Monday, 4 May 2026

Does the past still exist? — Discuss

A Conversation in the Senior Common Room (Where the Past Is Suspected of Lurking Nearby)

The fire continues, having already burned in ways it no longer does. Professor Quillibrace regards this without sentiment. Mr Blottisham looks faintly troubled, as though earlier flames ought to be somewhere still. Miss Elowen Stray attends to what remains—and how.


Blottisham:
I’ve been thinking about this rather seriously. The past—memories, history, everything that’s happened… does it still exist somewhere? Or is it just… gone?

Quillibrace:
An understandable discomfort with irreversible verbs.

Stray:
So the question is: Does the past still exist?

Blottisham:
Exactly. Either past events are still real in some sense—or they’ve vanished completely. It can’t be both.

Quillibrace:
A familiar demand for temporal storage.


1. The Shape of the Question

Stray:
It assumes that past events might continue to exist—just not be directly accessible.

Blottisham:
Yes—like earlier moments still “out there” somewhere in time.

Quillibrace:
Which implies:

  • that existence applies uniformly across past, present, and future,
  • that “pastness” is a mode of being,
  • and that temporal reference tracks ontological status.

Blottisham:
Well, if something did exist, surely it still exists in some sense?

Quillibrace:
An impressive refusal to let go of verbs.


2. The Setup Behind the Intuition

Stray:
So what assumptions are doing the work?

Quillibrace:
A tidy cluster:

  • that existence is independent of relational accessibility,
  • that temporal position corresponds to mode of being,
  • that what is no longer accessible is no longer real,
  • that representation requires its referent to persist,
  • and that memory implies the continued existence of what is remembered.

Blottisham:
Well yes—otherwise what are we remembering?

Quillibrace:
Not, as it turns out, a currently existing object.


3. Three Ways the Past Becomes a Place

Blottisham:
But surely the past must be somewhere if it affects us?

Quillibrace:
Let us examine how it acquires a location.

(a) Reification of the past
The past is treated as a domain.

  • Instead of prior states within unfolding processes,
  • it becomes a region populated by still-existing events.

Blottisham:
A sort of temporal archive?

Quillibrace:
Curated, one assumes, by nostalgia.

(b) Flattening of temporal structure
Temporal distinctions become ontological ones.

  • “Past,” “present,” and “future” are treated as different kinds of being,
  • rather than positions within relational unfolding.

Stray:
So time is turned into a landscape of coexisting regions?

Quillibrace:
A particularly misleading cartography.

(c) Projection from representation to ontology
Retention is mistaken for persistence.

  • Because systems carry traces of prior states,
  • those states are assumed to still exist somewhere.

Blottisham:
So memory is taken as evidence that the past is still there?

Quillibrace:
Rather than evidence that something has been retained.


4. If We Attend to What Actually Remains

Stray:
So within a relational account, what is the past?

Quillibrace:
Not a domain. A structure.

More precisely:

  • Systems instantiate relations under constraint.
  • As they evolve, prior configurations leave traces.
  • These traces are stabilised within subsequent states.
  • What we call “the past” is the configuration of these traces in the present.

Blottisham:
So the past isn’t somewhere else—it’s… here, as traces?

Quillibrace:
Precisely. Inconveniently located.

Stray:
So history persists as structured imprint, not as continuing events?

Quillibrace:
Yes. Effects without ongoing existence of their causes as present entities.


5. The Disappearance of the Temporal Warehouse

Blottisham:
So what becomes of the question—“Does the past still exist?”?

Quillibrace:
It dissolves once its assumptions are withdrawn.

It depends on:

  • treating temporal positions as modes of being,
  • assuming memory requires persistent referents,
  • converting traces into entities,
  • and flattening temporal unfolding into domains.

Remove these, and there is no “past” to locate as an existing realm.

Stray:
So what disappears is the idea that the past exists elsewhere—not the reality of what has happened?

Quillibrace:
Exactly.


6. Why It Still Feels Like It Must

Blottisham:
And yet the past feels very real. Regret certainly does.

Quillibrace:
Naturally.

  • Memory is vivid.
  • Emotion binds strongly to prior events.
  • Records and artefacts persist.
  • And we are continuously shaped by prior configurations.

Stray:
So the past feels present because its traces are active in current systems?

Quillibrace:
Yes. Influence is mistaken for coexistence.

Blottisham:
So because it affects us, we assume it must still be?

Quillibrace:
With touching loyalty.


Closing

Blottisham:
So “Does the past still exist?” turns out to be—

Quillibrace:
—a reification of retention, a flattening of temporal structure, and a projection from trace to ontology.

Stray:
And once those moves are undone?

Quillibrace:
The past is not a continuing domain.

It is re-situated.

As structured trace within ongoing relational actualisation—real in its effects, but not existing as a separate realm of being.

Blottisham:
So nothing I’ve done still exists… but it still matters?

Quillibrace:
An arrangement both morally and metaphysically efficient.

Stray (quietly):
What has happened persists—not as something still there, but as something still shaping what is here.

Quillibrace:
Miss Stray, as ever, restores continuity without invoking storage.

Blottisham:
I suppose I shall have to give up the idea of the past as a kind of… archive one could visit.

Quillibrace:
You may retain the archive.

Blottisham (hopeful):
Ah—

Quillibrace:
But it is written in the present.

Is the future already determined? — Discuss

A Conversation in the Senior Common Room (Where the Future Is Suspected of Already Having Happened)

The fire continues, untroubled by its own temporal status. Professor Quillibrace observes it with quiet approval. Mr Blottisham suspects it may already know how it will burn out. Miss Elowen Stray attends to the difference between what has occurred and what can occur.


Blottisham:
Right. I’ve been thinking about this. If the laws of nature are fixed—and everything follows from them—then surely the future is already determined. It’s all… decided in advance.

Quillibrace:
An admirably efficient universe. No need for suspense.

Stray:
So the question would be: Is the future already determined?

Blottisham:
Exactly. Either everything is fixed, or the future is somehow open. It must be one or the other.

Quillibrace:
A binary built on a temporal misunderstanding.


1. The Shape of the Assumption

Stray:
The question treats the future as if it were already something that exists.

Blottisham:
Well, it must exist in some sense—otherwise how could it happen?

Quillibrace:
A bold inference.

What is assumed is:

  • that the future could be fully specified in advance,
  • that determination applies to events prior to their occurrence,
  • and that the future is a structure awaiting access.

Blottisham:
Yes—like a timeline already laid out.

Quillibrace:
A completed script, merely awaiting performance.


2. The Quiet Setup

Stray:
So what has to be presupposed for that to make sense?

Quillibrace:
A rather symmetrical view of time:

  • that past, present, and future are ontologically comparable,
  • that what is actualised in the past could also be actualised “already” in the future,
  • that determination is a property applicable before instantiation,
  • that outcomes exist independently of the processes that generate them,
  • and that openness and determination are mutually exclusive.

Blottisham:
That seems entirely reasonable. Either it’s fixed or it isn’t.

Quillibrace:
Yes. Provided one mistakes potential for actuality.


3. Three Small Distortions, Working Overtime

Blottisham:
But if we can predict things reliably, doesn’t that mean the future is already set?

Quillibrace:
It means you are confusing constraint with pre-existence.

Let us proceed.

(a) Projection of completed structure
The future is treated as already formed.

  • As if it were a fixed sequence awaiting traversal.
  • Rather than a field of structured potential.

Blottisham:
So it’s not “there” yet?

Quillibrace:
Not in the sense required for your conclusion.

(b) Reification of determination
Determination is treated as a thing-like property.

  • Instead of a feature of constraint within systems.
  • It becomes something that applies to events before they exist.

Stray:
So determination is being moved from process to pre-condition?

Quillibrace:
Exactly.

(c) Temporal flattening
Past and future are treated symmetrically.

  • Ignoring that the past consists of actualised instantiation.
  • While the future consists of not-yet-actualised potential.

Blottisham:
So we’re treating “will happen” like “has happened”?

Quillibrace:
With impressive confidence.


4. If We Keep the Asymmetry Intact

Stray:
So within a relational account, the future isn’t already determined?

Quillibrace:
It is neither already determined nor unconstrained.

More precisely:

  • Systems operate under structured constraints.
  • These constraints shape how instantiation can unfold.
  • They limit and organise possible trajectories.
  • Instantiation actualises one trajectory at a time.

Prior to that, there is no set of formed events.

Blottisham:
So the future is… constrained, but not pre-written?

Quillibrace:
A phrase I would reluctantly endorse.

Stray:
So determination applies within unfolding processes, not to a pre-existing timeline?

Quillibrace:
Exactly.


5. The Disappearance of the Binary

Blottisham:
So what becomes of the question—“Is the future already determined?”?

Quillibrace:
It dissolves under inspection.

It depends on:

  • projecting completed structure onto the future,
  • treating determination as pre-existing,
  • flattening temporal distinctions,
  • and assuming potential must already be actual.

Remove these, and there is no pre-existing future to be determined.

Stray:
So what disappears is the idea that the future exists in advance as a fixed structure?

Quillibrace:
Precisely.


6. Why It Still Feels True

Blottisham:
And yet… prediction works. Things follow patterns. It feels determined.

Quillibrace:
Naturally.

  • Scientific models are highly successful.
  • Causal continuity from past to future feels compelling.
  • Stable constraints produce reliable outcomes.
  • And certainty is deeply attractive.

Stray:
So constraint gives the impression of inevitability?

Quillibrace:
Yes. Reliability masquerades as pre-existence.

Blottisham:
So we mistake predictability for the future already being there?

Quillibrace:
With admirable consistency.


Closing

Blottisham:
So “Is the future already determined?” turns out to be—

Quillibrace:
—a projection of completed instantiation onto structured potential, assisted by a reified notion of determination and a flattened sense of time.

Stray:
And once those moves are undone?

Quillibrace:
The future is not pre-written.

It is re-situated.

A constrained field of potential, continuously actualised through relational processes—shaped by structure, but never existing in advance as the outcomes it makes possible.

Blottisham:
So nothing is fixed… but not everything is possible either?

Quillibrace:
You have, at last, located the middle without destroying it.

Stray (quietly):
Which makes the future neither a script nor a void—but something that becomes, under constraint.

Quillibrace:
Miss Stray, as ever, restores temporal dignity.

Blottisham:
I suppose I shall have to give up the idea that everything is already decided.

Quillibrace:
You may keep the feeling.

Blottisham (hopeful):
Ah—

Quillibrace:
But you will have to relinquish the ontology.

Is there a correct way to describe reality? — Discuss

A Conversation in the Senior Common Room (Where Reality Is Suspected of Wanting a Proper Description)

The fire continues its quietly disciplined existence. Professor Quillibrace appears content to let it do so without commentary. Mr Blottisham, however, looks as though he would very much like to summarise it definitively. Miss Elowen Stray watches the interplay between description and what is being described—without rushing to separate them.


Blottisham:
Right. Enough ambiguity. There must be a correct way to describe reality. Science can’t just be… approximate forever.

Quillibrace:
One admires your faith in final drafts.

Stray:
The question would be: Is there a correct way to describe reality?

Blottisham:
Exactly. Surely some descriptions are closer to the truth than others. And ideally, one would be the right one.

Quillibrace:
A single, privileged account—language finally aligned with the world. A satisfying image.


1. The Shape of the Demand

Stray:
The question assumes that descriptions aim to match reality.

Blottisham:
Well yes—otherwise what are they for?

Quillibrace:
So we are given:

  • reality as a fixed, fully determinate structure,
  • description as something that mirrors it,
  • and error as a mismatch between the two.

Blottisham:
Precisely. Accuracy as correspondence.

Quillibrace:
Language as cartography. Reality as terrain. And somewhere, one hopes, a perfect map.


2. The Representational Setup

Stray:
So what has to be assumed for that to work?

Quillibrace:
A familiar arrangement:

  • that language and reality are separable domains,
  • that description maps one onto the other,
  • that correctness is defined by correspondence,
  • that reality admits a single exhaustive description,
  • and that differences between descriptions are differences in proximity to that one target.

Blottisham:
Which seems entirely reasonable if one wants to be correct.

Quillibrace:
It is certainly the most efficient way to be mistaken.

Stray:
So the whole model depends on treating meaning as representational?

Quillibrace:
Yes. As though description were a mirror held up to a pre-given world.


3. Three Ways the Model Goes Astray

Blottisham:
But descriptions are things. You can compare them.

Quillibrace:
You can also misunderstand them.

Let us proceed carefully.

(a) Reification of description
Descriptions are treated as static objects.

  • Instead of ongoing acts of construal, they become things to be measured against reality.

Blottisham:
Well, a theory is a thing.

Quillibrace:
A theory is something one does with language.

(b) Dualisation of language and world
Language and reality are separated.

  • Description becomes a bridge between two domains.
  • Rather than part of the same relational system.

Stray:
So language is imagined as external to what it describes?

Quillibrace:
Yes. Which makes its success rather mysterious.

(c) Flattening of descriptive variation
All descriptions are treated as competing maps.

  • Ignoring differences in purpose, constraint, and stratum.
  • Reducing everything to a single scale of “accuracy.”

Blottisham:
Well surely some descriptions are just better.

Quillibrace:
Better for what, Mr Blottisham?


4. If We Refuse the Mirror

Stray:
So within a relational account, description isn’t mapping?

Quillibrace:
It is participation.

More precisely:

  • Systems instantiate structured relations under constraint.
  • Language is one such system.
  • Describing is an act of construal—selecting, stabilising, articulating aspects of structure.
  • Different descriptions realise different modes of engagement.

Blottisham:
So there isn’t one correct description?

Quillibrace:
There are many effective ones.

Stray:
And correctness becomes internal to systems—dependent on constraints, goals, and stability?

Quillibrace:
Exactly.

Blottisham:
So science, poetry, everyday speech—

Quillibrace:
—are not competing mirrors, but different articulations of relational structure.


5. The Collapse of the Perfect Description

Blottisham:
So what happens to the idea of the correct description?

Quillibrace:
It dissolves under inspection.

It depends on:

  • separating language from world,
  • treating description as mapping,
  • assuming a single fully determined target,
  • and collapsing all descriptive practices into one metric.

Remove these, and there is no absolute notion of correctness to pursue.

Stray:
So truth doesn’t disappear—it just isn’t a single optimal representation?

Quillibrace:
Precisely. It becomes a matter of constrained effectiveness.


6. Why the Idea Persists

Blottisham:
I must admit, I rather like the idea of a final, perfect description.

Quillibrace:
Naturally.

  • Scientific models can be extraordinarily precise.
  • Predictive success encourages the mapping metaphor.
  • Comparison invites ranking.
  • And closure is deeply appealing.

Stray:
Some descriptions really do feel better—they generalise, coordinate, compress…

Quillibrace:
Yes. But these are relational virtues, not signs of proximity to a final mirror.

Blottisham:
So better doesn’t mean closer to “the one true description”?

Quillibrace:
It means better suited to the constraints under which it operates.


Closing

Blottisham:
So “Is there a correct way to describe reality?” turns out to be—

Quillibrace:
—a reification of description, a separation of language and world, and a charming belief in a single optimal mirror.

Stray:
And once those assumptions are withdrawn?

Quillibrace:
Description is no longer a mirror.

It is re-situated.

A set of relational practices participating in the construal of reality itself—each effective within its own conditions, none final, none external.

Blottisham:
So we keep improving descriptions—but never arrive at the description?

Quillibrace:
A distressing prospect for those who enjoy endings.

Stray (quietly):
Perhaps not distressing. It means understanding remains something we do, not something we complete.

Quillibrace:
Miss Stray, as ever, rescues process from premature closure.

Blottisham:
I suppose I shall have to give up the idea of the perfect map.

Quillibrace:
You may keep your maps.

Blottisham (hopeful):
Ah—

Quillibrace:
You will simply have to stop mistaking them for the terrain.

Is consciousness separate from the physical world? — Discuss

A Conversation in the Senior Common Room (Where Someone Suspects the Mind Has Left the Building)

The fire continues to behave with impeccable physicality. Mr Blottisham looks at it as though it cannot possibly account for his inner life. Professor Quillibrace looks at Mr Blottisham as though it might. Miss Elowen Stray watches the relation between what appears and what makes appearing possible.


Blottisham:
Right. This one has been bothering me. Colours, thoughts, pain—none of it seems remotely like… that
(gestures at the fire)
So the question is obvious: Is consciousness separate from the physical world?

Quillibrace:
Obviousness, Mr Blottisham, is often a symptom.

Stray:
It does feel like a genuine divide. Experience doesn’t look like objects or processes.

Blottisham:
Exactly! So either consciousness is something different—or we’re missing something fundamental.

Quillibrace:
Or you have mistaken a difference in organisation for a difference in substance.


1. The Shape of the Divide

Stray:
The question assumes a boundary between “mental” and “physical.”

Blottisham:
Well yes. Thoughts here, atoms there.

Quillibrace:
And it further assumes:

  • that both are comparable as kinds of things,
  • that consciousness must either be identical with the physical or separate from it,
  • and that explanation requires choosing one side of the divide.

Blottisham:
That seems entirely reasonable.

Quillibrace:
It is at least entirely familiar.


2. The Setup Behind the Split

Stray:
So what has to be in place for the question to even make sense?

Quillibrace:
A rather tidy arrangement:

  • that “the physical world” is a complete, self-sufficient domain,
  • that consciousness is an additional entity requiring placement,
  • that experience and physical process can be specified independently,
  • that ontological categories must be mutually exclusive,
  • and that explanation means either reduction or separation.

Blottisham:
Well, what else could explanation mean?

Quillibrace:
Something less architectural, perhaps.

Stray:
So relational differentiation is being forced into a binary opposition?

Quillibrace:
Yes. A stratified organisation is being mistaken for a divided reality.


3. Three Familiar Missteps

Blottisham:
But surely consciousness is something. I can’t just dissolve it into relations.

Quillibrace:
No one is suggesting it be dissolved. Only that it be properly located.

Let us proceed carefully.

(a) Reification of consciousness
Consciousness is treated as a thing.

  • Instead of a mode of construal, it becomes an entity requiring ontological placement.

Blottisham:
Well, I certainly have it.

Quillibrace:
You certainly are engaged in it.

(b) Externalisation of the physical
The physical is treated as a complete domain.

  • As if it could be fully specified without reference to construal.
  • As if it were a closed system independent of experience.

Stray:
So the physical is imagined as complete on its own terms?

Quillibrace:
Yes. Which is convenient, but incorrect.

(c) De-stratification of organisation
Different relational strata are collapsed:

  • physical instantiation,
  • biological organisation,
  • cognitive-semiotic construal.

Blottisham:
And these are treated as… separate substances?

Quillibrace:
Rather than nested realisations within a single relational field.


4. If We Restore the Relations

Stray:
So within a relational account, consciousness isn’t separate?

Quillibrace:
It is not separate. Nor is it reducible in the crude sense.

More precisely:

  • Physical systems instantiate structured relations under constraint.
  • Some achieve organisational closure—living, self-maintaining systems.
  • Within these, relational processes become available to themselves as construal.
  • This self-relating structure is what we call consciousness.

Blottisham:
So consciousness is… the system becoming aware of its own relations?

Quillibrace:
A serviceable approximation.

Stray:
So it’s not outside the physical—it’s a reconfiguration within it?

Quillibrace:
Exactly. A shift in relational organisation, not a migration to another domain.

Blottisham:
So there aren’t two kinds of reality?

Quillibrace:
Only increasing complexity within one.


5. The Disappearance of the Divide

Blottisham:
So “Is consciousness separate from the physical world?”—what happens to it?

Quillibrace:
It loses its structural support.

It depends on:

  • treating consciousness as a thing,
  • assuming the physical is complete without construal,
  • collapsing stratified processes into a binary,
  • and requiring ontological exclusivity.

Remove these, and there is no separation to adjudicate.

Stray:
So the problem isn’t solved—it’s reconfigured?

Quillibrace:
It is returned to its proper level of description.


6. Why It Still Feels Like a Divide

Blottisham:
And yet experience still feels utterly different from the physical.

Quillibrace:
Of course it does.

  • Experience is immediate and private.
  • Physical description is abstract and third-person.
  • First-person construal resists third-person representation.
  • Tradition encourages the framing as a dualism.

Stray:
So consciousness feels non-physical because it’s the condition under which anything physical is experienced?

Quillibrace:
Precisely.

It does not appear as an object within the very descriptions it enables.

Blottisham:
So it’s invisible to the framework it helps generate?

Quillibrace:
A functional asymmetry, not an ontological gulf.


Closing

Blottisham:
So “Is consciousness separate from the physical world?” turns out to be—

Quillibrace:
—a reification of consciousness combined with a flattening of relational strata and an overconfident notion of physical completeness.

Stray:
And once those moves are undone?

Quillibrace:
Consciousness is neither separate nor reducible.

It is re-situated.

A relational mode of construal arising within physical systems that have become sufficiently complex to organise themselves as experience.

Blottisham:
So my thoughts are not floating somewhere outside the universe?

Quillibrace:
They are disappointingly well-integrated.

Stray (quietly):
Which makes them no less real—just differently realised.

Quillibrace:
Miss Stray, as ever, restores proportion.

Blottisham:
I suppose I shall have to give up the idea of my mind as a sort of… independent tenant.

Quillibrace:
You may retain the tenancy.

Blottisham (hopeful):
Ah—

Quillibrace:
But it is not a separate property.

Is meaning inherent in the world? — Discuss

A Conversation in the Senior Common Room (Where the World Is Suspected of Meaning Something)

The fire continues its disciplined performance of structured regularity. Professor Quillibrace approves of its constraints. Mr Blottisham suspects it may be trying to say something. Miss Elowen Stray watches the moment where pattern becomes significance—and where it does not.


Blottisham:
Right. I’ve been thinking. Sometimes things just feel… too coherent. Too structured to be accidental. Which raises the obvious question: Is meaning inherent in the world?

Quillibrace:
Obvious to whom?

Stray:
It does feel like a natural move. As if the world might carry significance in itself—waiting to be discovered.

Blottisham:
Exactly. Either meaning is built into reality, or we’re just… making it up.

Quillibrace:
A pleasing binary. Built, as usual, on a preliminary confusion.


1. The Shape of the Question

Stray:
So the question asks whether the world itself contains meaning—purpose, significance, intelligibility.

Blottisham:
Yes. Whether meaning is discovered or imposed.

Quillibrace:
Which implies:

  • that meaning could exist independently of interpretation,
  • that the world might “carry” significance prior to construal,
  • and that meaning is a property of things rather than a relational achievement.

Blottisham:
Well, where else would it be?

Quillibrace:
We might begin by asking where it occurs.


2. The Detachment of Meaning

Stray:
So what assumptions are doing the work here?

Quillibrace:
A familiar detachment:

  • that meaning is a transferable property,
  • that semiotic systems can be separated from what they interpret,
  • that the world can be described independently of interpretive activity,
  • that significance could exist without a system capable of realising it,
  • and that “the world” is a single domain capable of bearing global meaning.

Blottisham:
That sounds like a perfectly respectable metaphysics.

Quillibrace:
It is certainly a persistent one.

Stray:
So meaning is being treated as if it could exist prior to interpretation?

Quillibrace:
Or independently of it. As though interpretation merely uncovers what is already there.


3. Three Small Confusions, Carefully Maintained

Blottisham:
But surely patterns in nature—symmetry, structure—those are meaningful?

Quillibrace:
Let us be precise.

(a) Reification of meaning
Meaning is treated as a thing.

  • Instead of a relational outcome, it becomes a property objects possess.

Blottisham:
So the pattern has meaning?

Quillibrace:
Only once something makes it mean.

(b) Externalisation of semiotic activity
Interpretation is treated as optional.

  • As if meaning could exist before or without construal.
  • As if interpretation merely detects pre-existing significance.

Stray:
So the act of interpreting is made secondary rather than constitutive?

Quillibrace:
Exactly.

(c) De-stratification of domains
Physical and semiotic are collapsed.

  • Physical regularities are treated as inherently meaningful.
  • Semiotic processes are reduced to revealing what is already there.

Blottisham:
So we confuse structure with significance?

Quillibrace:
With admirable consistency.


4. If We Keep the Strata Intact

Stray:
So within a relational account, meaning isn’t in the world as such?

Quillibrace:
Not in the way the question suggests.

More precisely:

  • Physical systems instantiate structured relations under constraint.
  • Certain systems develop semiotic capacities.
  • Within those systems, patterns are construed, differentiated, evaluated.
  • Meaning arises as a product of these processes.

Blottisham:
So the world isn’t meaningful?

Quillibrace:
The world supports the emergence of meaning.

Stray:
So meaning isn’t added to the world, nor extracted from it—it’s actualised within semiotic processes?

Quillibrace:
Precisely.

Blottisham:
So the fire isn’t saying anything?

Quillibrace:
Only if you insist on interviewing it.


5. The Disappearance of the Question

Blottisham:
So “Is meaning inherent in the world?”—what happens to it?

Quillibrace:
It loses its footing.

It depends on:

  • treating meaning as a thing,
  • detaching interpretation from its systems,
  • collapsing physical and semiotic strata,
  • and assuming a global domain that could bear meaning.

Remove these, and there is no coherent sense in which the world could be said to contain meaning.

Stray:
So meaning doesn’t disappear—it’s just no longer located in things?

Quillibrace:
It returns to its conditions of actualisation.


6. Why It Still Feels Like Discovery

Blottisham:
And yet meaning often feels like it’s found.

Quillibrace:
Of course.

  • Humans are exquisitely sensitive to pattern.
  • Natural regularities are highly interpretable.
  • Cultural systems encourage the idea of cosmic significance.
  • And arbitrariness is psychologically intolerable.

Stray:
So when something “reveals itself” as meaningful—

Quillibrace:
—you are witnessing the operation of a semiotic system, not the unveiling of a pre-existing property.

Blottisham:
So insight is… constructed?

Quillibrace:
Actualised. If we are being charitable.


Closing

Blottisham:
So “Is meaning inherent in the world?” turns out to be—

Quillibrace:
—a reification of meaning combined with a collapse of physical and semiotic domains, and the charming notion that interpretation is optional.

Stray:
And once those moves are undone?

Quillibrace:
Meaning is neither discovered in the world nor projected onto it.

It is actualised.

A relational achievement of semiotic systems through which structure becomes significance under conditions of construal.

Blottisham:
So the world isn’t meaningful—but it allows meaning to happen?

Quillibrace:
A serviceable summary.

Stray (quietly):
Which makes meaning no less real—just more precisely located.

Quillibrace:
Miss Stray, as ever, restores dignity to a displaced concept.

Blottisham:
I suppose I shall have to stop expecting the universe to mean something on its own.

Quillibrace:
You may continue expecting it.

Blottisham (hopeful):
Ah—

Quillibrace:
You will simply have to supply the conditions under which it does.