Saturday, 9 May 2026

Poststructuralism

The Senior Common Room had been lent, for the evening, to a visiting scholar whose name was printed on the programme as:

Dr X. (interpretation discouraged)

Nobody had known what this meant. The Dean had insisted it was “cutting-edge interdisciplinary engagement.” Quillibrace had quietly replied that so was falling down stairs.

Dr X arrived with no notes, no slides, and an expression that suggested language itself was being used without permission.

Miss Elowen Stray was already alert.

Mr Blottisham had brought a notebook titled Key Takeaways (Pending Reality Check).

Quillibrace sat with the patience of a man preparing to witness grammar undergo moral dissolution.

Dr X began:

“Meaning is not stable.”

A pause.

“That is to say, stability is itself a rhetorical effect of discursive repetition within regimes of signification that—”

Blottisham scribbled furiously.

Quillibrace lifted a hand slightly.

“I would like to clarify,” he said, “whether a claim has been made yet.”

Dr X smiled gently.

“Ah. The desire for claims.”

Blottisham looked up.

“Yes! That’s a claim!”

Miss Stray said nothing.

Quillibrace nodded once.

“Not necessarily,” he said. “It may be an observation about the status of claim-making.”

Dr X continued:

“Every assertion is already implicated in structures that exceed it.”

Blottisham underlined this three times.

“So assertions are trapped,” he said.

“Not trapped,” said Dr X. “Situated.”

Quillibrace leaned back slightly.

“I see,” he said carefully. “So when you say ‘meaning is not stable,’ are you asserting that meaning is not stable?”

Dr X paused.

“That would be too simple.”

Blottisham looked confused.

“But you said it.”

Dr X smiled.

“I produced a textual event.”

Silence.

Miss Stray tapped her pen lightly.

“There may be a difference,” she said gently, “between producing a textual event and making a proposition.”

Dr X nodded approvingly.

“Yes. Exactly.”

Quillibrace closed his eyes for a moment.

“My concern,” he said slowly, “is that we are now in a situation where it is impossible to determine whether anything has been said in order to respond to it.”

Dr X responded:

“Response is also a form of textual production.”

Blottisham whispered to Miss Stray:

“I think I’m losing the conversation.”

“You are not,” she said softly. “The conversation is losing itself.”

Quillibrace resumed:

“If I ask whether meaning is stable, is that a meaningful question in your framework?”

Dr X considered.

“It is a gesture toward instability within the metaphysics of meaning.”

Blottisham wrote:

QUESTION = GESTURE

Then paused.

“Does that mean it’s not a question?”

Dr X replied:

“It is not reducible to interrogative form.”

Quillibrace rubbed his temples.

“So it is neither a claim nor a question.”

Dr X smiled.

“It is both and neither.”

A long silence followed.

The fire crackled with what sounded like interpretive hesitation.

Blottisham looked at Quillibrace.

“So… has anything been said?”

Quillibrace opened his eyes slowly.

“That,” he said, “is precisely the question I have been attempting to answer all evening.”

Miss Stray leaned forward slightly.

“Perhaps,” she said, “we are witnessing a mode of discourse in which meaning is continuously deferred rather than stabilised into propositional form.”

Blottisham frowned.

“So it’s like language, but it never lands?”

Quillibrace nodded faintly.

“A useful description of certain academic tendencies, yes.”

Dr X added:

“To land would be to impose closure.”

Blottisham looked alarmed.

“So closure is bad?”

“It is violent,” said Dr X gently.

Quillibrace exhaled very slowly.

“My dear colleague,” he said, “if closure is violence, then conversation becomes a crime scene.”

Dr X smiled.

“Or an event.”

A pause.

Blottisham whispered:

“I still don’t know if they’ve said anything.”

Miss Stray replied:

“That may be the point.”

Quillibrace stood up briefly, then sat down again as though reconsidering the ontological commitment required.

After a moment, he said:

“I have spent the entire evening attempting to determine whether a claim has been made.”

He looked at Dr X.

“And I am now unsure whether that sentence itself is a claim.”

Dr X inclined their head.

“That is a productive uncertainty.”

Blottisham closed his notebook.

“I have written down: everything is uncertain.”

He paused.

“Is that correct?”

Quillibrace looked at him.

“It is correct,” he said, “in the sense that it will generate further uncertainty.”

A silence settled.

Dr X smiled peacefully, as though the room itself had become a draft version of meaning.

Miss Stray closed her notebook gently.

“I think,” she said, “we may have successfully avoided concluding anything.”

Quillibrace nodded once.

“Yes,” he said.

“A rare achievement.”

And somewhere in the background, Blottisham quietly underlined his note again:

DID THEY SAY ANYTHING? (ongoing research project)

The Simulation Hypothesis

The Senior Common Room had developed, over time, a complex and adversarial relationship with its coffee machine.

It was not merely broken. That would have been too simple.

It was performatively unreliable.

It occupied a space between appliance and philosophical statement, producing coffee only after a ritual of escalating error messages that seemed increasingly judgemental in tone.

Professor Quillibrace regarded it as an example of “non-cooperative materiality.”

Miss Elowen Stray had begun to map its behaviours.

Mr Blottisham had begun to fear it.

On this particular morning, the machine emitted its usual sequence:

ERROR 1: WATER NOT FOUND

A pause.

Then, unexpectedly:

ERROR 1: WATER NOT FOUND

A second time.

Blottisham froze.

Quillibrace looked up slowly.

“That is unusual,” he admitted.

Blottisham pointed.

“It repeated itself.”

“Yes,” said Miss Stray. “I see that.”

Blottisham leaned back slightly.

“No,” he said. “You don’t understand. It repeated itself in exactly the same way.”

Quillibrace blinked.

“I would hope so. That is typically how repetition works.”

Blottisham shook his head.

“This is not malfunction,” he said quietly. “This is pattern confirmation.”

Miss Stray frowned slightly.

“In what sense?”

Blottisham lowered his voice.

“We are in a simulation.”

A silence followed.

The coffee machine emitted a small, satisfied whirr, as though it had been waiting for this exact interpretive moment.

Quillibrace exhaled slowly.

“My dear Blottisham,” he said, “you have reached a conclusion of considerable metaphysical ambition on the basis of a beverage appliance repeating a diagnostic string.”

Blottisham nodded gravely.

“Yes.”

Miss Stray tilted her head.

“Can you explain the inference?”

Blottisham gestured at the machine.

“If reality were fundamentally real,” he said, “error messages would vary. They would degrade. Entropy would introduce noise.”

Quillibrace raised an eyebrow.

“And yet?”

“And yet,” Blottisham continued, “it repeated exactly.”

He leaned forward.

“That is not chaos. That is code execution.”

The coffee machine beeped again.

This time:

ERROR 1: WATER NOT FOUND

Blottisham visibly flinched.

“Three times,” he whispered.

Quillibrace pressed his fingers together.

“My dear fellow,” he said gently, “repetition is not evidence of simulation. It is evidence of a system operating within constraints.”

Blottisham frowned.

“That sounds like what a simulation would want you to think.”

Miss Stray wrote something in her notebook.

“That is not a falsifiable position,” she observed.

Blottisham nodded.

“Exactly.”

Quillibrace closed his eyes briefly.

“This is one of the more efficient epistemic collapses I have witnessed before breakfast.”

Blottisham persisted.

“If reality were fundamental, why would it produce identical errors?”

Miss Stray answered carefully.

“Because identical conditions can produce identical outputs within stable systems.”

Blottisham shook his head.

“But why would the system tell me it is an error twice?”

Quillibrace looked at him.

“It is not telling you anything.”

A pause.

“It is emitting a state description.”

Blottisham sat back, unconvinced.

“So you’re saying there is no hidden layer?”

Quillibrace considered this.

“There is always a hidden layer,” he said. “But not necessarily one that cares about your metaphysical anxieties.”

At this point the coffee machine emitted a new message:

PLEASE REFILL WATER TANK

Then, immediately:

PLEASE REFILL WATER TANK

Blottisham stood up.

“There,” he said quietly. “That is intentionality.”

Miss Stray looked up.

“Why?”

“Because it is persistent,” he said. “It is insisting.”

Quillibrace sighed.

“My dear Blottisham, persistence is not intention. A dripping tap is not petitioning Parliament.”

Blottisham looked shaken.

“But it repeats with variation when conditions change.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace. “So do thermostats. And tides. And bureaucracy.”

A silence settled.

The coffee machine made a soft grinding sound, like laughter without joy.

Miss Stray spoke gently.

“Blottisham, you are mapping human interpretive tendencies onto system behaviour.”

Blottisham frowned.

“But what if it is a simulation?”

Quillibrace opened his eyes.

“Then,” he said calmly, “you are also simulated, and your conclusion is part of the simulation’s behaviour regarding itself.”

Blottisham paused.

“That feels unfair.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace. “Reality is not obliged to optimise for your metaphysical satisfaction.”

Blottisham sat down slowly.

“So I can’t tell?”

Quillibrace softened slightly.

“You can tell something,” he said. “You can tell that a coffee machine is broken, poorly designed, or poorly maintained.”

Miss Stray added:

“But not that it constitutes evidence for ontological architecture at the level of base reality.”

Blottisham stared at the machine.

It emitted one final message:

ERROR 1: WATER NOT FOUND

Then fell silent, as though waiting.

Blottisham exhaled.

“So,” he said at last, “it’s not a simulation.”

Quillibrace shook his head.

“No.”

A pause.

Blottisham frowned.

“It is just a bad coffee machine.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace.

A longer pause.

Blottisham nodded slowly.

“That is somehow more disturbing.”

Quillibrace picked up his cup.

“It usually is,” he said.

Academic Metrics

The Senior Common Room had been temporarily requisitioned by the University’s Strategic Excellence Initiative, a development announced in an email whose subject line read:

“URGENT: Enhancing Excellence Through Enhanced Excellence Enhancement.”

No one had replied.

This, in administrative terms, counted as agreement.

Professor Quillibrace was seated beneath a notice that now read “THIS SPACE OPTIMISED FOR PRODUCTIVITY.” He appeared to be optimising neither his mood nor his compliance.

Miss Elowen Stray was quietly observing the new “Impact Dashboard” that had been installed on a freestanding screen.

Mr Blottisham was attempting to log into it using his library password, which it had already rejected on ethical grounds.

At the head of the room stood the Dean.

He was visibly enthusiastic in the way only someone deeply insulated from the consequences of enthusiasm can be.

“We are entering a new era,” he declared.

Quillibrace did not look up.

“We are always entering a new era,” he said. “It is one of our more persistent habits.”

The Dean ignored this.

“We are introducing a revolutionary system for measuring research impact.”

Blottisham looked intrigued.

“Oh! Citations?”

“Better,” said the Dean. “Engagement.”

Miss Stray tilted her head slightly.

“In what sense?”

The Dean gestured toward the screen, where a swirling diagram of arrows, hearts, and indistinct professional optimism was rotating slowly.

“We will be using an algorithm trained entirely on LinkedIn posts.”

There was a pause.

Somewhere in the corridor, a filing cabinet quietly resigned.

Blottisham looked impressed.

“Oh! So it measures professional influence.”

“Precisely,” said the Dean. “Visibility, networking, thought leadership signals, endorsement density—”

Quillibrace finally looked up.

“My dear colleague,” he said carefully, “you are proposing to evaluate scholarly contribution using a dataset whose primary function is self-description under conditions of mild existential performance anxiety.”

The Dean smiled brightly.

“Exactly!”

Miss Stray spoke softly.

“So the model is trained on people describing their own impact.”

“Yes,” said the Dean.

“And then used to measure actual impact.”

“Yes.”

A silence followed.

Blottisham nodded slowly.

“That seems efficient.”

Quillibrace closed his eyes briefly.

“It is not efficiency,” he said quietly. “It is circularity wearing a name badge.”

The Dean pressed on.

“The algorithm identifies high-impact individuals by detecting signals of influence.”

Blottisham frowned.

“What counts as a signal?”

The Dean consulted his notes.

“Consistent posting. Strategic visibility. Comment engagement. Inspirational phrasing. Use of phrases like ‘excited to announce’.”

Miss Stray looked thoughtful.

“So impact is being inferred from self-promotional linguistic patterns.”

“Yes.”

Quillibrace leaned back slightly.

“And scholarship?”

The Dean waved a hand.

“Oh, that will correlate.”

A pause.

Blottisham looked uncertain.

“But what if someone does important work but doesn’t post about it?”

The Dean smiled kindly.

“Then the algorithm will detect low impact.”

Quillibrace murmured:

“As one would expect.”

Miss Stray tapped her pen gently against her notebook.

“There seems to be a substitution occurring,” she said. “From epistemic evaluation to visibility metrics derived from a specific communicative platform.”

The Dean nodded enthusiastically.

“Yes! Exactly! Modernisation!”

Blottisham brightened.

“So being good at LinkedIn is the same as being good at research.”

“Not the same,” said the Dean. “But strongly predictive.”

Quillibrace opened his eyes.

“My dear Dean,” he said, “you appear to have constructed a system in which the representation of impact has fully replaced the phenomenon of impact.”

The Dean looked pleased.

“Streamlining!”

Miss Stray added gently:

“It may also privilege a particular style of self-presentation as if it were a proxy for epistemic contribution.”

Blottisham frowned.

“So if I write ‘excited to share my groundbreaking thoughts on medieval pottery,’ I get more impact?”

“Potentially,” said the Dean.

Quillibrace sighed.

“Wonderful,” he said softly. “We have finally solved the problem of knowledge by replacing it with enthusiasm about knowledge.”

The room fell quiet.

The impact dashboard pulsed gently, as though awaiting validation from the universe itself.

Blottisham studied it.

“So the algorithm thinks LinkedIn is reality.”

“No,” said Quillibrace.

“It thinks LinkedIn is evidence of reality.”

Miss Stray added:

“Which is not quite the same thing—but in practice may behave as if it is.”

Blottisham sat back.

“That seems dangerous.”

Quillibrace nodded.

“Yes,” he said. “But it is a very legible kind of danger. Administrations tend to prefer those.”

The Dean smiled once more.

“So we are agreed?”

Nobody replied.

The silence was not procedural.

It was epistemic.

And in the absence of further engagement metrics, the algorithm quietly awarded everyone maximum impact.

The Philosophy of Time

The Senior Common Room had begun to exhibit a mild but persistent temporal disagreement.

The mantelpiece clock insisted it was 3:17.

The wall clock claimed 3:42.

The grandfather clock, with aristocratic calm, maintained it was 2:58 and would not be taking questions.

No one had yet succeeded in reconciling them.

Professor Quillibrace, however, had decided this was the ideal moment to deliver an impromptu lecture on temporal ontology.

Miss Elowen Stray was seated with her notebook open, already suspicious that the clocks were not the main problem.

Mr Blottisham was looking between them with increasing anxiety, as though time itself might escalate.

Quillibrace began.

“Time,” he said, “is not a thing.”

The mantelpiece clock ticked aggressively in disagreement.

“It is,” continued Quillibrace, “a structural ordering of events within a system of change. It is not an object moving through space, nor a substance flowing from past to future.”

At this point the wall clock chimed once, loudly, at what appeared to be pure spite.

Blottisham raised his hand.

“So time isn’t like… a river?”

Quillibrace closed his eyes briefly.

“No.”

“A sort of river-like substance?”

“No.”

“A metaphorical river?”

“A metaphor,” said Quillibrace carefully, “is precisely what is misleading you.”

Miss Stray glanced at the grandfather clock, which had begun ticking in a rhythm that suggested it had lost faith in arithmetic.

Quillibrace continued.

“In relational terms, temporal ordering is a constraint on how events are construed as sequenced within a system of change. There is no external ‘time-stuff’ in which events sit.”

At this moment, all three clocks disagreed simultaneously.

Blottisham looked unsettled.

“But I feel time passing.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace. “You also feel that the sun moves. This does not require geocentric cosmology.”

A pause.

The mantelpiece clock ticked louder.

Miss Stray spoke gently.

“It may be that we are mixing levels of construal,” she said. “Clock time, experiential time, and theoretical time are not the same phenomenon.”

Blottisham frowned.

“So there are three times?”

Quillibrace pinched the bridge of his nose.

“No.”

Blottisham persisted.

“But the clocks disagree.”

“They are,” said Quillibrace, “mechanical systems with different calibration histories.”

The wall clock chose this moment to lose all composure and jump forward seven minutes without consultation.

Blottisham pointed.

“See! Time just moved!”

“No,” said Quillibrace calmly. “A mechanism changed state.”

Miss Stray added:

“And we construed it as time moving because we have aligned certain physical processes as temporal indicators.”

Blottisham sat back.

“So clocks don’t tell time?”

“They indicate synchronised physical regularities,” said Quillibrace.

“That is much less satisfying.”

“It is also more accurate,” said Quillibrace.

The grandfather clock struck something that was not clearly an hour, but felt like a judgement.

Blottisham looked between them.

“So what is time, then?”

Quillibrace paused.

Then said:

“A way of ordering change under constraints of irreversibility.”

Blottisham frowned.

“That sounds… abstract.”

“It is,” said Quillibrace.

Miss Stray leaned forward slightly.

“And importantly,” she added, “it is not independent of the systems in which it is construed. Temporal ordering is not a container for events, but a relational structure inferred from regularities in change.”

Blottisham looked at the clocks again.

The mantelpiece clock now appeared to be arguing silently with the wall clock via irregular ticking patterns.

“So,” he said slowly, “there isn’t one correct time in the room.”

Quillibrace looked at him.

“There is no singular metaphysical substance called ‘Time’ currently present in the room, no.”

Blottisham processed this.

Then brightened slightly.

“So time is basically what clocks agree on.”

Quillibrace exhaled.

“No.”

Miss Stray smiled faintly.

“It’s what we construct as agreement across regularities,” she said.

Blottisham leaned back.

“That sounds like disagreement pretending to be agreement.”

Quillibrace regarded him.

“That,” he said, “is an unexpectedly good description of most human temporal experience.”

At that moment, all three clocks struck different minutes simultaneously.

The room fell into a brief silence that felt structurally uncertain.

Blottisham spoke carefully.

“So… time isn’t real?”

Quillibrace answered without hesitation.

“No.”

A pause.

“Not in the way you mean.”

Miss Stray added softly:

“But the constraints that give rise to temporal ordering are very real.”

Blottisham looked relieved.

“So time exists, but not as a thing.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace.

Another pause.

Blottisham nodded slowly.

“So the clocks are wrong.”

Quillibrace looked at them.

“No,” he said.

“They are simply not in agreement about which regularities to privilege.”

A final silence.

The grandfather clock ticked once, decisively, as though ending the discussion.

Blottisham leaned back.

“So,” he said at last, “time is complicated.”

Quillibrace allowed himself the faintest expression of relief.

“Yes,” he said.

“And unfortunately,” he added, “it does not become less complicated if you stare at the clocks harder.”

Miss Stray closed her notebook.

The mantelpiece clock ticked once more in what might have been agreement or protest.

Nobody checked.

Mathematics

The Senior Common Room had acquired, through a sequence of administrative misunderstandings involving a grant application and what appeared to be a misfiled request for “symbolic transcendence support,” a small visiting library of mathematical philosophy texts.

Nobody had asked for this.

It had simply arrived.

Professor Quillibrace regarded it with the expression of a man seeing an already difficult universe become unnecessarily more precise.

Miss Elowen Stray was reading quietly from a slim volume on formal systems.

Mr Blottisham entered holding a book open at an alarming angle, as though it might attempt escape if not properly restrained.

“I’ve found something disturbing,” he announced.

Quillibrace did not look up.

“This is not new information about you.”

Blottisham ignored this.

“It’s Gödel.”

A pause.

Quillibrace slowly closed his book.

“I see.”

Blottisham sat down heavily.

“He’s shown that arithmetic cannot be both complete and consistent.”

Miss Stray looked up attentively.

“Yes,” she said. “That is broadly correct, within a sufficiently formal system.”

Blottisham nodded urgently.

“So mathematics is broken.”

“No,” said Quillibrace immediately.

Blottisham frowned.

“But there are true statements that cannot be proven.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace.

“In arithmetic.”

“In formal arithmetic systems,” corrected Miss Stray gently.

Blottisham leaned forward.

“So there are things that are true but unprovable.”

“Yes.”

A silence followed in which Blottisham appeared to be internally re-evaluating the moral legitimacy of multiplication.

Then he spoke.

“So mathematics has gaps.”

Quillibrace sighed.

“It has limits.”

Blottisham sat back sharply.

“Right. So it’s not complete.”

“Correct.”

“And not fully self-contained.”

“Correct.”

“And therefore,” Blottisham concluded, “arithmetic has legally dissolved.”

A long silence settled across the room.

Somewhere in the corridor, a distant clock made a sound like it had lost confidence in itself.

Quillibrace removed his glasses slowly.

“My dear Blottisham,” he said, with care, “what precisely do you mean by ‘legally’?”

Blottisham gestured at the book.

“It’s been proven internally inconsistent or incomplete.”

Miss Stray interjected softly.

“Incompleteness is not inconsistency.”

Blottisham waved this away.

“It sounds like a loophole.”

Quillibrace leaned back.

“You are treating a theorem about formal systems as if it were a court ruling annulling the existence of arithmetic.”

Blottisham brightened.

“Yes! Exactly!”

“No,” said Quillibrace.

A pause.

Miss Stray spoke carefully.

“What Gödel shows,” she said, “is that within any sufficiently powerful formal system capable of expressing arithmetic, there will be true statements that are not provable within that system. It is a result about the structure of formal derivability, not a cancellation of arithmetic itself.”

Blottisham frowned.

“But if you can’t prove everything…”

Quillibrace finished the thought:

“…you do not thereby abolish what you are proving about.”

Blottisham looked unconvinced.

“So numbers still exist.”

Quillibrace nodded.

“As well as they ever have.”

Blottisham considered this.

“But the system cannot capture itself fully.”

“Yes.”

“So it is incomplete.”

“Yes.”

Blottisham paused.

Then smiled faintly.

“So mathematics is slightly illegal inside itself.”

Quillibrace stared at him.

“My dear Blottisham,” he said quietly, “you are attempting to assign jurisdictional metaphors to logical structure.”

Miss Stray added, almost kindly:

“It may be that you are importing the language of law into a domain that is not governed by enforcement but by derivation.”

Blottisham sat back.

“So Gödel is saying mathematics cannot close itself.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace.

A pause.

“But that is not collapse.”

Blottisham looked disappointed.

“It feels like collapse.”

Quillibrace nodded.

“Many profound results do.”

Miss Stray closed her book gently.

“The interesting point,” she said, “is not that arithmetic dissolves, but that any system rich enough to describe itself necessarily contains a limit of self-containment.”

Blottisham frowned.

“So mathematics is permanently unfinished.”

Quillibrace allowed a faint smile.

“If you like.”

Blottisham brightened again.

“So it’s still going.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace.

“But with caveats.”

Blottisham nodded solemnly.

“I see.”

A pause.

Then he added:

“So I haven’t been wasting my time with arithmetic.”

Quillibrace looked at him for a long moment.

“No,” he said finally.

“You’ve merely been participating in one of the more persistent forms of structured impossibility.”

Miss Stray smiled into her tea.

And somewhere in the visiting library, Gödel’s theorems sat quietly on the shelf, continuing not to dissolve anything at all.

Consciousness

The High Table at St. Bartholomew’s had recently adopted a new policy of “interdisciplinary enrichment,” which had resulted, somewhat predictably, in nobody understanding anyone else slightly more efficiently than before.

Professor Quillibrace sat at one end, looking as though he had been invited to a dinner party inside a collapsing epistemic framework.

Miss Elowen Stray was beside him, attentive as ever.

Mr Blottisham was trying to decide whether the soup constituted an argument.

At the centre of the table, a visiting neuroscientist from the capital university was speaking with the calm certainty of someone whose metaphysics had been peer-reviewed into submission.

“Ultimately,” he said, stirring his glass of water for emphasis, “love is just chemicals.”

A brief silence followed.

Somewhere, a dessert spoon paused mid-air as though reconsidering its career.

Blottisham leaned forward immediately.

“Ah!” he said. “So romance is reducible to neurochemical processes.”

“Precisely,” said the neuroscientist. “Dopamine, oxytocin, serotonin. It’s all biochemistry.”

Quillibrace closed his eyes very slowly, like a man trying not to hear a building become theoretical.

Blottisham looked delighted.

“So when I feel attachment, it is fundamentally a chemical cascade.”

“Yes,” said the neuroscientist.

“And when I feel heartbreak…”

“Also chemistry.”

Blottisham nodded with increasing enthusiasm.

“So emotions are biochemical phenomena.”

“Exactly.”

A pause.

Blottisham sat back, satisfied.

“So love is just chemicals.”

The neuroscientist smiled.

“Yes.”

At this point, Quillibrace made a small involuntary movement with his fork that suggested a deep philosophical resignation.

Miss Stray, however, tilted her head slightly.

“Can I ask something?” she said gently.

The neuroscientist turned.

“Of course.”

She looked at him thoughtfully.

“Is chemistry itself just chemicals?”

The table went very still.

Blottisham frowned.

“That seems redundant.”

Quillibrace opened one eye.

“It is,” he said softly, “and yet we appear to be standing on it.”

The neuroscientist laughed lightly.

“Well, chemistry is the study of chemicals, yes.”

Miss Stray nodded.

“And that study is itself a physical-chemical activity occurring in a brain composed of chemical structures.”

“Yes,” he said, slightly cautiously.

She continued, still gently:

“So when you say ‘love is just chemicals,’ are you making a claim about love alone, or about the status of explanation itself?”

A faint tension entered the room, like a theorem noticing it had been applied to itself.

Blottisham looked between them.

“I think,” he said slowly, “we may have accidentally reduced everything to chemicals.”

Quillibrace exhaled.

“An occupational hazard,” he murmured.

The neuroscientist attempted to recover ground.

“The point is that emotional experience correlates with neurochemical states.”

Miss Stray nodded.

“Yes. Correlates.”

A pause.

“And the correlation is itself a construal within a scientific practice embedded in linguistic, social, and material systems all of which are…” she gestured lightly, “…chemical?”

The neuroscientist hesitated.

“Well—yes, but that’s not usually how we phrase it.”

Quillibrace finally spoke.

“My dear colleague,” he said, “you have performed a manoeuvre beloved of certain reductive programmes: you have translated a relationally rich construal into a single level of description, declared victory, and then quietly forgotten that the act of translation itself remains unaccounted for.”

Blottisham looked impressed.

“That sounds decisive.”

“It is,” said Quillibrace, “and unfortunately also incomplete.”

Miss Stray added softly:

“The issue may be that ‘just’ does a great deal of unnoticed work in such statements. It removes strata of construal and presents one level as if it were exhaustive.”

The neuroscientist sighed.

“So you’re saying love is not chemicals?”

Quillibrace considered this.

“I am saying,” he replied carefully, “that ‘just chemicals’ is not an explanation. It is a reduction that has mistaken itself for a conclusion.”

Blottisham frowned.

“But love does involve chemicals.”

“Certainly,” said Quillibrace. “And so does the act of writing your paper, your decision to present it at High Table, and the digestion of your lunch while doing so. This does not exhaust the phenomena of either lunch or love.”

A silence settled again.

The soup cooled in thoughtful suspension.

Finally, Blottisham spoke.

“So love is chemicals… but not just chemicals.”

Quillibrace nodded faintly.

“Among other things.”

Miss Stray added:

“And among other construals.”

Blottisham leaned back, considering this.

“So when people say ‘just chemicals’…”

Quillibrace finished quietly:

“…they are usually not describing the world so much as compressing it beyond usability.”

A pause.

Then Miss Stray, almost to herself, said:

“In that sense, chemistry itself is never ‘just chemicals’ either. It is a structured practice of meaning-making within a world that does not reduce itself to any one of its descriptions.”

Blottisham stared at his spoon.

“So nothing is just anything.”

Quillibrace gave a small, weary smile.

“Now you are beginning to see why philosophers are so frequently tired.”

And somewhere above them, at High Table, the idea of reductionism quietly excused itself and left the room without finishing its sentence.

Multiverse Cosmology

The Senior Common Room had been placed, without consultation, under the jurisdiction of the Department of Theoretical Cosmology, a development nobody had voted for but which had nonetheless occurred with bureaucratic inevitability.

A poster had been pinned above the mantelpiece reading:

“WELCOME TO THE MULTIVERSE SEMINAR SERIES: INFINITE WORLDS, INFINITE POSSIBILITIES, INFINITE ADMINISTRATIVE CONFUSION.”

Professor Quillibrace had placed a small handwritten sign beneath it reading:

“NO.”

Miss Elowen Stray was reviewing notes on modal realism.

Mr Blottisham entered carrying a whiteboard marker and the expression of someone who had recently discovered that epistemology might be optional.

“I’ve solved it,” he announced.

Quillibrace did not look up.

“You have not.”

Blottisham ignored this.

“The multiverse is real.”

Miss Stray looked up calmly.

“In what sense of ‘real’ are we currently operating?” she asked.

“In the sense,” said Blottisham, “that every possible outcome exists somewhere.”

Quillibrace finally raised his eyes.

“That is one interpretation of a speculative metaphysical model,” he said, “yes.”

Blottisham nodded rapidly.

“And therefore,” he continued, “every possible mistake I could make is already correct in some universe.”

A silence followed.

Somewhere in the corridor, a filing cabinet fell over out of sympathy.

Miss Stray blinked slowly.

“I’m not sure that follows,” she said.

Blottisham was already writing on the whiteboard:

UNIVERSE A: Blottisham is right
UNIVERSE B: Blottisham is slightly more right
UNIVERSE C: Blottisham is peer-reviewed

Quillibrace sighed in a way that suggested he had been preparing for this exact sentence since childhood.

“My dear Blottisham,” he said, “you appear to be confusing ontological plurality with epistemic validation.”

Blottisham turned.

“They’re not the same?”

“No.”

“That seems inefficient.”

“It is,” said Quillibrace. “But reality is under no obligation to be user-friendly.”

Miss Stray leaned forward slightly.

“The key issue,” she said carefully, “is that even if multiple possible worlds exist, it does not follow that every construal is equally endorsed within each.”

Blottisham frowned.

“But somewhere I’m right.”

“Possibly,” said Quillibrace.

Blottisham brightened.

“Exactly!”

Quillibrace continued.

“Somewhere you are also a sentient teapot. This does not, unfortunately, grant your current argument additional authority.”

Blottisham paused.

Then pressed on.

“But the existence of a correct version of me somewhere means I am not fully wrong here.”

Miss Stray tilted her head.

“That depends on what you mean by ‘you’,” she said.

Blottisham hesitated.

“The version of me across all universes?”

Quillibrace pinched the bridge of his nose.

“We are not aggregating selves like university funding streams.”

Blottisham looked briefly confused, then recovered.

“So there is a universe where I never make mistakes.”

Quillibrace considered this.

“Almost certainly.”

Blottisham smiled triumphantly.

“So mistakes are optional.”

“No,” said Quillibrace.

Blottisham’s smile faltered slightly.

“But they exist in some worlds.”

“So do unicorns,” said Quillibrace. “And regrettable fashion decisions. Existence elsewhere is not a licence for local incoherence.”

Miss Stray added gently:

“Possibility across a modal space does not collapse into permission within a given construal.”

Blottisham frowned again, then suddenly pointed at the whiteboard.

“Right,” he said. “So academically speaking, every possible error I could make is validated somewhere.”

Quillibrace stared at him for a long moment.

Then said, very quietly:

“My dear Blottisham, that is not academic validation.”

A pause.

“That is ontological vandalism.”

Blottisham looked slightly hurt.

“But if every version exists…”

Quillibrace interrupted gently.

“Then every version exists,” he said. “Including the ones where you stop drawing conclusions.”

Silence.

The fire crackled.

The multiverse poster rustled faintly, as if unsure of its own implications.

Miss Stray closed her notebook.

“I think,” she said thoughtfully, “the danger is treating modal plurality as a global permission structure rather than a relational model of possibility.”

Blottisham sat down slowly.

“So I’m not right in every universe?”

Quillibrace softened, just a fraction.

“You are right in some,” he said.

A pause.

“And wrong in most.”

Blottisham considered this.

“That seems statistically discouraging.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace. “Reality has that effect on confidence.”

Blottisham looked back at the whiteboard.

Slowly erased UNIVERSE C: Blottisham is peer-reviewed.

Then added, more carefully:

UNIVERSE D: Blottisham is still learning

Quillibrace nodded once.

Miss Stray smiled faintly into her tea.

And somewhere, in a very large number of possible worlds, an identical conversation was going exactly the same way — none of which helped.

Free Will

The Senior Common Room was enjoying a rare interval of tranquillity.

Outside, autumn rain drifted gently across the college quadrangle. Inside, the fire crackled softly beneath portraits of former masters who appeared, almost without exception, to have died disappointed in someone.

Professor Quillibrace sat reading a monograph entitled Temporal Necessity and Modal Collapse in Post-Spinozist Determinism, which he appeared to be annotating chiefly with expressions of personal betrayal.

Miss Elowen Stray was writing notes nearby.

Mr Blottisham entered abruptly carrying a bowl of cereal.

“I’ve done it,” he announced.

Quillibrace did not look up.

“Done what?”

“Disproven determinism.”

Quillibrace slowly lowered the monograph and regarded him over the rims of his glasses.

“With bran flakes.”

Blottisham nodded gravely.

“You see before you,” he said, lifting the bowl slightly, “the collapse of mechanistic causality.”

Miss Stray looked up with cautious interest.

“What happened?”

Blottisham sat down triumphantly.

“For eleven consecutive years,” he said, “I have eaten the same breakfast cereal every Thursday.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace. “The college kitchen staff refer to it as ‘the event horizon.’”

“This morning,” Blottisham continued, “I suddenly chose a different cereal for no reason whatsoever.”

He gestured dramatically toward the bowl.

“Chocolate crescents.”

A silence followed.

Quillibrace blinked once.

“And from this,” he said carefully, “you inferred the falsity of determinism.”

“Obviously.”

“I see.”

Blottisham leaned forward.

“If the universe were fully determined by prior causes, my breakfast behaviour should have been perfectly predictable.”

Quillibrace nodded faintly.

“And yet you selected processed sugar geometry.”

“Exactly!”

Quillibrace removed his glasses and polished them with the slow precision of a man attempting to delay reality.

“My dear Blottisham,” he said at last, “determinism does not mean events become predictable to you personally.”

Blottisham frowned.

“But I surprised myself.”

“Yes,” said Quillibrace. “You frequently do.”

Miss Stray hid a smile.

Blottisham persisted.

“No, but surely genuine spontaneity disproves strict causality.”

Quillibrace sighed softly.

“The fact that you do not know the causes of an action does not establish the absence of causes.”

“But the choice felt completely free.”

“Indeed,” said Quillibrace. “Human consciousness is often the last department informed of its own operations.”

Miss Stray glanced thoughtfully into the fire.

“The difficulty,” she said carefully, “may lie in conflating unpredictability with metaphysical freedom.”

Blottisham looked encouraged.

“Yes! Precisely!”

“No,” said Miss Stray gently. “Again, not precisely.”

Blottisham deflated slightly.

She continued:

“A system may be difficult to predict for many reasons — complexity, incomplete information, recursive self-reference, probabilistic dynamics, or limitations in observation. None of these automatically establish freedom in the strong metaphysical sense.”

Quillibrace nodded approvingly.

“Quite so. Weather systems are notoriously unpredictable. One does not therefore conclude that thunderstorms possess moral autonomy.”

Blottisham crossed his arms.

“But I could have chosen differently.”

“Could you?” asked Quillibrace mildly.

“Yes.”

“In exactly the same universe?”

“Yes.”

“With exactly the same prior conditions?”

“Yes.”

Quillibrace regarded him quietly.

“My dear fellow, you are now attempting to smuggle metaphysical indeterminacy into breakfast.”

Blottisham opened his mouth.

Paused.

Closed it again.

Miss Stray spoke softly.

“There may also be a hidden ambiguity in what we mean by ‘could have done otherwise.’”

Blottisham pointed at her eagerly.

“Exactly!”

She ignored this.

“In ordinary life, the phrase usually means the system possessed multiple available potentials relative to its organisation and constraints. But in metaphysical debates, people often reinterpret it as requiring the entire universe to have unfolded differently while remaining somehow identical.”

Quillibrace smiled faintly.

“A manoeuvre popular among philosophers because it converts perfectly intelligible experiences into impossible cosmological riddles.”

Blottisham frowned at his cereal.

“But it felt like I interrupted causality.”

Quillibrace leaned back.

“My dear Blottisham, causality is not a railway timetable occasionally disrupted by acts of bran-based rebellion.”

The fire crackled gently.

Rain whispered against the windows.

At last Blottisham spoke again.

“So you’re saying my cereal choice was determined?”

“I am saying,” replied Quillibrace carefully, “that your inability to identify the relational conditions contributing to an event does not magically place the event outside relational organisation.”

Blottisham looked thoughtful.

Then suddenly his eyes widened.

“I see!” he cried. “So free will is deterministic unpredictability!”

Quillibrace stared silently into the middle distance with the exhausted expression of a man watching a piano fall slowly down a staircase in conceptual slow motion.

Miss Stray quietly reached over and moved the sherry bottle closer to him without a word.