Saturday, 18 July 2026

XIII. The Conversation That Learned to Observe Itself

The fire had burned low.

Outside, the quadrangle was unusually still.

Mr Blottisham was looking thoughtfully around the Senior Common Room.

Professor Quillibrace noticed.

"You appear unusually reflective."

"I've been wondering something."

"Dangerous."

"I know."


Miss Elowen Stray smiled.

"What is it?"

Blottisham hesitated.

"I've begun to wonder whether we've spent the past several weeks discussing artificial intelligence..."

"...or something else."


Quillibrace did not answer immediately.

Instead he asked,

"What was the first question we considered?"

Blottisham thought.

"How scientific ideas become possible."

"And after that?"

"How anomalies reshape possibilities."

"And then?"

"Theories."

"Language."

"Scientific entities."

"Conceptual ecologies."

"Dark matter."

"Inflation."

"Quantum mechanics."

"The multiverse."

He stopped.

"It all seems rather connected."


Miss Stray looked slowly around the room.

"I've noticed something."

"What is it?"

"We keep using the same words."

"Do we?"

"'Gardens.'"

"Yes."

"'Scaffolding.'"

"Indeed."

"'Biographies.'"

"'Brass plaques.'"

"'Trellises.'"

"'Ecologies.'"

She paused.

"It is almost as though..."

"...yes?"

"...our own conversations have developed a vocabulary."


Quillibrace smiled.

"They have."


Blottisham laughed.

"So we've built a theory."

"I should be careful."

"A framework, then."

"Better."

"But why does it now seem easier to think about these things than it did at the beginning?"


No one answered immediately.

The silence itself seemed to contain the reply.


At length Miss Stray spoke.

"Perhaps..."

"...yes?"

"...because each conversation made the next one possible."


Quillibrace looked at her with unmistakable pleasure.

"My dear Miss Stray..."

"Yes?"

"...I believe you have just summarised the entire series."


Blottisham leaned back.

"So artificial intelligence..."

"...yes?"

"...isn't really different."

"In what respect?"

"It is another idea whose ecology is growing."


Quillibrace nodded.

"Consider how people first described these systems."

"They predicted words."

"Quite."

"Then they reasoned."

"Indeed."

"Then they understood."

"So it was said."

"Then they became intelligent."

"Sometimes."

"Then conscious."

"Occasionally."

"And eventually..."

He smiled.

"...they began acquiring rights."


Miss Stray looked thoughtful.

"The systems certainly changed."

"They did."

"But the language changed even faster."


Quillibrace rose and wandered slowly to the window.

"The observations improved."

"Yes."

"The capabilities expanded."

"Indeed."

"But alongside them..."

"...yes?"

"...an entire civilisation began constructing meanings."


Outside, a group of students crossed the quadrangle, animatedly debating something none of the three could hear.

One gestured energetically.

Another shook her head.

A third laughed.

The conversation disappeared into the library.

Blottisham watched them.

"They're probably discussing AI."

"They may be."

"Or consciousness."

"Perhaps."

"Or ethics."

"Quite."

"It all seems connected."


Miss Stray smiled.

"The ecology has escaped."


Quillibrace laughed softly.

"A delightful way of putting it."


For a while none of them spoke.

The fire settled quietly into glowing embers.

Then Blottisham asked,

"Do you think artificial intelligence is conscious?"


Quillibrace looked at him over the rim of his spectacles.

"My dear Blottisham..."

"Yes?"

"I notice that, several weeks ago, you would have asked whether it is conscious."

"And now?"

"Now you have asked what I think."

Blottisham looked surprised.

"I have."

"You no longer imagine the question has an immediate answer."


Miss Stray looked from one to the other.

"I wonder whether that is what philosophy contributes."

"What?"

"Not certainty."

"No."

"Better questions."


Quillibrace nodded.

"Science observes the world."

"Yes."

"Philosophy occasionally observes science."

"And?"

She looked slowly around the familiar room.

"Perhaps, every so often..."

"...yes?"

"...it also observes the observer."


The chapel bell sounded Compline.

The three scholars remained seated for a while longer.

The conversation had nowhere further to go.

Or perhaps it had finally arrived where it had always been travelling.

At length Quillibrace rose.

"We have spent many evenings discussing conceptual ecologies."

"We have."

"But I rather suspect..."

He glanced around the old Common Room.

"...that one has quietly been growing here as well."


They gathered their books.

As they reached the door, Blottisham paused.

"I've just realised something."

Quillibrace waited.

"When we began..."

"...yes?"

"...I thought these conversations were about science."

"And now?"

"I think they were about thinking."

Quillibrace smiled.

"A distinction worthy of St Anselm's."


The three stepped into the cloister.

Behind them, the Common Room fell silent once more.

The chairs remained where they had always stood.

The fire continued to glow.

Nothing visible had changed.

Yet the room now contained a history that had not existed when the first conversation began.

Not because the furniture had altered.

But because a shared way of seeing had quietly taken root within it.

Perhaps that, Miss Stray reflected as the chapel door closed behind them, was how every genuine intellectual tradition begins.

Not with answers.

But with a conversation that gradually teaches itself how to ask better questions.

XII. The Catalogue and the Shelves

The Senior Common Room was unusually empty.

Most of the Fellows had wandered across to the library, where a newly completed catalogue was being unveiled.

Mr Blottisham returned looking faintly bewildered.

"I've discovered something extraordinary."

Professor Quillibrace looked up.

"The missing Aristotle?"

"Worse."

"Worse?"

"The catalogue contains books that are not on the shelves."


Quillibrace smiled.

"I should hope so."

"You approve?"

"Entirely."

"I thought catalogues described libraries."

"They do."

"Then why describe books that aren't here?"


Miss Elowen Stray closed the volume she had been reading.

"Are they imaginary books?"

"No."

"Then what are they?"

Blottisham consulted his notes.

"Some have been ordered."

"Yes."

"Some belong to collections still being organised."

"Indeed."

"And some..."

He looked puzzled.

"...exist only because the librarians expect them to arrive."


Quillibrace nodded thoughtfully.

"So the catalogue has begun exploring possibilities."


Blottisham sat down.

"I don't think libraries should speculate."

"No?"

"No. They should contain books."

"They do."

"But not imaginary ones."

Miss Stray smiled.

"Perhaps there is a difference between imagining books..."

"...yes?"

"...and preparing for them."


Quillibrace rose.

"Tell me."

"Yes?"

"Which came first?"

"The shelves."

"The catalogue?"

Blottisham hesitated.

"I suppose..."

"...it depends."

"Quite."


He walked slowly towards the window.

"A good catalogue does more than record what already exists."

"It does?"

"It organises what the library could become."


Blottisham frowned.

"That sounds suspiciously philosophical."

"I fear it is."


For a while they watched students carrying newly acquired books into the reading room.

Miss Stray spoke first.

"I've been thinking about the multiverse."

Blottisham looked relieved.

"So have I."

"Have you?"

"At least, I've been trying."


Quillibrace smiled.

"Most discussions begin by asking whether the multiverse exists."

"A reasonable question."

"Perhaps."

"But perhaps an earlier one is..."

"...yes?"

"...how did anyone begin talking about it?"


Blottisham thought carefully.

"It didn't simply appear."

"No."

"It emerged from inflation."

"Among other places."

"String theory."

"Indeed."

"Quantum mechanics."

"Quite."

Miss Stray nodded.

"So several conversations arrived at similar destinations."


Quillibrace looked pleased.

"A convergence."

"But not necessarily..."

"...yes?"

"...a confirmation."


The fire settled quietly.

Blottisham looked puzzled again.

"So several theories all point towards something similar."

"They may."

"Doesn't that make it true?"

Quillibrace shook his head gently.

"It makes it interesting."


Miss Stray looked towards the library across the quadrangle.

"I wonder whether mathematics sometimes resembles the catalogue."

Quillibrace remained silent.

"It organises possibilities."

"Yes."

"It reveals connections."

"Indeed."

"But the shelves..."

"...yes?"

"...are observation."


Blottisham suddenly laughed.

"So the catalogue may become much larger than the library."

"Temporarily."

"And that isn't necessarily a mistake?"

"No."

"It simply means..."

He paused.

"...the librarians have travelled further than the porters."

Quillibrace laughed aloud.

"A splendid distinction."


They sat together for some time.

Outside, crates of newly arrived books were being unloaded.

The catalogue had anticipated them months before.

Some fitted perfectly into the waiting shelves.

Others would require the library to be reorganised.

A few, no doubt, would never arrive at all.

Miss Stray watched quietly.

"The catalogue is not the library."

"No."

"But without the catalogue..."

"...yes?"

"...the library would never know where it might grow."


The chapel bell sounded the hour.

Blottisham closed his notebook.

"I've always imagined mathematics proving things."

"And now?"

"I wonder whether it also explores them."

Quillibrace smiled.

"My dear Blottisham..."

"Yes?"

"It has been doing both for rather a long time."


They rose together and crossed towards the library.

Inside, the shelves remained reassuringly finite.

The catalogue, however, hinted at collections not yet assembled, books not yet acquired, and subjects not yet fully imagined.

Neither was complete without the other.

As they entered, Miss Stray paused beneath the great catalogue cabinet.

"It seems," she said softly, "that every growing library contains more possibilities than volumes."

Quillibrace nodded.

"And every mature science," he replied, "must occasionally decide whether its catalogue is expanding faster than its shelves."

The librarian, overhearing only the final sentence, looked faintly alarmed.

XI. The Music Behind the Notes

As they crossed the quadrangle, the sound of the College orchestra drifted from the Assembly Hall.

Mr Blottisham paused.

"They're rehearsing rather well."

Professor Quillibrace listened for a moment.

"They are."

"I've always envied musicians."

"Have you?"

"They know exactly what they're supposed to play."


Miss Elowen Stray smiled.

"They know what is written."

Blottisham looked at her.

"Is there a difference?"


Quillibrace opened the hall door quietly.

Inside, the orchestra was rehearsing under the conductor's patient eye.

Violins, cellos and woodwinds moved together with impressive precision.

The music stopped.

The conductor frowned.

"Gentlemen," he said to the string section, "the notes are correct."

A pause.

"But the phrase is not."


Blottisham looked puzzled.

"How can that be?"

"The notes were right."

"They were."

"So what was wrong?"

Quillibrace smiled.

"An excellent question."


The rehearsal resumed.

Again the orchestra stopped.

This time two violinists began discussing the passage.

"I think the composer intended resignation."

"Nonsense."

"It is clearly hope."

"But look at the harmony."

"Exactly."

Blottisham listened with increasing bewilderment.

"They're arguing."

"They are."

"But they're playing the same notes."


Miss Stray watched thoughtfully.

"Perhaps the disagreement is not about the notes."

"No."

"It is about what the notes mean."


Back in the Common Room, Blottisham poured himself another cup of tea.

"I think I understand."

"Do you?"

"They agree on the score."

"Yes."

"But not on the interpretation."

Quillibrace nodded.

"And does that remind you of anything?"


Blottisham thought for a long moment.

Then he smiled.

"Quantum mechanics."


Quillibrace looked delighted.

"Indeed."

"The mathematics works."

"Remarkably well."

"The predictions work."

"Extraordinarily well."

"The experiments agree."

"With astonishing precision."

"But..."

"...yes?"

"...physicists still disagree about what the mathematics is saying."


Miss Stray leaned forward.

"So the equations resemble the musical score."

"Precisely."

"The interpretations resemble different performances."

Quillibrace nodded.

"A most illuminating analogy."


Blottisham frowned.

"But surely one interpretation must be correct."

"Perhaps."

"And the others mistaken."

"Possibly."

"But the mathematics itself..."

"...yes?"

"...does not yet force the choice."


The room fell quiet.

Outside, the orchestra began rehearsing once more.

The melody floated faintly through the open window.

Miss Stray spoke almost to herself.

"How curious."

"What is?"

"The same marks on a page can support several coherent understandings."


Quillibrace smiled.

"And science occasionally behaves in exactly the same manner."


Blottisham looked thoughtful.

"I've noticed something."

"What?"

"In the dark matter discussion..."

"...yes?"

"...people disagreed because they didn't yet know enough."

"Quite."

"And with inflation..."

"...yes?"

"...one successful idea produced many descendants."

"Indeed."

"But here..."

He looked puzzled.

"...the mathematics itself remains the same."


Quillibrace nodded.

"The habitat remains."

"The inhabitants differ."

Miss Stray looked pleased.

"So quantum theory is rather like a house occupied by several families."

Quillibrace laughed softly.

"Each convinced the architect intended them."


The fire crackled gently.

For a while no one spoke.

Then Blottisham asked the question that had clearly been troubling him.

"So what is the wavefunction?"

Quillibrace smiled over the rim of his teacup.

"An excellent way to begin an argument."


Miss Stray laughed.

"I notice you didn't answer."

"I couldn't."

"Because you don't know?"

"Because the question already assumes one particular kind of answer."


She considered this.

"So perhaps we should first ask..."

"...yes?"

"...what role the wavefunction plays within the theory..."

"...before deciding what sort of thing it is."

Quillibrace inclined his head.

"A philosophical instinct of the highest order."


Outside, the orchestra reached the end of the movement.

This time the conductor smiled.

"Better," he said.

"The notes were unchanged."

He paused.

"But now the music has begun."


The three scholars listened in silence.

At length Blottisham spoke.

"I always imagined that once scientists agreed upon the equations..."

"...yes?"

"...they had finished the difficult part."

Quillibrace looked towards the music drifting across the quadrangle.

"My dear Blottisham..."

"Yes?"

"Sometimes that is merely the point at which the conversation truly begins."

They rose together.

The score remained exactly as it had always been.

Only the understanding of it continued to evolve.

X. The Theory That Became a University

The noticeboard outside the Senior Common Room had become almost completely covered.

Mr Blottisham examined it with concern.

"Something must be done."

Professor Quillibrace looked up from his tea.

"About what?"

"The proliferation."

"The proliferation of what?"

"Committees."

Quillibrace glanced towards the board.

"Ah."

"There is now a committee for reviewing the committees."

"Yes."

"And a subcommittee to evaluate whether the committee-reviewing committee has achieved its objectives."

"Naturally."

Blottisham sighed.

"I fear the original purpose has been forgotten."


Miss Elowen Stray smiled.

"That is an interesting accusation."

"Why?"

"Because many successful things develop in precisely that manner."

Blottisham looked suspicious.

"I don't think you're defending committees."

"Not necessarily."

"Good."

"I am defending growth."


Quillibrace folded his newspaper.

"Consider St Anselm's itself."

"The College?"

"Yes."

"Very well."

"Was there always a Department of Comparative Philosophy and Historical Ontology?"

"Of course not."

"An Institute for Advanced Studies in Conceptual Ecology?"

"Certainly not."

"The annual symposium on the metaphysics of gardening?"

Blottisham looked alarmed.

"I sincerely hope not."


Quillibrace smiled.

"And yet the College began somewhere."

"With a foundation."

"Precisely."

"And then?"

"Questions appeared."


Miss Stray looked towards the shelves of old college histories.

"One question requires a specialist."

"Yes."

"One specialist creates a subject."

"Indeed."

"A subject creates a department."

"Quite."

"A department creates further questions."

"And eventually..."

Quillibrace gestured towards the noticeboard.

"...the inevitable paperwork."


Blottisham laughed despite himself.

"So you are saying theories behave like universities?"

"Not exactly."

"No?"

"Universities provide a useful analogy."


He walked to the blackboard.

"Imagine a scientific idea introduced to solve a particular problem."

He wrote:

Why does the universe look the way it does?

"A question appears."

"Yes."

"An answer is proposed."

He added:

Perhaps an early period of rapid expansion.

"Inflation."

"Quite."

"And then?"


Blottisham thought.

"One asks how it happened."

"Yes."

"What caused it?"

"Yes."

"How did it end?"

"Indeed."

"Whether it happens once or many times."

"Precisely."

Miss Stray smiled.

"The first answer creates new questions."


Quillibrace nodded.

"And this is the curious feature of successful ideas."

"They don't simply answer questions."

"No."

"They manufacture new ones."


Blottisham looked thoughtful.

"That sounds almost like a problem."

"Why?"

"Because if an idea creates endless questions, how do we know it is succeeding?"

Quillibrace smiled.

"A very good question."


He pointed towards the College around them.

"Does the existence of new departments prove that the original College failed?"

"No."

"Does the fact that the library contains books nobody has read prove the library has failed?"

"No."

"Does the fact that a theory produces new possibilities prove that it has failed?"

Blottisham paused.

"I suppose not."


Miss Stray opened the old College register.

"Perhaps the mistake is expecting growth to preserve simplicity."

"Explain."

"When a seed becomes a tree, it becomes more complicated."

"Yes."

"But complexity is not necessarily confusion."

"No."

"It can be evidence of fertility."


Blottisham looked again at the noticeboard.

"So inflation became..."

"...yes?"

"...a kind of scientific university."

Quillibrace considered this.

"A rather cosmological one."


"A university?"

"Of possibilities."

"With departments?"

"Many."

"Some successful?"

"Certainly."

"Some abandoned?"

"Almost inevitably."

"Some still under investigation?"

"Most."


Miss Stray looked amused.

"And perhaps some departments whose existence seems questionable to future generations."

Blottisham nodded.

"Like the Department of Conceptual Ecology."

"Exactly."


The fire crackled quietly.

For a while they sat in silence.

Then Blottisham spoke.

"I think I see the difference."

"Between what?"

"A bad idea that produces complications..."

"...yes?"

"...and a good idea that produces possibilities."

Quillibrace smiled.

"An important distinction."


Outside, a group of students hurried across the quadrangle carrying books.

One stopped suddenly, remembered something, and turned back towards the library.

Miss Stray watched them.

"The College changes every year."

"Yes."

"But it remains St Anselm's."

"Indeed."

"Perhaps theories are similar."


Quillibrace nodded.

"A successful theory is not necessarily one that prevents further questions."

"No?"

"Perhaps it is one that creates better ones."


The evening bell rang.

The three scholars gathered their papers.

As they left the Common Room, Blottisham glanced once more at the crowded noticeboard.

"I still think there are too many committees."

"Perhaps."

"But..."

"...yes?"

"...I admit that some of them may exist because someone asked an interesting question."

Quillibrace smiled.

"That is how most institutions begin."

"And most theories?"

"Indeed."


They walked beneath the cloisters.

Above them, new stonework had been added to an old arch.

The College was still recognisably itself.

Yet every generation had left additions, alterations and unexpected extensions.

No one had designed the whole.

No one could predict the final form.

And perhaps that was precisely why it continued to live.

IX. The Curious Career of Dark Matter

The evening fire burned steadily.

Mr Blottisham was reading an article in an astronomy magazine with increasing concentration.

At length he looked up.

"I've been thinking about dark matter."

Professor Quillibrace looked mildly surprised.

"How very cosmological of you."

"It seems to make up most of the universe."

"So one often reads."

"And yet..."

"...yes?"

"...nobody appears to know what it is."

Quillibrace smiled.

"An excellent beginning."


Miss Elowen Stray laid aside her knitting.

"I wonder whether that is the first question we should ask."

Blottisham frowned.

"What could be earlier than asking what something is?"

"What made anyone think of it at all?"


Quillibrace nodded approvingly.

"Tell me, Blottisham."

"Yes?"

"Did astronomers discover dark matter?"

"Surely they did."

"What did they actually observe?"

Blottisham hesitated.

"Galaxies."

"Indeed."

"What about them?"

"They rotated..."

"...yes?"

"...rather unexpectedly."

"And galaxy clusters?"

"They seemed too massive."

"And gravitational lensing?"

"It suggested more gravity than visible matter could explain."

Quillibrace smiled gently.

"So they discovered..."

Blottisham stopped.

"...a problem."


For a moment no one spoke.

The fire shifted softly.

Miss Stray broke the silence.

"A problem is not yet an explanation."

"No."

"It merely changes the questions."


Quillibrace leaned back.

"What possibilities suddenly became available?"

Blottisham counted carefully on his fingers.

"The observations might be mistaken."

"Quite."

"Perhaps there was ordinary matter we couldn't see."

"Indeed."

"Perhaps gravity itself required modification."

"Very good."

"Or..."

"...yes?"

"...there might be an entirely new form of matter."

Quillibrace inclined his head.

"One possibility among several."


Blottisham looked thoughtful.

"But that isn't how people speak now."

"No?"

"They speak of dark matter as though it were already part of the furniture of the universe."

Miss Stray smiled.

"The brass plaques again."

Quillibrace laughed quietly.

"Precisely."


Blottisham looked pleased.

"So we've found another ontological escalator."

"We may have done."

"The language became more confident."

"Because the explanation became more successful."

"But success..."

"...yes?"

"...is not quite the same thing as certainty."


They sat quietly for a while.

Outside, twilight was settling over the college gardens.

Miss Stray looked towards the old oak.

"I've noticed something."

"What is it?"

"When a tree thrives..."

"...yes?"

"...it doesn't merely become taller."

"No."

"It produces branches."


Quillibrace smiled.

"And dark matter?"

"Has done exactly the same."


Blottisham looked puzzled.

"I don't follow."

"It began as one proposal."

"Yes."

"Then came WIMPs."

"Indeed."

"Axions."

"Quite."

"Sterile neutrinos."

"Yes."

"Primordial black holes."

"And many others."

Blottisham laughed.

"So the theory has become rather a large tree."


"Not merely a tree," said Quillibrace.

"An orchard."


Miss Stray looked amused.

"Some trees will flourish."

"Indeed."

"Others may fail."

"Quite."

"But planting many varieties is not evidence that the gardener is confused."

"No?"

"It is evidence that the soil has proved fertile."


Blottisham sat silently for a long moment.

"I think I understand."

"Do you?"

"We often ask whether dark matter exists."

"A natural question."

"But perhaps an earlier question is..."

He searched for the words.

"...what work the idea has been doing."

Quillibrace's expression brightened.

"A considerably earlier question."


Outside, the gardener was inspecting several young saplings planted the previous spring.

One had grown vigorously.

Another appeared unlikely to survive.

A third had produced unexpected shoots.

Miss Stray watched them carefully.

"The gardener doesn't yet know which trees will shape the avenue."

"No."

"But he already knows..."

"...yes?"

"...that the planting has changed the future of the garden."


The college clock struck eight.

Blottisham closed the magazine.

"I began the evening wondering whether dark matter was real."

"And now?"

"I'm more interested in how it became possible."

Quillibrace smiled.

"My dear Blottisham..."

"Yes?"

"I suspect you have been paying rather more attention than you realise."

The three scholars rose.

Outside, the young trees stood quietly in the gathering darkness.

Whether each would flourish, fail, or transform the garden in ways no one yet anticipated remained unknown.

Yet their presence had already altered what the gardeners could imagine planting next.

VIII. The Art of Letting Go

The autumn air had arrived almost unnoticed.

Leaves drifted slowly across the lawns of St Anselm's.

Mr Blottisham watched the gardeners loading branches into a wheelbarrow.

"I've always thought gardening rather destructive."

Professor Quillibrace looked up from his bench.

"Have you?"

"They spend half their time cutting things down."

"They do."

"One wonders why they plant them in the first place."


Miss Elowen Stray smiled.

"I imagine the gardeners ask themselves the opposite question."


Blottisham frowned.

"If a plant is healthy, surely one should leave it alone."

Quillibrace rose and walked towards a rose bed that had recently been pruned.

"Tell me."

"Yes?"

"What would happen if nothing in this garden were ever removed?"

Blottisham looked around.

"It would become rather full."

"And after a few years?"

"Very full."

"And eventually?"

Blottisham hesitated.

"I suppose..."

"...yes?"

"...everything would begin competing with everything else."


Quillibrace nodded.

"The garden would not become richer."

"No."

"It would become impenetrable."


They walked slowly beneath a line of old beech trees.

Miss Stray watched one of the gardeners carefully remove a vigorous shoot from the base of an ancient yew.

"It seems rather severe."

"It does."

"Was the shoot unhealthy?"

"No."

"Then why remove it?"

Quillibrace smiled.

"Because health is not the only question a gardener asks."


Blottisham looked puzzled.

"What else matters?"

"Whether the garden can continue to grow."


A comfortable silence settled between them.

The only sound was the quiet clipping of secateurs.

Blottisham spoke first.

"I've always imagined science accumulating ideas."

"A common image."

"Like books filling a library."

"Indeed."

"But now..."

"...yes?"

"...I'm beginning to wonder whether it resembles gardening more than collecting."


Quillibrace nodded approvingly.

"What happens whenever a new theory appears?"

"It generates new questions."

"Quite."

"And new explanations."

"Yes."

"And new possibilities."

"Certainly."

"What if none of the old possibilities were ever abandoned?"

Blottisham considered this.

"The number would become enormous."

"And useful?"

"...perhaps not."


Miss Stray had stopped beside an old apple tree.

Several branches had recently been removed.

"The tree looks smaller."

"It does."

"But somehow..."

"...yes?"

"...it also looks healthier."


Quillibrace rested one hand upon the trunk.

"I suspect ideas behave rather similarly."


Blottisham laughed.

"So poor old theories must occasionally be pruned."

"Occasionally?"

"Frequently."

"But surely some are proved wrong."

"Some."

"And others?"

"They simply cease to bear fruit."


They resumed walking.

A robin landed briefly on a freshly cut branch before darting away again.

Miss Stray looked thoughtful.

"I've noticed something."

Quillibrace waited.

"When people describe old scientific theories..."

"...yes?"

"...they often speak as though they disappeared."

"And?"

"But they seldom entirely disappear."


Blottisham looked curious.

"What do you mean?"

"The ether vanished."

"It did."

"But fields remained."

"Quite."

"Bohr's atom disappeared."

"Yes."

"But quantum theory inherited much that came before."

Quillibrace smiled.

"So perhaps ideas leave descendants."


Blottisham stopped walking.

"I rather like that."

He looked back towards the pruning.

"The gardener isn't destroying the garden."

"No."

"He's deciding what the garden shall become."


For a few moments none of them spoke.

The afternoon light filtered through branches that had themselves survived generations of careful pruning.

Miss Stray watched the gardeners gathering fallen branches into neat bundles.

"I don't think they're throwing the branches away."

"No?"

"They're making space."

Quillibrace's face brightened.

"An excellent distinction."


The chapel clock struck three.

Blottisham picked up one of the fallen leaves.

"I've always thought science progressed by discovering better ideas."

Quillibrace smiled.

"And now?"

"I suspect it also progresses by relinquishing good ones."


They turned towards the cloister.

Behind them, the gardeners continued their quiet work.

No flower complained.

No tree protested.

Yet by removing what could no longer serve the whole, they were already preparing a garden that none of them would fully live to see.

Miss Stray looked back one final time.

"It seems," she said softly, "that wisdom is not measured only by what one cultivates..."

Quillibrace waited.

"...but also by what one has learned to release."

Quillibrace inclined his head.

"My dear Miss Stray..."

"Yes?"

"I believe every mature science eventually discovers precisely that."

The three scholars disappeared beneath the cloister arch.

Behind them, another branch fell quietly to the ground.

Not as a sign of decay.

But as an act of preparation.