, and systems. Responsibility is distributed across these interactions rather than located in a single practitioner.

  • Traffic systems: Accidents are seldom the fault of a single driver. Responsibility is emergent from rules, signals, vehicle interactions, and shared expectations.

In all cases, responsibility works without a single controlling agent.


6. Ethical implication

This perspective does not absolve anyone of action. On the contrary, it increases ethical demand by showing that outcomes are co‑individuated. Accountability is a property of patterns and relationships, not inner cores.

We can intervene, adjust, and repair systems without ever imagining that responsibility resides in a detached central mind. Ethics becomes a matter of relational calibration rather than internal judgement.


7. What becomes possible

Reframing responsibility allows us to:

  • Analyse failures and successes with precision, seeing relational sources of breakdown

  • Design institutions and practices that distribute responsibility appropriately

  • Collaborate effectively without expecting perfect central oversight

  • Understand moral demand as embedded in action and interaction rather than abstracted to inner agents

Responsibility is not lost when agency is de-emphasised; it is redistributed and rendered more generative.

What Becomes Possible: 3 Learning Without Transfer

What becomes possible when we stop imagining that skills, knowledge, or expertise are portable objects.


1. The conventional expectation

Educational theory, cognitive science, and organisational training often assume that learning can be stored and moved from one context to another. Skills are acquired, knowledge is accumulated, and expertise is seen as a transferable asset.

From this assumption arises the familiar question: Does this training or experience transfer? Failure to transfer is treated as a shortcoming of the learner, the instruction, or both.

But what if this expectation itself is misframed?


2. Transfer as a representational hangover

The traditional view presumes that learning is a thing inside the mind: a representation, schema, or memory structure. If these internal structures are stable and general enough, they should apply across contexts. If not, learning appears partial or incomplete.

This model mirrors the same representational logic we saw in the intelligence series. Once learning is treated as relational rather than representational, the need for transfer dissolves.


3. Learning as re‑construal

On a relational ontology, learning is a pattern of re‑construal that emerges in activity:

  1. Knowledge is stabilised in specific interactions, not abstracted as a standalone object.

  2. Skills emerge as coordination patterns between the learner, tools, tasks, and environment.

  3. Expertise is the capacity to re‑align these patterns under new constraints.

From this perspective, apparent “transfer” is not the movement of a discrete asset. It is the successful re‑actualisation of relational patterns in a new situation. Failure is simply the mismatch between the old patterns and the new construal ecology.


4. Examples in practice

  • Medical training: A surgeon trained in one hospital may excel in similar contexts but struggle in a different hospital layout or with a different team. The skill did not disappear; it must adapt to new relational configurations.

  • Software engineering: Knowing a programming language does not automatically mean one can navigate a new codebase. Expertise arises from understanding the patterns of interaction within that code, the team, and the problem domain.

  • Musical performance: Learning a piece of music in one ensemble does not guarantee successful performance in another. The coordination between instruments, acoustics, and group dynamics must be reconstructed.

In each case, the issue is not insufficient learning; it is the relational specificity of enactment.


5. Implications for teaching and training

Reframing learning relationally changes pedagogical priorities:

  • Focus on situational adaptability rather than content transfer.

  • Teach the principles of re‑construal instead of decontextualised facts.

  • Provide varied environments for practice to strengthen relational patterns.

  • Value diagnostic failures as information about context‑dependent alignment rather than deficiencies.

The goal shifts from creating universal competence to cultivating responsiveness and alignment across situations.


6. Expertise without portability

This perspective also reframes expertise. Experts are not repositories of generalisable knowledge. They are skilled in relational adaptation.

Their value lies not in what they possess internally, but in what they can stabilise, adjust, and co‑individuate within ongoing situations. Their apparent portability is an emergent effect of similar construal ecologies, not a property of the expert alone.


7. What becomes possible

Letting go of transfer opens several possibilities:

  • We can design learning environments that emphasise relational agility rather than static content.

  • We can evaluate competence by situational effectiveness rather than hypothetical generalisation.

  • We can stop treating brittleness as failure and start using it as a diagnostic tool.

  • We can collaborate with other experts, human or artificial, without expecting shared internal representations.

In short, learning is not a portable object to be transmitted. It is a relational achievement that becomes visible in action.


8. Looking forward

Understanding learning without transfer sets the stage for the next move: Responsibility Without Agency. Here, we will explore how ethical and practical accountability arises not from inner agents or controlling selves, but from relational patterns and stabilised interaction.

The series continues its quiet demonstration: that what seemed to require foundational primitives can, in fact, be accomplished through relational structure alone.

What Becomes Possible: 2 Coordination Without Control

What becomes possible when we stop imagining that complex systems are held together by controlling agents.


1. The default story

Organisations, institutions, and social systems are almost always described as hierarchies of control.

There are managers, leaders, executives, or central committees; they issue instructions; the rest of the system is meant to follow. Failures are explained as mismanagement, poor oversight, or human error. Success is explained as competent governance.

The story is intuitive because it mirrors our everyday experience of responsibility. It feels true because we naturally treat agency as the source of action.

Yet, when this story is applied systematically, it produces predictable puzzles: why do well-led organisations fail? Why do “flat” networks sometimes outperform hierarchical ones? Why is leadership often less predictive than we think?


2. Control as a representational hangover

The idea that systems require a central controlling agent is inherited from a representational model. Control implies that there is an internal map of the system, which the agent consults to issue commands. Deviations from the plan are errors, and alignment is evidence of skill.

But consider: in most systems, no single agent actually holds such a map. Coordinated activity emerges even when participants have only partial knowledge, incomplete incentives, or inconsistent goals.

The implication is simple but profound: the perceived need for control is an artefact of expecting the wrong explanatory primitives.


3. Coordination as relational process

On a relational ontology, coordination is a property of interaction, not of controllers. It emerges from patterns of mutual adjustment, signalling, and response.

Three principles illustrate this:

  1. Distributed sensing: participants detect conditions locally and respond to them.

  2. Patterned adjustment: repeated interactions produce stable regularities without central instruction.

  3. Constraint propagation: feedback loops transmit consequences of actions, aligning behaviour indirectly.

These are sufficient to stabilise complex activity without anyone needing to hold the whole system in mind.


4. Why leaders feel necessary

Leadership often appears indispensable because humans are pattern-seeking and outcome-sensitive.

When coordination succeeds, we credit leaders. When it fails, we blame them. Both are retrospective attributions, not explanatory mechanisms.

The relational perspective does not deny that leadership exists or matters. It reframes it: leadership is an emergent feature of construals, influence, and alignment, not the lever that holds the system together from above.


5. Examples in practice

  • Open-source software communities: code is produced and refined by distributed contributors; release management is often procedural rather than controlling; success emerges from conventions, feedback, and iterative practices.

  • Market systems: pricing, production, and innovation occur without a central mind; order arises from interaction patterns, constraints, and incentives.

  • Biological systems: flocks, swarms, and neural networks coordinate without top-down control; complex behaviour is a property of relational dynamics.

In each case, looking for a controlling agent explains very little. Observing relational patterns explains everything.


6. What becomes possible when control is relinquished

Relinquishing the expectation of control changes the questions we ask and the interventions we attempt:

  • From: Who is in charge, and did they fail?

  • To: Which patterns of interaction maintain alignment, and where do they break?

This perspective makes apparent strategies that are invisible under a control-oriented model:

  • Adjusting feedback loops instead of issuing commands

  • Designing protocols rather than issuing orders

  • Facilitating alignment without coercion


7. The subtle power of the relational view

Coordination without control does not mean chaos. It does not mean that anyone can do anything without consequences. Constraints, history, and mutual adjustments ensure stability. What changes is where explanatory weight lies.

Instead of searching for a “missing leader,” we map relations, dependencies, and sensitivities. Instead of expecting uniform adherence, we design for robustness and adaptability. Instead of blaming individuals, we learn from breakdowns in patterns.

In short, relinquishing control opens up a more precise, more generative way of working with complex systems.


8. Next steps

Understanding coordination without control prepares the ground for questions about learning, ethics, and resilience in systems.

The next post will explore Learning Without Transfer, showing how skills, knowledge, and expertise propagate not by transmitting a core, but by stabilising patterns of re‑construal.

What Becomes Possible: 1 Intelligence Without Generality

What becomes possible when we stop asking for minds that work everywhere.


1. The demand for generality

Few phrases have done more quiet damage to our thinking about intelligence than general intelligence. The phrase carries an apparently modest ambition—competence across domains—but smuggles in a far stronger claim: that intelligence must be something that transcends situations rather than something that emerges within them.

The demand is so familiar that it rarely announces itself. We hear it whenever intelligence is assessed by its ability to transfer, abstract, or operate “out of context.” We see it in anxieties about artificial intelligence (“it only works in narrow domains”), in educational theory (“will this skill generalise?”), and in cognitive science (“what is the underlying capacity?”).

The shared assumption is simple and rarely examined:

If intelligence is real, it must be portable.

This post argues that this assumption is mistaken—not because intelligence is weak, but because it has been framed in the wrong ontological register.


2. Generality as a representational hangover

The insistence on generality belongs to a representational picture of mind.

On that picture:

  • Intelligence is a thing or capacity inside a system

  • Situations are external inputs

  • Successful action is the application of internal representations to external cases

From here, generality looks like a natural benchmark. If intelligence consists in representations of the world, then better intelligence should involve representations that are more abstract, more context-free, and more widely applicable.

But once the representational picture loosens its grip, the benchmark collapses with it.

If intelligence is not the manipulation of representations but the stabilisation of successful action within a construal, then there is no privileged standpoint from which “generality” could even be measured.

What would it mean to be intelligent everywhere when there is no everywhere—only differently structured situations?


3. Intelligence as situated adequacy

On a relational ontology, intelligence is not a substance, capacity, or faculty. It is a pattern of adequacy that emerges when a system and a situation co‑individuate successfully.

Three consequences follow immediately.

First, intelligence is inseparable from the situation that elicits it. There is no residue left over once the situation is removed.

Second, competence does not transfer; it reforms. What looks like transfer is the successful re‑actualisation of a pattern under a new construal, not the deployment of a context‑free asset.

Third, failure to generalise is not a defect. It is the expected outcome when the conditions that supported adequacy are no longer present.

From this perspective, the question “Is this intelligence general?” becomes not merely difficult, but ill‑posed. It asks for a property that no longer plays any explanatory role.


4. Artificial intelligence and the myth of the missing core

Large language models have made the problem visible in an unusually sharp form.

These systems demonstrate extraordinary competence across a vast range of linguistic situations while simultaneously failing in ways that appear trivial or absurd. The standard diagnosis is familiar: they lack true understanding, world models, grounding, or general intelligence.

But notice what this diagnosis presupposes.

It presupposes that there ought to be a single, unifying capacity underwriting all performances—a core that explains success and whose absence explains failure.

From a relational perspective, no such core is missing. None was ever required.

What LLMs exhibit is not partial intelligence striving toward generality, but highly localised adequacy at scale. Their competence is real, not simulated; situated, not universal; robust within particular construal ecologies and brittle outside them.

This is not a shortcoming to be repaired by adding more layers of abstraction. It is a feature of intelligence understood correctly.


5. Why “narrow” intelligence is not narrow

The term narrow intelligence suggests confinement. But what it actually names is specificity—the alignment between a system’s capacities and the structure of the situations it encounters.

Human expertise displays the same profile.

A physicist who cannot balance a company budget is not thereby less intelligent. A chess grandmaster who fails at small talk has not revealed a cognitive deficit. These are not exceptions to intelligence; they are its normal expression.

The myth lies in thinking that there must be something behind these competences that would unify them if only it were sufficiently developed.

What unifies them instead is the observer’s abstraction, not an internal mechanism.


6. What becomes possible when we let generality go

Once the demand for generality is released, several things become newly visible.

We can evaluate systems—human or artificial—by the stability and adaptability of their situated performance, rather than by imaginary benchmarks of universality.

We can design collaborations that respect complementary intelligences instead of chasing mythical replacements.

We can stop treating brittleness as failure and begin treating it as diagnostic information about the limits of a construal.

Most importantly, we can ask better questions.

Not: Is this intelligence general?

But:

  • Under what construals does this system become adequate?

  • What breaks when those construals shift?

  • How can new alignments be engineered rather than demanded?

These are not weaker questions. They are sharper ones.


7. Intelligence, properly deflated

To abandon generality is not to diminish intelligence. It is to locate it.

Intelligence does not hover above situations, waiting to be applied. It takes form with them. It does not generalise; it re‑aligns. It does not fail when it breaks; it tells us something precise about the world it was built to meet.

Seen this way, the recent successes of artificial intelligence are not the first steps toward minds without limits.

They are demonstrations—clearer than any philosophical argument—that intelligence has never needed generality to begin with.


Next: Coordination Without Control

Applied Construals: 6 Why This Keeps Working

Across the previous posts, a consistent pattern has repeated.

Each time, a familiar domain was approached — experience, action, meaning, selfhood, reality — and each time a quiet shift in explanatory priority dissolved problems that normally feel intractable. No hidden entities were added. No paradoxes were heroically resolved. The problems simply stopped gripping.

This final post steps back to ask why.

Not to introduce a new doctrine, and not to defend a worldview, but to reflect on the methodological shape of what has been happening.


No New Answers

One striking feature of the series is that it does not culminate in answers to the questions it unsettles.

“What is experience really?”
“What causes action?”
“What grounds meaning?”
“What am I?”
“What is reality?”

These questions are not answered. They are re‑situated.

The reason this works is that many philosophical problems are not unsolved because they are difficult, but because they are posed at the wrong level of analysis. Once the level shifts, the demand for an answer evaporates.


Changing the Unit of Analysis

The most important move throughout the series has been a change in what counts as basic.

Instead of starting with things, agents, representations, selves, or absolute viewpoints, the analysis begins with relations, processes, and patterns of coordination. What looked foundational is treated as an outcome; what looked secondary becomes primary.

This is not an argumentative trick. It is a re‑orientation of attention.

When the unit of analysis changes, the space of possible explanations changes with it. Problems that depended on the old unit no longer have anywhere to attach.


Dissolution Rather Than Refutation

Another recurring feature is the absence of refutation.

At no point has the series attempted to prove that objects do not exist, that agents are illusions, or that reality is constructed. Such claims would merely reproduce the very grammar being questioned.

Instead, each post showed that the explanatory work attributed to these notions can be done without treating them as primitive.

Dissolution works where refutation fails because it removes the need for a winner.


Staying Inside Practice

A further reason the approach keeps working is that it never steps outside practice in order to explain practice.

Experience is examined from within experience. Action from within action. Meaning from within use. Reality from within coordination and constraint.

This avoids a familiar philosophical temptation: to imagine a theoretical vantage point that somehow escapes the conditions it seeks to describe. No such escape is required.

The analysis remains immanent throughout.


Constraint Without Metaphysics

The approach also avoids the opposite temptation: treating everything as unconstrained.

Because relations and patterns are always embedded in material, social, and historical conditions, there is constant pushback. Not everything works. Not every construal holds. Failure is informative.

This is why the account supports realism without appealing to metaphysical independence, and normativity without invoking external standards.

Constraint is encountered, not imposed.


Why It Scales

Perhaps the most important reason this way of seeing keeps working is that it scales across domains.

The same shift in priority reorganises perception, action, language, selfhood, science, and social life. This is not because one theory is being forced everywhere, but because the same mistaken assumption — that explanation must begin with things — has been quietly governing them all.

Once that assumption is relaxed, many domains reorganise themselves in parallel.


What This Is — and Is Not

It may help to be explicit.

This is not a metaphysical system offering a final inventory of what exists.
It is not a theory competing with others for representational accuracy.
It is not a vocabulary to be adopted in place of existing ones.

It is a way of cutting.

A way of deciding what to treat as basic, what to treat as derivative, and where to look when familiar explanations stall.


An Ongoing Use

If the posts in this series have been effective, it is not because they have convinced the reader of a position.

It is because they have changed what can be noticed.

Once that change occurs, the approach no longer belongs to the series or to the blog. It becomes something that can be used — tested, stressed, refined — wherever explanation feels stuck.

That is why this keeps working.

Not because it answers the hardest questions, but because it quietly removes the need to keep asking them in the same way.

Applied Construals: 5 Reality Without a View from Nowhere

By this point in the series, several familiar anchors have been quietly re‑ordered.

Experience no longer begins with objects. Action no longer issues from agents. Meaning no longer depends on representation. The self no longer requires a core.

At this stage, a final concern often surfaces — sometimes explicitly, sometimes only as a lingering unease:

If all of this is so, what becomes of reality itself?

This worry usually takes a particular form. If there are no things, no agents, no representations, and no inner cores, then surely reality must be slipping away into perspective, construction, or mere appearance.

This post addresses that worry by questioning one last assumption: that reality requires a view from nowhere.


Why the View from Nowhere Feels Necessary

The idea of a view from nowhere promises neutrality.

It offers a picture of the world as it is independently of any perspective, interest, or situation. From this imagined vantage point, disagreements can be adjudicated, appearances corrected, and truth secured.

Science is often invoked here, not because scientists actually occupy such a view, but because science is taken to aim at it.

The trouble is that the view from nowhere is not merely unattainable. It is incoherent.


Perspectives Are Not Distortions

A perspective is often treated as a limitation — a partial or biased access to a world that is fully formed elsewhere.

But consider what a perspective actually does. It organises relevance. It brings some distinctions into focus and lets others recede. It enables coordinated action, communication, and correction.

Without perspective, nothing would show up as anything at all.

The mistake is to treat perspective as a veil placed over reality, rather than as one of the ways reality becomes structured.


Constraint Without Independence

At this point, a familiar accusation arises: relativism.

If reality depends on construal, does anything constrain what can be said or done? Are all perspectives equally valid?

The answer is no — and the reason is simple. Construal is not free invention. It is constrained by material conditions, by shared practices, by histories of coordination, and by the consequences of action.

A bridge either supports weight or it does not. A prediction either holds up under use or it does not. A description either enables effective coordination or it does not.

These constraints do not require a world standing entirely apart from perspective. They operate within perspective, across many of them.


Objectivity Reframed

On this view, objectivity is not achieved by escaping perspective, but by aligning perspectives.

Scientific objectivity, for example, consists in building practices that allow results to travel — across instruments, observers, laboratories, and times. What matters is not that measurements reflect a view from nowhere, but that they can be re‑actualised under specified conditions.

Objectivity is thus a property of coordination, not of detachment.

This is why disagreement does not imply that one side is simply cut off from reality. Disagreements often reflect different construals operating under different constraints, aims, or levels of resolution.


Reality as What Pushes Back

If reality is not what appears when perspective is removed, what is it?

A useful answer is this: reality is what resists unconstrained construal.

It is what pushes back when expectations fail, when actions misfire, when coordination breaks down. This resistance is not encountered outside experience or practice; it is encountered in them.

Reality, in other words, is not hidden behind appearances. It is encountered precisely where appearances stop working.


What Becomes Visible

When the view from nowhere is relinquished, several features of reality come into focus:

  • Reality is shared, but not perspective‑free.

  • Truth is practical, not pictorial.

  • Error is instructive, not merely negative.

  • Knowledge grows by re‑cutting, not by approximation to an absolute.

Most importantly, the long‑standing opposition between realism and anti‑realism loses its force. Both assume that reality must either stand entirely apart from construal or collapse into it.

Neither option is required.


A World That Holds

To say that there is no view from nowhere is not to say that the world is unstable or negotiable at will.

It is to say that stability arises through durable patterns of coordination — patterns that can be challenged, refined, and sometimes broken, but not simply wished away.

The world holds, not because it is independent of all perspective, but because perspectives themselves are constrained by how things go.


Closing the Series

Across these posts, a consistent re‑ordering has been at work.

What looked like foundations — objects, agents, representations, cores, and absolute viewpoints — have been revealed as outcomes of relational organisation.

Nothing essential has been lost.

What has been gained is a way of seeing that dissolves familiar philosophical knots while remaining fully answerable to experience, action, meaning, selfhood, and reality.

If there is a single thread running through the series, it is this:

Reality does not require us to step outside it in order to take it seriously.