Saturday, 6 June 2026

On Images Without Objects 7. What an Image Must Be

St Anselm’s College: Senior Common Room Discussion

There is a noticeable stillness in the room before Quillibrace even opens the final section.

Blottisham has stopped preparing objections in advance. This is not resignation so much as conservation of effort.

Stray is watching the page as though it might finally admit what it has been doing.

Quillibrace turns it.

“What an Image Must Be”

Blottisham nods once.

“Right. Good. Final definition. At last we’ll know what we’re dealing with.”

Quillibrace does not look up.

“There is no definition.”

Blottisham pauses.

“…Of course there isn’t.”

Stray leans slightly forward.

“It says,” she adds carefully, “that we are now at a point where nothing earlier can be reintroduced without distortion.”

Blottisham frowns.

“That sounds inconvenient.”

Quillibrace reads:

“We cannot begin with objects.”

Blottisham interrupts immediately.

“Yes we know that now.”

Quillibrace continues without acknowledging him.

“We cannot assume relations between objects. We cannot posit a containing field…”

Blottisham raises a hand.

“Yes, yes, the entire list of prohibitions. We’ve lived through it.”

Stray whispers:

“It is not just prohibition. It is dependency structure.”

Blottisham turns to her.

“That sounds like prohibition with a better public relations team.”

Quillibrace continues:

“And yet something is given to be seen.”

A pause.

The room shifts slightly here, as though everyone recognises that this is the only sentence that has survived unchanged since the beginning.

Blottisham leans forward.

“Right. So now we finally explain what that ‘something’ is.”

Quillibrace turns the page.

“We do not.”

Blottisham sits back.

“…We don’t.”

Stray shakes her head slightly.

“It says the question is not what an image is, but what must be true for anything to be given at all.”

Blottisham gestures vaguely.

“That still sounds like ‘what is an image’ with extra steps.”

Quillibrace replies evenly.

“It is not.”

A pause.

He reads on:

“An image is not a thing.”

Blottisham nods.

“Agreed.”

“It is not a representation of a thing.”

Blottisham nods again.

“Still fine.”

“It is not a structure composed of parts.”

Blottisham hesitates.

“…Less fine, but manageable.”

Stray looks at him.

“It is removing compositional assumption.”

Blottisham sighs.

“Yes, I’ve noticed.”

Quillibrace continues:

“It is a temporarily stabilised configuration of differentiation…”

Blottisham interrupts.

“Configuration of what now?”

Stray answers immediately.

“Differentiation.”

Blottisham:

“I was afraid of that.”

Quillibrace continues:

“…in which collapse into uniformity is prevented sufficiently for distinction to occur.”

A silence.

Blottisham speaks first.

“So an image is basically something that stops everything turning into undifferentiated mush.”

Quillibrace nods.

“Yes.”

Blottisham thinks.

“…That is both simpler and more disturbing than I expected.”

Stray adds softly:

“It also says this is not composition.”

Blottisham gestures.

“But it looks like composition.”

Quillibrace replies:

“That is retrospective description.”

Blottisham leans back.

“So we are not allowed to say it has parts.”

Quillibrace:

“No.”

Blottisham:

“Or structure.”

Quillibrace:

“No.”

Blottisham:

“Or a viewer.”

Quillibrace:

“No.”

Blottisham pauses.

“So what do we call it?”

A brief silence.

Stray answers carefully.

“A temporary equilibrium of constraints.”

Blottisham stares at her.

“That sounds like a polite way of saying ‘we don’t know what it is’.”

Quillibrace closes the document slightly.

“It is not ignorance.”

Blottisham raises an eyebrow.

“No?”

Quillibrace:

“It is constraint-based specification.”

Blottisham leans back.

“I miss ignorance.”

Stray, almost gently:

“It was more comfortable.”

Quillibrace continues reading the final lines:

“An image is what happens when differentiation is held open long enough for something to be seen without presupposing what is seen.”

A pause.

The room does not immediately respond.

Blottisham speaks first.

“So… images are what happen when we don’t assume images in advance.”

Quillibrace looks up.

“That is broadly correct.”

Blottisham exhales.

“That feels like it should not work.”

Stray replies softly:

“It works by removing what normally does the explanatory work.”

Blottisham looks at the paper.

“So we’ve removed objects, relations, fields, viewers, structure, composition…”

He pauses.

“…What’s left?”

Quillibrace closes the document.

“Constraints.”

Blottisham stares.

“That is not reassuring.”

Stray looks down at her notes.

“It never claimed to be reassuring.”

A silence settles again—this time different from the earlier ones. Less confusion now. More recognition that confusion was doing more stabilising work than they had realised.

Blottisham finally speaks.

“So if this is right… we were never really looking at images.”

Quillibrace replies:

“No.”

Blottisham:

“We were looking at the conditions that let anything look like anything.”

Quillibrace:

“Yes.”

Blottisham leans back slowly.

“That is… slightly inconvenient.”

Stray, after a pause:

“It is also why it had to remove everything else first.”

Quillibrace gathers the pages.

“And that,” he says, “is the end.”

Blottisham looks at the empty space where the argument now seems to have gone.

“…I would like a simpler image next time.”

Stray replies, almost imperceptibly:

“That may no longer be available.”

Quillibrace stands.

“Meeting adjourned.”

Blottisham remains seated.

“I’m not sure I understand anything better.”

Stray closes her notebook.

“That might be the first stable outcome.”

Quillibrace, already at the door:

“Yes.”

And leaves them with it.

On Images Without Objects 6. Stability as Temporary Constraint Equilibrium

St Anselm’s College: Senior Common Room Discussion

By now, Blottisham has developed a new strategy: he nods at intervals as though agreement might stabilise the text into becoming more reasonable.

Stray has stopped reacting to Blottisham’s interpretations altogether and is now tracking only Quillibrace’s page-turning rhythm.

Quillibrace opens the next section.

“Stability as Temporary Constraint Equilibrium”

Blottisham exhales with relief.

“Ah good. Stability. That’s what we’ve been missing. So things finally settle down here.”

Quillibrace does not look up.

“There are no ‘things’ settling.”

Blottisham pauses.

“…Right. Conditions settling then.”

Quillibrace turns a page.

“Not in the sense of objects.”

Blottisham nods quickly.

“Right, right. Of course. Not objects. But still something stabilising.”

Stray looks at the text.

“It says stability is not a property of things,” she says.

Blottisham brightens.

“So it’s a property of conditions.”

Quillibrace immediately:

“No.”

Blottisham stops.

“…Not a property?”

Stray continues reading.

“It says stability is a temporary equilibrium of constraints.”

Blottisham leans forward.

“Ah. Constraints. Good. So we have a structure again.”

Quillibrace finally looks up.

“We do not have a structure in the usual sense.”

Blottisham gestures at the page.

“But constraints are structure.”

Quillibrace replies evenly.

“Not necessarily.”

A pause.

Blottisham tries again.

“So we have constrained structure.”

“No.”

“Unstructured constraints?”

“No.”

Blottisham exhales.

“Right. So constraints that aren’t structure, holding things that aren’t things, in a field that isn’t a field.”

Stray adds quietly:

“And stabilising without becoming stable objects.”

Blottisham looks at her.

“That last part sounds like it should not be possible.”

Quillibrace turns a page.

“It is not being described as possible. It is being specified as necessary.”

Blottisham leans back.

“For what?”

Quillibrace:

“For anything to be given.”

A silence.

Blottisham shakes his head slowly.

“I feel like we’ve been demoted from thinking about images to thinking about… refusal of collapse.”

Stray replies gently:

“That may be more accurate than it sounds.”

Blottisham frowns.

“But stability usually means something is solid.”

Quillibrace responds immediately.

“That is the error.”

Blottisham pauses.

“…Stability is not solid?”

Stray answers.

“It is dynamic.”

Blottisham:

“So it moves.”

Quillibrace:

“No.”

Blottisham stops.

“…It doesn’t move, but it’s dynamic.”

Quillibrace:

“Yes.”

Blottisham rubs his forehead.

“That is not a sentence I can live inside.”

Stray looks at the text again.

“It says stability is the ongoing maintenance of non-collapse.”

Blottisham points.

“Maintenance implies something doing maintenance.”

Quillibrace:

“No.”

Blottisham:

“…So no maintenance?”

Stray:

“Maintenance without a maintainer.”

Blottisham sits back slowly.

“I am beginning to suspect this paper has removed agency as a concept.”

Quillibrace nods once.

“That is not incorrect.”

Blottisham looks alarmed.

“That feels like a major omission.”

Stray replies softly:

“It seems to be a structural consequence.”

Blottisham leans forward again.

“So what is doing the stabilising?”

A pause.

Quillibrace answers first.

“Nothing identifiable as a thing.”

Blottisham:

“That is not reassuring.”

Stray adds:

“It is constraints interacting.”

Blottisham points.

“Constraints doing something again.”

Quillibrace corrects him.

“Not ‘doing’ in the sense of agency.”

Blottisham sighs.

“Right. So constraints that aren’t doing anything, maintaining non-collapse, without anything maintaining them.”

Quillibrace:

“Yes.”

Blottisham stares at the ceiling.

“I miss verbs.”

Stray, almost smiling:

“That may be expected.”

Quillibrace turns the page.

“And now we are ready for the final section.”

Blottisham sits up slightly.

“Good.”

A pause.

“…Will there be anything left after it?”

Quillibrace answers without hesitation.

“That is not guaranteed.”

Blottisham leans back.

“I hate this discipline.”

Stray looks at him.

“You are still assuming there is a discipline.”

Blottisham mutters:

“I am assuming there is something I can complain about.”

Friday, 5 June 2026

On Images Without Objects 5. Attention as Participation

St Anselm’s College: Senior Common Room Discussion

By now, the atmosphere in the Senior Common Room has changed in a way none of them are willing to name.

Blottisham is no longer annotating the text. He is simply tapping it occasionally, as though checking whether it still responds to normal intellectual pressure.

Stray has adopted a posture of careful stillness, as if movement might introduce assumptions.

Quillibrace opens the next section.

“Attention as Participation”

Blottisham exhales with relief.

“Ah. Good. Attention. Finally something familiar. So we have a viewer now.”

Quillibrace does not respond immediately.

Stray looks up slowly.

“It does not yet say ‘viewer’.”

Blottisham waves a hand.

“Well, attention implies a viewer. That’s just standard cognitive architecture.”

Quillibrace turns the page.

“It explicitly warns against that assumption.”

Blottisham pauses.

“…Of a viewer?”

Quillibrace:

“Of a subject who attends.”

A silence.

Blottisham leans forward again.

“So what is attending then, if not a subject doing it?”

Stray speaks carefully.

“It says attention is not an act.”

Blottisham blinks.

“…Then what is it?”

Quillibrace reads:

“the participation of differentiation in its own stabilisation”

Blottisham sits back immediately.

“That’s just words arranged to avoid saying someone is looking at something.”

Stray shakes her head.

“It seems to be saying there is no separation available yet between looking and what is looked at.”

Blottisham points at the page.

“That’s just… merged looking.”

Quillibrace looks up.

“No.”

Blottisham tries again.

“Distributed looking?”

“No.”

“Field-based looking?”

Quillibrace pauses.

“That is precisely the kind of metaphor it is refusing.”

Blottisham exhales.

“Right. So no looking. But somehow still attention.”

Stray adds softly:

“Attention as maintenance of distinction.”

Blottisham frowns.

“That sounds like attention doing work without being a thing.”

Quillibrace nods.

“Yes.”

Blottisham stares.

“…That is not how attention works.”

Quillibrace replies evenly.

“It is how it is being reconstructed here.”

Blottisham leans forward.

“So attention is… what keeps differences from disappearing?”

Stray nods.

“In a sense.”

Blottisham brightens.

“Right. So attention is a stabilising force.”

Quillibrace looks up immediately.

“No.”

Blottisham freezes.

“…Not a force?”

Stray answers:

“Force implies separation between agent and effect.”

Blottisham gestures vaguely.

“Okay, so not a force. A process.”

Quillibrace:

“No.”

Blottisham sighs.

“Right. So not force, not process, not act…”

He pauses.

“…Is it anything?”

A brief silence.

Stray answers quietly.

“It is what happens when differentiation does not collapse uniformly.”

Blottisham sits back.

“That is not helpful.”

Quillibrace closes the page slightly.

“It is deliberately not reified.”

Blottisham looks at him.

“That sounds like a personal attack on my ability to understand things.”

Quillibrace replies without hesitation.

“It is not personal.”

Stray adds, almost gently:

“It is structural.”

Blottisham looks between them.

“So we don’t have a viewer, we don’t have attention as an act, and we don’t have separation between seeing and seen.”

Quillibrace:

“Correct.”

Blottisham pauses.

“So what’s doing the seeing?”

A silence that lasts slightly too long.

Stray answers first.

“That may be the wrong question.”

Blottisham leans back.

“It feels like the only remaining question.”

Quillibrace turns the page.

“It assumes what has not yet been permitted.”

Blottisham groans.

“So we are not allowed a seer.”

Quillibrace:

“No.”

Blottisham:

“Or a seen.”

Quillibrace:

“No.”

Blottisham:

“Or seeing.”

Quillibrace:

“No.”

Blottisham stares at him.

“…Then what are we doing?”

Stray replies softly:

“Trying to understand what must be the case for anything to be distinguishable at all.”

Blottisham leans back fully now.

“I miss objects.”

Quillibrace, without looking up:

“That sentiment is also data.”

Blottisham mutters:

“I hate this paper.”

Stray, almost imperceptibly:

“It is not yet a paper.”

Quillibrace turns the page.

“And we are not yet finished with attention.”

Blottisham closes his eyes briefly.

“…Of course we’re not.”

On Images Without Objects 4. Differentiation Without Units

St Anselm’s College: Senior Common Room Discussion

By now, Blottisham has stopped underlining and begun circling entire paragraphs, as though meaning might accumulate through repetition.

Stray has developed a new habit: pausing before turning each page, as if checking whether the page is still authorised to continue existing.

Quillibrace remains, as ever, irritatingly composed.

He reads:

“Differentiation Without Units”

Blottisham reacts immediately.

“Good,” he says. “Finally. Differentiation. That’s what we’ve been waiting for. So we’ve got things now—differences between things.”

Quillibrace does not look up.

“There are explicitly no units yet.”

Blottisham pauses.

“…No units?”

Stray turns one page back, then forward again, as if verifying continuity.

“It says,” she replies, “differentiation without units.”

Blottisham frowns.

“That sounds like contradiction.”

Quillibrace corrects him gently.

“It sounds like discipline.”

Blottisham leans forward.

“Right, but difference between what?”

Quillibrace answers immediately.

“Nothing that qualifies as a ‘what’.”

A silence settles.

Blottisham blinks.

“…That’s not helpful.”

Stray looks at the text.

“It says,” she adds, “that difference must precede objects, but cannot be a relation between objects.”

Blottisham brightens slightly.

“So: pre-object objects.”

Quillibrace exhales quietly through his nose.

“No.”

Blottisham tries again.

“Proto-objects?”

“No.”

“Non-objects?”

“No.”

Blottisham gestures vaguely.

“Look, I’m just trying to give it something to work with.”

Stray speaks softly.

“It seems to be removing what we normally mean by ‘something’.”

Blottisham pauses.

“That feels excessive. Surely we need at least something.”

Quillibrace turns a page.

“We do,” he says. “But not yet in the form of units.”

Blottisham sits back.

“So we have difference without things that differ.”

Quillibrace nods.

“Yes.”

Blottisham stares at him.

“That is… not reassuring.”

Stray adds carefully:

“It says differentiation is not segmentation, classification, or partitioning.”

Blottisham sighs.

“So no dividing things into things.”

Quillibrace:

“Correct.”

Blottisham looks at the ceiling.

“What exactly is left then?”

A pause.

Stray answers first.

“A condition under which something fails to be uniform.”

Blottisham squints.

“That sounds like nothing happening in a particular way.”

Quillibrace corrects again.

“It is not nothing happening. It is the minimal requirement for anything to become distinguishable.”

Blottisham points at the page.

“But distinguishable implies two things.”

Stray replies immediately:

“It implies distinction, not things.”

Blottisham freezes.

“…That is worse.”

Quillibrace continues reading:

“Differentiation must not presuppose differentiated units.”

Blottisham leans forward again.

“So we’re doing difference without differences.”

Quillibrace nods.

“Yes.”

Blottisham waits.

“That seems like it should cancel itself.”

Stray shakes her head slightly.

“It seems instead to be the condition under which cancellation does not occur.”

Silence.

Blottisham slowly puts the paper down.

“I think I preferred it when there were objects.”

Quillibrace responds without hesitation.

“That preference is precisely what is being examined.”

Blottisham looks at him.

“It feels like being examined by absence.”

Stray, almost smiling:

“That may be the most accurate thing you’ve said so far.”

Quillibrace turns another page.

“And we have not yet introduced attention.”

Blottisham groans.

“Oh no.”

Stray looks down at the text.

“I suspect that will complicate matters.”

Quillibrace:

“Undoubtedly.”

Blottisham leans back.

“I would like to formally object to the direction of this paper.”

Quillibrace, without looking up:

“On what grounds?”

Blottisham thinks.

“…On grounds of disappearance of everything I can think with.”

A pause.

Stray replies gently:

“That may not be a procedural objection.”

Blottisham mutters:

“It feels like one.”

On Images Without Objects 3. The Field That Does Not Contain Things

St Anselm’s College: Senior Common Room Discussion

A faint fatigue has entered the room, though no one has agreed to acknowledge it.

Blottisham has begun drawing small arrows in the margin of the document. None of them point to anything in particular, but they are increasing in confidence.

Stray has stopped writing altogether and is now simply watching the text as if it might change if observed correctly.

Quillibrace, as usual, appears unaffected.

He reads aloud:

“The Field That Does Not Contain Things”

Blottisham nods immediately.

“Ah. Good. So we’ve got the field now. That’s helpful. We can finally locate things properly.”

Quillibrace pauses.

“There is an explicit instruction,” he says, “that this is not a field in the usual sense.”

Blottisham glances at the page.

“Yes, yes, metaphorical field. Understood.”

Stray looks up.

“It says,” she replies, “that ‘field’ is already too spatial.”

Blottisham frowns.

“That seems excessive. Everything has to be somewhere.”

Quillibrace turns a page.

“Not if ‘somewhere’ presupposes containment.”

Blottisham gestures at the air.

“Fine. Not containment. But still a kind of… space.”

Stray shakes her head slightly.

“It says it is not space either.”

Blottisham stops.

“…So what is it then?”

Quillibrace reads:

“It is the condition under which differences can hold without collapsing.”

Blottisham nods.

“Yes. So: a container that holds differences without being a container.”

Silence.

Stray speaks carefully.

“That would reintroduce containment by denial.”

Blottisham blinks.

“…Is that a thing?”

Quillibrace answers without looking up.

“It is a very common thing.”

Blottisham sits forward.

“Right, so we avoid saying container. We call it something else. Problem solved.”

Stray looks at him.

“That is exactly what is not being allowed.”

Blottisham exhales.

“This is starting to feel like linguistic sabotage.”

Quillibrace replies evenly.

“It is more precise than that.”

He taps the page.

“It is a systematic refusal of spatial metaphor.”

Blottisham brightens slightly.

“Oh good. So it’s about language. That I can handle.”

Stray says quietly:

“It is about what language does when it assumes space too early.”

Blottisham nods, pleased.

“So: we fix the language.”

Quillibrace finally looks up.

“No.”

A pause.

Blottisham deflates slightly.

“…We don’t fix the language?”

Quillibrace returns to the text.

“We remove the assumption that the conditions for appearance are spatial at all.”

Blottisham sits back.

“That seems extreme.”

Stray turns a page slowly.

“It says,” she adds, “that a field, if the word is retained at all, is not spatial, not extended, not filled, and not containing.”

Blottisham raises a hand.

“Right. So: invisible space.”

Quillibrace immediately:

“No.”

Blottisham lowers his hand.

“Non-invisible space?”

Stray looks at him.

“That is worse.”

A pause.

Blottisham tries again, carefully.

“Okay. So it’s not space, not container, not background…”

He thinks.

“…Is it like a system?”

Quillibrace answers instantly.

“No.”

Blottisham sighs.

“I’m running out of categories.”

Stray speaks gently.

“That may be the point.”

Blottisham looks at the page again.

“So what are we meant to imagine?”

Quillibrace closes the document slightly.

“That is the wrong question.”

Blottisham looks up.

“It feels like the only available question.”

Stray replies:

“It says we are not yet entitled to imagining anything.”

Silence.

Blottisham slowly leans back in his chair.

“So we have a field that is not a field, that contains nothing, in which nothing is contained, but somehow difference still happens.”

Quillibrace nods once.

“Yes.”

Blottisham stares at him.

“That is either philosophy or refusal to cooperate.”

Stray, quietly:

“It might be a description of what we usually hide when we start with objects.”

Quillibrace turns the page again.

“And we have not yet reached differentiation.”

Blottisham groans softly.

“We haven’t?”

Quillibrace:

“No.”

A pause.

Blottisham looks at Stray.

“I feel like I’ve already lost the ability to think in normal ways.”

Stray answers, almost sympathetically:

“It is only paragraph three.”

Quillibrace adds, without looking up:

“And we are still learning what we are not allowed to assume.”

Blottisham sinks slightly in his chair.

“…This is going to be a long series.”

On Images Without Objects 2. Relation Before Object

St Anselm’s College: Senior Common Room Discussion

Blottisham has underlined the phrase “relation before object” three times. The ink pressure suggests he is trying to restore order by force.

Quillibrace notices but says nothing.

Stray is still reading the same paragraph she was reading ten minutes earlier, though she appears to have moved several millimetres deeper into it.

Blottisham speaks first.

“Right,” he says. “So this is the key point. Relations come first. That’s straightforward enough. Everything relates to everything else before we identify the things involved.”

Quillibrace does not look up.

“That is not what it says.”

Blottisham waves the paper.

“It says relation before object. That’s what I said.”

Stray tilts her head slightly.

“It also says,” she adds, “that relation in the usual sense cannot come first, because relation usually presupposes things to relate.”

Blottisham pauses.

“…Yes. That’s just clarification.”

Quillibrace turns a page slowly.

“It is not clarification,” he says. “It is a restriction on what ‘relation’ is allowed to mean.”

Blottisham sits forward.

“Right, so we redefine relation. Easy. We just say relations don’t need objects. Done.”

A silence settles that feels briefly like agreement before collapsing under inspection.

Stray speaks.

“If we say that,” she says, “we may simply be replacing objects with relations and assuming the same structure underneath.”

Blottisham brightens.

“Yes! Exactly. We keep the structure, just swap the labels. Much simpler.”

Quillibrace finally looks up.

“That would be precisely what the text is refusing to permit.”

Blottisham hesitates.

“…Refusing to permit?”

Quillibrace taps the page once.

“It is not offering a new ontology of relations. It is removing the assumption that relations are secondary to objects.”

Blottisham nods slowly.

“So relations are primary.”

“No,” says Stray immediately.

Blottisham turns to her.

“They’re not?”

Stray looks at the paragraph again.

“It says that ‘primary’ is already too structured,” she says. “Because it introduces ordering where only dependency is being examined.”

Blottisham frowns.

“I think you’re making it more complicated than it needs to be.”

Quillibrace leans back slightly.

“That is not complexity,” he says. “That is constraint discipline.”

Blottisham points at the page.

“Well, it clearly says something must come first.”

Quillibrace raises an eyebrow.

“It explicitly warns against treating ‘before’ as temporal or sequential.”

Blottisham stops pointing.

“…So nothing comes first.”

Stray hesitates.

“It says we should not assume sequence,” she replies. “Not that dependency disappears.”

Blottisham looks between them.

“So what is it saying then?”

Quillibrace answers without hesitation.

“That objects depend on conditions that do not presuppose objects.”

A pause.

Blottisham nods.

“Yes. So: relations.”

Quillibrace closes his eyes briefly.

Stray looks down at her notes, then speaks carefully.

“It seems,” she says, “that what is being described is not a set of relations, but a condition under which difference can operate without requiring things to differ in advance.”

Blottisham sits back.

“So… invisible relations.”

Quillibrace opens his eyes.

“No.”

Blottisham tries again.

“Pre-relations?”

“No.”

“Meta-relations?”

“No.”

Blottisham gestures vaguely.

“Look, I’m just trying to get something I can picture.”

Stray looks up.

“That may be exactly what is being withheld.”

Blottisham stares at her.

“That seems counterproductive.”

Quillibrace turns a page.

“It is structurally necessary,” he says. “If you begin with something pictureable, you have already begun with objects.”

Blottisham leans back further.

“So we are not allowed objects, relations, or pictures.”

A pause.

“…What are we allowed?”

Stray answers quietly.

“Dependency without form.”

Blottisham blinks.

“That sounds like nothing.”

Quillibrace corrects him immediately.

“It is not nothing. It is the condition under which anything could become something.”

Blottisham considers this.

“So,” he says slowly, “we are working with… invisible scaffolding.”

Quillibrace opens his mouth, then closes it.

Stray speaks first.

“That is already too architectural.”

Blottisham sighs.

“Right,” he says. “So not scaffolding.”

A long silence.

Then, cautiously:

“…ambient scaffolding?”

Quillibrace looks at him.

“No.”

Blottisham nods.

“Fine.”

He taps the page again.

“So relations don’t connect things.”

Stray corrects gently.

“They are what makes ‘things’ unnecessary in order for difference to persist.”

Blottisham leans forward again, hopeful.

“So: relational stuff that isn’t things.”

Quillibrace puts the paper down.

“That is exactly the habit of thought the text is trying to undo.”

Blottisham sits back.

“…This is going to be harder than I thought.”

Stray, almost inaudibly:

“Yes.”

Quillibrace returns to the page.

“And we have only reached paragraph three.”

On Images Without Objects 1. What Is Given to Be Seen

St Anselm’s College: Senior Common Room Discussion

The room is already occupied when Professor Quillibrace enters.

Mr Blottisham is standing by the window holding a printed copy of the series as though it might begin to behave better if handled correctly. Miss Elowen Stray is seated, reading slowly, pencil resting beside her notebook in a way that suggests she is not yet convinced the pencil will be needed.

Quillibrace closes the door with care.

“Well,” he says, looking at the document rather than the people, “this is either a serious piece of work or an extended refusal to declare its topic.”

Blottisham looks up immediately.

“It’s about images,” he says. “Clearly. It says so in the title.”

Quillibrace does not respond. He turns a page instead, as though the title may yet correct itself under scrutiny.

Stray speaks softly.

“It begins,” she says, “by refusing to begin with images.”

Blottisham frowns.

“That’s just rhetoric. You always start with images if you’re talking about images. Otherwise you end up—well—like this.”

He taps the paper.

“Talking about not talking about images.”

Quillibrace adjusts his glasses.

“It does not, in fact, begin with images,” he says. “It begins with the refusal to assume that ‘image’ is a stable category. That is a different move entirely.”

Blottisham brightens slightly.

“Ah. So it does question images. Good. So we agree it’s about images.”

Stray’s pencil lifts, hovers, then rests again.

“It’s not clear,” she says, “that ‘aboutness’ survives the first page intact.”

Blottisham ignores this.

“Right,” he says, “so we’re dealing with images, but in a… philosophical way.”

Quillibrace exhales through his nose.

“We are dealing,” he says, “with a sequence of constraints on what can be presupposed before anything like an image is allowed to stabilise.”

Blottisham nods confidently.

“Yes. So: images.”

A pause.

Stray looks down at the first paragraph.

“It removes objects,” she says.

“Yes,” says Quillibrace.

“It removes relations between objects.”

“Yes.”

“It removes a containing field.”

“Yes.”

“It removes a viewer.”

“Yes.”

Blottisham looks increasingly satisfied.

“So,” he concludes, “it removes all the difficult parts so it can focus properly on images.”

Quillibrace closes his eyes for a moment, as though counting something that is not numbers.

“It does not remove them in order to simplify the subject,” he says carefully. “It removes them in order to determine what must be presupposed for ‘object’, ‘relation’, and ‘viewer’ to become available in the first place.”

Blottisham nods again, more slowly this time.

“So… it reconstructs images from the ground up.”

“No,” says Stray.

All look at her.

She taps the page lightly.

“It does not reconstruct images,” she says. “It suspends the assumption that ‘images’ are where we begin.”

Silence.

Blottisham leans back slightly.

“That sounds like reconstructing images with extra steps.”

Quillibrace opens the document again.

“I suspect,” he says, “that the difficulty here is not conceptual complexity, but directional discipline.”

Blottisham brightens.

“Oh good,” he says. “So it is about direction. That’s manageable. Which direction are we going in?”

Stray looks at the first line again.

“It refuses to say,” she replies.

Quillibrace nods once.

“Precisely.”

Blottisham pauses.

“…That seems unhelpful.”

Stray, after a moment:

“It is unusually precise about what it refuses to assume.”

Blottisham sits down.

“This is going to be one of those papers, isn’t it,” he says, “where you understand it better after you stop reading it.”

Quillibrace does not look up.

“Yes,” he says. “That is typically the sign that it is working.”

Blottisham frowns.

“That cannot be right.”

Stray, quietly:

“It might be the sign that we are used to thinking with objects too early.”

Blottisham looks between them.

“I’m perfectly happy thinking with objects at the correct time,” he says.

Quillibrace turns a page.

“That,” he says, “is exactly the problem under investigation.”

Relational Cuts: On Images — 7. What an Image Must Be

We now reach a point where the earlier refusals can no longer be treated as merely provisional.

They have accumulated into a single constraint structure.

We cannot begin with objects.
We cannot assume relations between objects.
We cannot posit a containing field.
We cannot treat differentiation as derivative of units.
We cannot introduce a subject who attends to an object.
We cannot treat stability as a property of things.

And yet:

something is given to be seen.

So the question that remains is no longer exploratory in tone.

It is structural.

What must be the case for anything to be given in this way?

We are now in a position to state the requirement more directly, though still cautiously.

What we have been circling is not a collection of components.

It is a single condition with multiple aspects:

a situation in which differentiation is maintained without collapse into uniformity, such that what later becomes describable as “object” can temporarily stabilise.

But even this formulation is already too generous.

Because it still suggests that there is a “situation” in which things occur.

We must be more precise.

There is no prior situation.

There is only the sustained possibility of distinction.

From this, everything else follows—but not as derivation from a base, and not as construction from elements.

Rather, as stabilisation of what can be held apart long enough to be encountered.

So we can now say, with as much restraint as possible:

an image is not a thing.

It is not a representation of a thing.

It is not a structure composed of parts.

It is not a field in which objects are arranged.

It is not an interface between subject and object.

All of these are later descriptions, imposed after stability has already been achieved.

What must an image be, then?

It must be:

a temporarily stabilised configuration of differentiation in which collapse into uniformity is prevented sufficiently for distinction to occur.

Nothing more than that.
Nothing less than that.

This sounds almost too minimal to be useful.

But that is because we are used to adding structure too early.

Once we resist that impulse, the simplicity becomes more revealing.

For it implies several things at once.

First:

An image does not require objects as prerequisites.

Objects are effects of stabilised differentiation within it.

Second:

An image does not require a viewer as an external condition.

Whatever is later called “viewing” is already part of the same stabilisation process that allows differentiation to persist.

Third:

An image does not contain meaning.

Meaning is not carried inside it like a substance.

Meaning is a secondary stabilisation of relations that are already active at the level of differentiation.

Fourth:

An image is not composed.

Composition is a retrospective description of how stabilised differentiations are distributed.

These are not interpretations of images.

They are consequences of the constraint we began with.

But we must be careful not to overstate what has been achieved.

We have not defined images.

We have not classified them.

We have not explained their varieties.

We have done something more basic, and more restrictive:

we have specified the minimum conditions under which anything could be given in a way that allows distinction to persist.

This is why the term “image” now feels almost secondary.

It names not a category of objects, but a threshold phenomenon:

a point at which differentiation has stabilised sufficiently to become encounterable.

And yet this stability remains fragile.

It is not guaranteed.

It is not permanent.

It is not independent.

It is continuously contingent on the maintenance of conditions that prevent collapse into uniformity.

So if there is a final formulation, it is this:

an image is what happens when differentiation is held open long enough for something to be seen without requiring that anything be presupposed as already seen.

At this point, the circle closes.

Not because we have returned to an initial definition, but because the initial assumption—“something is given to be seen”—has now been unfolded into its minimal conditions.

We began with givenness.

We end with constraint.

And between them, nothing has been added except precision in what must be true for appearance not to fail.

What remains is not a theory of images.

It is the recognition that images are not secondary to relation, object, or subject.

They are the temporary achievement of a system in which differentiation does not collapse.

And if anything is still missing, it is not another concept.

It is the question of how such a system sustains itself at all.

Relational Cuts: On Images — 6. Stability as Temporary Constraint Equilibrium

Up to this point, several prohibitions have accumulated.

We cannot begin with objects.
We cannot assume relations between objects.
We cannot posit a field that contains what appears.
We cannot treat differentiation as the operation of pre-given units.
We cannot introduce a subject who performs attention upon an object.

And yet, something remains given to be seen.

Not as a thing.
Not as a collection of things.
Not as a background upon which things are arranged.

But as something that does not immediately dissolve.

This persistence is what now requires attention.

Because without persistence, nothing could ever be distinguished at all.

If every differentiation collapsed instantly, there would be no “this rather than that,” no stabilisation, no appearance.

So we must account for a simple but demanding fact:

some configurations of differentiation hold.

They do not hold permanently.
They do not hold independently.
They do not hold by themselves.

But they hold long enough to be distinguishable.

This introduces a new constraint:

whatever is given to be seen is not only differentiated, but differentially stable.

We must be careful with this formulation.

Because “stability” too easily suggests a thing that remains unchanged over time.

That would reintroduce objecthood through the back door.

So we must refine the term.

Stability here does not mean persistence of a thing.

It means the persistence of a configuration of constraints that resists collapse into uniformity.

Not something that is stable.

But something that stabilises.

And even this must be handled cautiously.

Because “something” again risks too much.

So we adjust again:

what persists is not an entity, but a balance of conditions under which differentiation does not dissolve.

We might call this a temporary equilibrium.

But “equilibrium” must not be understood in a static sense.

It is not a state that is reached and then held.

It is not a resting point.

It is not an underlying structure.

It is a dynamic balancing of pressures that allows certain differentiations to remain effective.

And crucially:

this balance is not independent of what appears.

It is not hidden behind appearance.

It is not outside what is seen.

It is the condition under which appearance does not immediately fail.

We are therefore not describing stability as a property of objects.

We are describing stability as the ongoing maintenance of non-collapse within a differentiated situation.

At this stage, something subtle becomes visible.

What we have been calling:

  • differentiation
  • field-like conditions
  • non-uniform persistence
  • attention-like participation

are not separate layers.

They are different articulations of a single requirement:

that collapse into uniformity must be continuously prevented.

Stability, then, is not an addition to the system.

It is the system’s refusal to dissolve.

But even “system” is still too strong a word.

We are not yet entitled to it.

So we stay more restrained:

what is given to be seen is given only insofar as a temporary equilibrium of constraints holds.

When this equilibrium fails, nothing disappears.

It is more precise to say:

nothing becomes distinguishable.

This distinction matters.

Because it shows that “appearance” is not the presence of things, but the maintenance of conditions under which distinction is possible.

We are now close to a point where the earlier vocabulary begins to converge.

Differentiation without units.
Field without containment.
Attention without subject.
Stability without object.

Each of these was a way of circling the same requirement.

And now that requirement can be stated more directly:

for anything to be given, there must be a sustained prevention of collapse into undifferentiated uniformity.

But we still do not know what carries this prevention.

We only know that without it, nothing would ever be seen.

So we remain at the level of constraint.

Not yet explanation.
Not yet ontology of things.

Only the recognition that appearance depends on a fragile and temporary equilibrium that is constantly being maintained, though by nothing we can yet name.

The question that remains is now becoming unavoidable:

what kind of organisation is capable of producing such equilibrium without presupposing what appears within it?