Thursday, 18 June 2026

Discussion X: On Finishing

The manuscript has remained on the central table for several weeks.

No one has returned it.

No one has asked whether it belongs to anyone.


Blottisham: Well.

That's the last chapter.


Quillibrace: Is it?


Blottisham: Unless someone has hidden an appendix.


Quillibrace: They usually do.


(A brief silence.)


Stray: It's rather an odd ending.

The manuscript never really resolves its argument.


Blottisham: Exactly.

I kept expecting a grand conclusion.


Quillibrace: And instead?


Blottisham: It simply stops.


Quillibrace: Does it?

Or does the author merely cease writing?


(A pause.)


Stray: Those aren't quite the same thing.


Quillibrace: No.

An argument occasionally continues after its author has become silent.


(They sit quietly for a moment.)


Blottisham: I've been wondering...

does the manuscript ever actually define certainty?


Stray: I don't think it does.


Blottisham: Isn't that rather careless?


Quillibrace: On the contrary.

Definitions are useful when one wishes to stabilise a concept.

This manuscript seems more interested in observing what certainty does than in deciding what it is.


Blottisham: Anthropology rather than metaphysics.


Quillibrace: Just so.


(Blottisham nods slowly.)


Stray: I think that's why the chapters feel different from ordinary arguments.

Each one observes another part of civilisation.

Universities.

Expertise.

Morality.

Planning.

Tradition.

The author keeps asking the same question in different places.


Quillibrace: Yes.

Not,

"What is certainty?"

But,

"What sort of creature behaves like this?"


(A thoughtful silence.)


Blottisham: Human beings, apparently.


Quillibrace: Apparently.


(They smile.)


Stray: Then perhaps the title is slightly misleading.


Quillibrace: How so?


Stray: It isn't really an anthropology of certainty.

It's an anthropology of ourselves.

Certainty merely happens to be the trail we followed through the forest.


(Quillibrace closes the manuscript very gently.)


Quillibrace: Miss Stray...

I believe you've just written the preface.


(A longer silence follows.)


Blottisham: Do you know what surprised me most?


Quillibrace: No.


Blottisham: The manuscript seems rather fond of civilisation.

I expected satire.

Instead I found...

affection.


Quillibrace: Good satire generally possesses precisely that quality.

Otherwise it becomes complaint.


Stray: It laughs because people are extraordinary.

Not because they're ridiculous.


Quillibrace: Quite.

Ridiculousness is simply one of the ways in which extraordinariness becomes visible.


(They laugh.)


Blottisham: Then what have we learned?


(Quillibrace does not answer immediately.)


Quillibrace: That may be the wrong question.


Blottisham: Really?


Quillibrace: I think the manuscript would prefer another.


Stray: Which one?


Quillibrace: What conversations has it made possible that were previously unavailable?


(Silence.)


Stray: Including this one.


Quillibrace: Especially this one.


(The room becomes very still.)


Blottisham: I suppose...

that's what books are really for.


Quillibrace: The better ones, certainly.

They do not merely provide thoughts.

They alter the thoughts people become capable of having together.


(No one speaks for a while.)


Stray: Shall we return the manuscript to the Library?


Quillibrace: Certainly not.

Someone else may wish to begin arguing with it.


The manuscript remained on the table.

By the end of term it had accumulated seventeen pencilled annotations, three pressed leaves, two contradictory bookmarks, an unexplained coffee stain, and what appeared to be the beginning of an entirely different conversation.


No catalogue entry was ever created.

Nevertheless, it became part of the College.

Discussion IX: On What Civilisations Remember

The manuscript has become noticeably easier to open than to close.


Blottisham: I think I've finally located the author's central mistake.


Quillibrace: Congratulations.

Where is it?


Blottisham: The manuscript keeps describing civilisation as though it were a collection of habits.

Surely civilisation is a collection of achievements.


Quillibrace: Is it?


Blottisham: Naturally.

Cathedrals.

Universities.

Constitutions.

Scientific discoveries.

Works of art.


Quillibrace: All admirable examples.

How many survive if the habits that produced them disappear?


(A pause.)


Blottisham: Fewer than one would hope.


Stray: The manuscript seems interested in that very distinction.

Achievements can often be inherited.

Habits must continually be performed.


Quillibrace: Exactly.

One inherits a library.

One must repeatedly inherit reading.


(Silence.)


Blottisham: That's annoyingly elegant.


Quillibrace: It was waiting to be said.


Stray: There's another sentence here.

"Civilisations remember procedurally before they remember intellectually."

I'm not entirely sure what it means.


Quillibrace: Think of language.

Children learn to speak long before they learn grammar.


Blottisham: Obviously.


Quillibrace: The practice arrives before the explanation.

Indeed, the explanation frequently arrives centuries later.


Stray: So perhaps societies become competent before they become self-conscious.


Quillibrace: Quite.

Reflection is a remarkably late invention.


(A thoughtful silence.)


Blottisham: Then civilisation isn't preserved by monuments.


Quillibrace: Not primarily.

Monuments remind.

Habits continue.


Blottisham: That's rather disappointing.


Quillibrace: Only if one has invested heavily in marble.


(They laugh.)


Stray: The manuscript also says traditions are often misunderstood.

People imagine traditions preserve the past.

Perhaps they preserve successful ways of entering the future.


(Quillibrace looks up slowly.)


Quillibrace: My dear Miss Stray...

that is extraordinarily perceptive.


(A brief silence.)


Blottisham: I don't quite see it.


Stray: A tradition isn't repeated because yesterday mattered.

It's repeated because tomorrow still requires something from it.


Quillibrace: Precisely.

Traditions that no longer assist the future eventually become history.

Traditions that still assist the future continue being traditions.


Blottisham: Then tradition is less conservative than I thought.


Quillibrace: Much less.

Successful traditions are remarkably adaptive.

Otherwise they would have concluded centuries ago.


(They continue reading.)


Blottisham: Here's a curious observation.

"Every civilisation develops techniques for surviving disappointment."

That seems oddly specific.


Quillibrace: Does it?

What are constitutions?

Appeal processes?

Scientific replication?

Insurance?

Peer review?


Blottisham: Administrative optimism?


Quillibrace: Administrative pessimism.

They assume human beings will occasionally be mistaken.


Stray: Or unlucky.


Quillibrace: Exactly.

The manuscript's deepest admiration seems reserved for institutions that expect fallibility without surrendering to it.


(A longer silence.)


Blottisham: I think I understand now.

The manuscript isn't celebrating uncertainty.


Quillibrace: No.


Blottisham: It's celebrating civilisation's astonishing patience with it.


Quillibrace: Beautifully put.


Stray: Which means civilisation doesn't consist in finally becoming certain.

It consists in discovering increasingly subtle ways of continuing despite uncertainty.


(Quillibrace closes the manuscript.)


Quillibrace: Yes.

And perhaps that is why civilisation appears simultaneously so fragile...

and so remarkably durable.


(The room remains quiet for some time.)


Blottisham: I must confess...

I thought this manuscript was about certainty.


Quillibrace: So did I.

For approximately the first three chapters.


The discussion concluded after an inconclusive attempt to determine whether the College's oldest traditions had survived because they were ancient or because they continued to solve problems no one had yet noticed had changed.

Tea was served according to a procedure whose origins remained obscure.

Discussion VIII: On Living in Tomorrow

The manuscript lies open at a chapter entitled "The Future."

Several pages have acquired folded corners.

No one is prepared to admit whose.


Blottisham: I have discovered something rather disappointing.


Quillibrace: About the future?


Blottisham: About strategic plans.

The manuscript claims they exist less to predict the future than to coordinate the present.

Surely that can't be right.


Quillibrace: Why not?


Blottisham: Because a strategic plan concerns the future.

It's there in the name.


Quillibrace: Is it?

Or is it perhaps an agreement about what people shall begin doing on Monday?


(A pause.)


Stray: That's rather good.

The future itself doesn't attend planning meetings.

Only the present does.


Blottisham: Then why not call them present plans?


Quillibrace: Because no one would fund them.


(They laugh.)


Stray: The manuscript says something quite beautiful.

"Human beings cooperate remarkably well with events that have not yet occurred."


Blottisham: That's called optimism.


Quillibrace: No.

Optimism concerns outcomes.

This concerns coordination.

Children are educated for futures they will inhabit decades later.

Trees are planted.

Bridges are designed.

Libraries are founded.

None of these activities would make much sense if everyone insisted upon remaining in the present.


Blottisham: So civilisation depends upon imagination.


Quillibrace: Shared imagination.

One person's imagined future is eccentric.

Several million people's imagined future becomes infrastructure.


(A thoughtful silence.)


Stray: That's extraordinary.

Infrastructure is collective imagination that has acquired concrete.


Quillibrace: Miss Stray...

I suspect that sentence may survive the afternoon.


(They smile.)


Blottisham: But predictions are often wrong.


Quillibrace: Frequently.


Blottisham: Doesn't that undermine the whole enterprise?


Quillibrace: Not in the least.

A calendar may fail to predict the weather.

It nevertheless remains useful for arranging lunch.


Blottisham: That's infuriatingly reasonable.


Quillibrace: I have been practising.


Stray: The manuscript also says people rarely need accurate futures.

They need shared futures.


Blottisham: Surely accuracy matters.


Quillibrace: Immensely.

But coordination frequently arrives first.

A bridge cannot be built if every engineer is imagining a different bridge.


Stray: So the future is partly a meeting place.


Quillibrace: Precisely.

An imaginary location at which present actions agree to encounter one another.


(A silence.)


Blottisham: That's rather poetic.


Quillibrace: Entirely accidental.


(They continue reading.)


Blottisham: Here's an observation I don't understand.

"The future is administratively inhabited."

What on earth does that mean?


Quillibrace: Pension funds.

School curricula.

Building regulations.

Insurance.

Research grants.

Urban planning.

Every Tuesday afternoon.


Blottisham: Every Tuesday afternoon?


Quillibrace: A surprising proportion of civilisation consists of people quietly arranging tomorrow.


Stray: Long before tomorrow has agreed to cooperate.


Quillibrace: Indeed.

Tomorrow has always been rather independent-minded.


(A pause.)


Blottisham: Then perhaps hope is really an administrative activity.


(Quillibrace looks at him over his glasses.)


Quillibrace: My dear Blottisham...

that may be the most alarming sentence you have ever produced.


Blottisham: Is it wrong?


Quillibrace: Not entirely.

Which is considerably more worrying.


(The room falls quietly silent.)


Stray: I think the manuscript admires this.

It doesn't laugh at people for planning.

It laughs gently at the confidence with which each generation imagines its particular future to be the obvious one.


Quillibrace: Yes.

Every generation eventually discovers that the future has been making plans of its own.


(Another silence.)


Blottisham: It occurs to me...

perhaps civilisation is simply humanity's longest conversation with tomorrow.


(Quillibrace closes the manuscript.)


Quillibrace: If so...

it is one of the few conversations in which the final participant has never yet arrived.


The discussion concluded after an extended disagreement over whether the College's Five-Year Strategic Vision should be regarded as a forecast, an aspiration, or an unusually optimistic filing system.

The document was unanimously renewed for a further five years.

Discussion VII: On the Visibility of Goodness

The manuscript has acquired a pencilled question mark beside the heading "The Moral Animal."

No one attempts to erase it.


Blottisham: This chapter is rather dangerous.


Quillibrace: Then let us proceed unusually slowly.


Blottisham: The author appears to suggest that morality is partly concerned with making goodness visible.

Surely morality is about being good.


Quillibrace: One hopes so.

The interesting question is how societies recognise goodness once it exists.


Stray: Recognition isn't automatic.

Large societies require visible signs.

Otherwise everyone must inspect everyone else's character personally.


Blottisham: Which would take forever.


Quillibrace: And make committee meetings even longer.


(A brief pause.)


Stray: The manuscript isn't mocking morality.

It's asking how moral trust becomes possible between strangers.


Blottisham: Through honesty.


Quillibrace: An admirable beginning.

How does one recognise it?


Blottisham: Well...

eventually.


Quillibrace: Society generally prefers not to wait eventually.


(Blottisham nods reluctantly.)


Stray: So communities invent ways of signalling shared commitments.

Oaths.

Professional codes.

Public promises.

Ceremonies.


Quillibrace: Quite.

Visible assurances regarding invisible dispositions.


Blottisham: That seems entirely sensible.


Quillibrace: It is.

The manuscript's concern begins one step later.


Blottisham: Which is?


Quillibrace: The sign occasionally becomes easier to observe than the disposition.


(Silence.)


Stray: Like mistaking a wedding ring for a marriage.


Quillibrace: An excellent example.

The symbol may express the relationship.

It cannot conduct it.


Blottisham: But surely symbols matter.


Quillibrace: Immensely.

Civilisation would be impossible without them.

The difficulty arises only when symbols become substitutes rather than reminders.


(They read for a while.)


Stray: Here's an interesting sentence.

"Communities coordinate around publicly recognisable goodness."


Blottisham: That sounds faintly bureaucratic.


Quillibrace: Morality becomes surprisingly administrative once populations exceed several million.


(They laugh.)


Blottisham: I hadn't thought of ethics as an administrative challenge.


Quillibrace: Most ethical systems eventually do.

The filing arrives rather later.


Stray: The manuscript also distinguishes between goodness...

and confidence that goodness is present.


Quillibrace: Ah.

Now we arrive at the interesting part.


Blottisham: Aren't those the same thing?


Quillibrace: No more than health and confidence in health are the same thing.

Civilisations require both.

They merely flourish when they are not confused.


(A thoughtful silence.)


Stray: Perhaps that's why every age develops new ways of displaying virtue.

The forms change because society itself changes.


Quillibrace: Yes.

A medieval village and a modern city solve rather different coordination problems.

One should therefore expect different moral furniture.


Blottisham: Moral furniture?


Quillibrace: Every civilisation furnishes goodness slightly differently.

The architecture changes.

The aspiration is recognisably familiar.


Blottisham: I rather like that.


Quillibrace: So do I.

Though I distrust liking my own metaphors.


(A pause.)


Stray: I think the manuscript is kinder than I first realised.

It never laughs at people for wishing to be good.

Only for occasionally mistaking public recognisability for the thing itself.


Quillibrace: Precisely.

That mistake is understandable.

Visible things are easier to coordinate than invisible ones.


Blottisham: Then the solution is simply to ignore appearances?


Quillibrace: Good heavens, no.

One cannot conduct civilisation by private intuition alone.

The art lies in remembering that appearances are evidence...

not verdicts.


(Silence.)


Stray: That's rather beautiful.


Quillibrace: Merely practical.

Beautiful things often are.


The discussion concluded after an unexpectedly spirited debate over whether the College's annual prize for Collegial Conduct recognised exemplary behaviour or merely exemplary recognisability.

The prize committee declined to comment.

Discussion VI: On Moving Certainty

Someone has inserted a bookmark entitled "Replacement."

No such chapter exists.


Blottisham: This next section is rather unfair.

Quillibrace: To whom?

Blottisham: Everyone.

The author claims each generation replaces one certainty with another while believing it has finally escaped certainty altogether.

That seems unnecessarily sweeping.


Quillibrace: Does it?


Blottisham: We don't merely replace ideas.

Sometimes we genuinely improve them.


Quillibrace: Certainly.

The question is whether improvement eliminates the need for certainty...

or merely relocates it.


(A pause.)


Stray: I think that's the manuscript's central observation.

It never says new ideas are equivalent to old ones.

It says certainty itself appears surprisingly adaptable.


Blottisham: Adaptable?


Stray: It keeps finding new places to live.


Quillibrace: A rather elegant metaphor.

Yesterday's certainty occupies today's museum.

Today's certainty is already furnishing tomorrow's exhibition.


Blottisham: That's rather bleak.


Quillibrace: On the contrary.

Museums are generally signs of affection.


(They smile.)


Blottisham: But surely we do know more than previous generations.


Quillibrace: Almost certainly.

The manuscript is asking a subtler question.

Does knowing more reduce the human desire for certainty?


Blottisham: Doesn't it?


Quillibrace: History offers surprisingly little encouragement.


Stray: Perhaps knowledge expands...

and certainty simply moves to the new frontier.


Quillibrace: Yes.

The horizon retreats with admirable consistency.


(A thoughtful silence.)


Blottisham: There's a sentence here I rather like.

"Every generation recognises the previous generation's certainty more easily than its own."

That seems rather unfair.


Quillibrace: Entirely.

Which is why it may be true.


Blottisham: Surely we're capable of recognising our own assumptions.


Quillibrace: Occasionally.

Usually after retirement.


(A pause.)


Stray: Or after reading history.

History has an unfortunate habit of making previous certainties appear inevitable.


Quillibrace: Yes.

Every century finds the last one surprisingly confident.

The interesting question is what the next century will find surprising about ours.


Blottisham: That depends what survives.


Quillibrace: Precisely.

Posterity edits with extraordinary confidence.


Stray: I wonder whether certainty is less like a destination...

and more like accommodation.


Blottisham: Accommodation?


Stray: We inhabit it for a while.

It becomes comfortable.

Eventually it no longer fits.

So we move.


Quillibrace: Beautifully put.

Though, like most house moves, we spend several years insisting the new place is completely different...

while arranging the furniture in almost exactly the same way.


(Blottisham laughs.)


Blottisham: That's excellent.


Quillibrace: I was rather pleased with it myself.


(They return to the manuscript.)


Blottisham: Here's another curious remark.

"Revolutions often inherit the organisational habits of the institutions they replace."


Quillibrace: Of course.

One cannot organise a revolution without becoming organised.


Stray: Which means certainty doesn't merely survive revolutions.

It learns new vocabulary.


Quillibrace: Indeed.

Human beings are remarkably inventive.

Especially when renaming familiar arrangements.


Blottisham: Then are we simply condemned to repeat ourselves?


Quillibrace: No.

We repeat ourselves differently.

That is civilisation.


(A long silence.)


Stray: I don't think the manuscript is criticising certainty.

It's describing its migration.


Quillibrace: Exactly.

People imagine certainty to be a monument.

The manuscript suggests it is a tenant.


Blottisham: A tenant?


Quillibrace: Forever moving into newly renovated intellectual property.


(Silence.)


Blottisham: I shall never think about paradigm shifts in quite the same way again.


Quillibrace: That is the occupational hazard of good anthropology.

It rearranges perfectly ordinary phenomena until they become impossible to overlook.


The discussion concluded after an inconclusive attempt to determine whether the College had modernised over the previous century or merely acquired more efficient ways of preserving its traditions.

The minutes from 1928 were consulted.

They proved unexpectedly contemporary.

Discussion V: On the Comfort of Procedure

The manuscript now opens naturally at Chapter Five.

This is beginning to concern everyone.


Blottisham: I've been thinking about yesterday's discussion.

Quillibrace: My sympathies.

Blottisham: If institutions are organised around uncertainty...

why are they so fond of procedures?

Surely procedures exist because uncertainty has already been removed.


Quillibrace: An understandable assumption.

Entire bureaucracies have been constructed upon it.


Stray: The manuscript says something rather different.

It suggests that procedures exist because uncertainty cannot be removed.

Only managed.


Blottisham: That sounds suspiciously convenient.


Quillibrace: Does it?

Imagine two surgeons confronted with the same operation.

Would you prefer each to improvise according to temperament?


Blottisham: Certainly not.


Quillibrace: Quite.

The procedure does not abolish uncertainty.

It ensures that uncertainty is encountered in roughly the same order each time.


(A pause.)


Stray: That's a lovely way of putting it.

The uncertainty is still there.

The procedure simply gives everyone the same map.


Blottisham: So procedures aren't answers.

They're routes.


Quillibrace: Better.

They are agreed routes through territory that remains partly unmapped.


Blottisham: Then why do people become so attached to them?


Quillibrace: Because familiarity is reassuring.

One may traverse an uncertain landscape with considerable confidence if the footpath is well worn.


Stray: The manuscript also observes that procedures often survive the circumstances that produced them.


Blottisham: Surely not.


Quillibrace: Frequently.

Institutions possess unusually long memories.

Sometimes longer than their reasons.


(Blottisham looks thoughtfully at the ceiling.)


Blottisham: That would explain several forms I completed last week.


Quillibrace: It may explain civilisation.


(A brief silence.)


Stray: I liked another sentence.

"A procedure is institutional memory disguised as present necessity."


Quillibrace: Ah.

That is rather good.


Blottisham: Is it true?


Quillibrace: Often.

Someone once made a mistake.

The institution remembered.

Eventually the memory acquired a form.

Future generations inherited the form without necessarily inheriting the story.


Stray: Which is why people sometimes ask,

"Why do we do it this way?"

and no one can answer.


Quillibrace: Precisely.

The explanation has retired.

The procedure has remained in post.


(They laugh.)


Blottisham: That's absurd.


Quillibrace: It is administration.

The distinction is occasionally difficult to maintain.


Stray: So perhaps institutions don't preserve certainty.

They preserve successful ways of living with uncertainty.


Quillibrace: Yes.

Until circumstances change.

At which point they continue preserving them with admirable determination.


Blottisham: That's rather unfair.

Institutions do change.


Quillibrace: Indeed.

Very slowly.

This prevents them changing every Tuesday.

Which would be exhausting.


(A thoughtful pause.)


Stray: The manuscript never laughs at procedures themselves.

Only at the belief that procedures somehow replace judgement.


Quillibrace: Exactly.

A procedure cannot decide whether this is the occasion on which the procedure ought not to be followed.

That responsibility remains stubbornly human.


Blottisham: Then judgement survives all bureaucracy.


Quillibrace: It had better.

Otherwise bureaucracy would require another bureaucracy to supervise it.


Blottisham: Surely no civilisation would...


(He stops.)


Quillibrace: Quite.


(A silence of unusual quality settles over the room.)


Stray: I think I'm beginning to understand the manuscript.

Every institution seems to consist of two things.

Its procedures...

and the quiet judgement required whenever the procedures prove insufficient.


Quillibrace: My dear Miss Stray...

I rather suspect that is why institutions continue employing people.


The discussion concluded after a prolonged attempt to determine whether the College's procedure for revising procedures ought itself to be revised.

The existing procedure was retained pending further procedural review.

Discussion IV: On the Custodians of Uncertainty

The manuscript now contains several bookmarks.

They have been inserted with the confidence of someone intending to return.


Blottisham: I've reached the chapter on experts.

I must say, the author seems unusually fond of them.

Quillibrace: Does he?

Blottisham: I expected a satire.

Instead he appears to be defending expertise.


Stray: I don't think he's defending it.

He's describing its function.


Blottisham: Which is?


Stray: To know more than everyone else.


Quillibrace: No.

To know more about what remains unknown than everyone else.

There is a difference.


Blottisham: Surely expertise consists in possessing answers.


Quillibrace: Only in introductory textbooks.

Among experts themselves, the conversation is generally about the unanswered questions.


Stray: That's true, isn't it?

Whenever specialists speak to the public they explain what is known.

Whenever they speak to one another they discuss what still isn't.


Quillibrace: Precisely.

The frontier is always more interesting than the territory.


(Blottisham considers this.)


Blottisham: Then why does everyone keep saying we should "trust the experts"?


Quillibrace: A curious phrase.

Experts are rarely trustworthy because they know everything.

They are trustworthy because they usually know exactly where certainty ends.


Stray: So expertise isn't the elimination of uncertainty.

It's familiarity with its boundaries.


Quillibrace: Better still.

It is familiarity with the shape of the fog.


Blottisham: That's unhelpfully poetic.


Quillibrace: Only because the landscape is difficult to survey.


(A pause.)


Stray: The manuscript also makes an interesting point about disagreement.

It says outsiders often regard disagreement between experts as evidence that expertise has failed.


Blottisham: Isn't it?


Quillibrace: Quite the reverse.

Experts usually disagree most intensely where the questions become most interesting.


Blottisham: Then what distinguishes an expert from an amateur?


Quillibrace: The amateur has opinions.

The expert has difficulties.


(A silence.)


Blottisham: That's rather unfair.


Quillibrace: To amateurs?

Possibly.


Stray: Or perhaps the expert has learned to see the cost of every answer.


Quillibrace: Yes.

The longer one studies a subject, the more expensive certainty becomes.


Blottisham: That's an extraordinary sentence.


Quillibrace: I thought so too.

Which is why I wish I'd written it.


(They return to the manuscript.)


Stray: Here's another curious observation.

"Authority functions by redistributing uncertainty."

I'm not entirely sure what that means.


Quillibrace: Consider medicine.

Most patients do not wish to master physiology.

They wish to know whom they should ask.


Blottisham: Naturally.


Quillibrace: The uncertainty has not disappeared.

It has moved.


Stray: To someone better equipped to live with it.


Quillibrace: Exactly.

Authority is often less about possessing certainty than about accepting responsibility for uncertainty.


Blottisham: That makes authority sound rather noble.


Quillibrace: Sometimes it is.

Sometimes it merely owns a better filing system.


(A thoughtful silence.)


Blottisham: The manuscript seems surprisingly sympathetic.

I had expected it to expose experts.


Quillibrace: It does.

It simply exposes everyone else at the same time.


Stray: Perhaps that's why it doesn't feel cynical.

No one escapes the pattern.


Quillibrace: Quite.

One should be suspicious of theories in which the author alone remains anthropologically invisible.


(Blottisham closes the manuscript.)


Blottisham: I must confess...

I rather liked experts better when I imagined they knew everything.


Quillibrace: Most people do.

Reality generally asks rather more of them.


The discussion ended with an extended consideration of whether the porter should properly be regarded as the foremost expert on the College or merely the only person who knew where everything actually was.

Opinion remained divided.

Discussion III: On Questions Worth Organising

A fresh annotation has appeared in the margin beside the chapter entitled "The Institutions of Uncertainty."

It reads simply:

"Surely not."

The handwriting remains unidentified.


Blottisham: I think the author has finally overreached.

Quillibrace: That is always encouraging.

Proceed.

Blottisham: The manuscript claims that sufficiently important unanswered questions produce institutions.

That's absurd.

People create institutions.

Questions don't.

Quillibrace: They do if one permits a modest degree of metaphor.

Blottisham: I never permit metaphor.

It encourages ambiguity.

Quillibrace: How fortunate that language has learned to cope without your approval.


Stray: I don't think the point is causal in a literal sense.

The suggestion is that some questions are so persistent they reorganise social life around themselves.


Blottisham: Such as?


Stray: Disease.

Justice.

Education.

Security.

Energy.

How children learn.

How societies govern themselves.

Those questions never quite disappear.

So neither do the institutions devoted to them.


Quillibrace: Quite.

The institution is less an answer than a commitment to remain occupied by the question.


(Blottisham frowns.)


Blottisham: Universities don't exist because knowledge is incomplete.

They exist to complete it.


Quillibrace: An admirable ambition.

How long do you imagine that will take?


(A pause.)


Blottisham: Longer than anticipated.


Quillibrace: Indeed.

Which is why universities have proved surprisingly durable.


Stray: That's rather a beautiful inversion.

A university isn't a warehouse of answers.

It's an organisation built around questions that refuse to go away.


Quillibrace: Yes.

Libraries contain answers.

Universities contain unanswered questions.

The books are simply where they sleep.


(A long silence.)


Blottisham: That's annoyingly good.


Quillibrace: It occurred to me only this moment.

I shall probably claim to have believed it for years.


Stray: The manuscript also says something curious.

It suggests that disciplines are distinguished less by what they know than by which uncertainties they agree are worth preserving.


Blottisham: Preserving uncertainty?

Surely that's the opposite of scholarship.


Quillibrace: Is it?

A discipline that solved every important question would immediately lose its reason for existing.


Blottisham: You make academia sound almost self-interested.


Quillibrace: I make it sound perennial.

There is a difference.


Stray: Perhaps disciplines don't simply eliminate uncertainty.

Perhaps they cultivate particular forms of it.


Blottisham: Cultivate uncertainty?


Stray: They teach students which questions remain alive.

Which distinctions matter.

Which disagreements deserve another generation.


Quillibrace: Quite so.

Every discipline has its own carefully tended garden of unresolved problems.

The flowers change.

The gardening rarely does.


Blottisham: That's a rather peaceful image.


Quillibrace: It was not intended to be.


(A brief silence.)


Blottisham: If that's true...

then conferences begin to look rather different.


Quillibrace: Yes.


Blottisham: They aren't gatherings at which uncertainty is eliminated.


Stray: They're gatherings at which uncertainty is redistributed.


Quillibrace: Or, if one is feeling particularly charitable...

maintained collectively.


Blottisham: That would explain something I've never understood.


Quillibrace: Only one?


Blottisham: Why conferences conclude by identifying even more questions than they began with.


Quillibrace: Ah.

That is often regarded as a successful conference.


Stray: Because everyone leaves knowing more precisely what they still don't know.


Quillibrace: Exactly.

Precision is frequently mistaken for closure.

The two have almost nothing in common.


(The room falls quiet.)


Blottisham: I must admit...

if the manuscript is right...

civilisation seems rather less like a monument.


Stray: More like a conversation.


Quillibrace: Better still.

A conversation that has become sufficiently organised to survive the departure of its participants.


(Silence.)


Blottisham: That's almost comforting.


Quillibrace: Don't worry.

Someone will eventually form a committee to improve it.


The discussion concluded after an unsuccessful attempt to determine whether the Senior Common Room itself constituted an interdisciplinary research environment or merely an unusually persistent conversation.

The distinction remained unresolved.

Discussion II: On Making Certainty Visible

A copy of the manuscript has acquired pencilled annotations.

No one claims responsibility.


Blottisham: I've reached the chapter on certificates.

Quillibrace: My condolences.

Blottisham: It says certificates don't merely record competence.

They display certainty.

Surely that's nonsense.

A certificate tells you someone has passed an examination.

Quillibrace: Does it?

Blottisham: Well... yes.

Quillibrace: It tells you someone has passed an examination.

Whether they remain competent twenty years later is a rather different proposition.

Blottisham: You're quibbling.

Quillibrace: Habitually.


Stray: I don't think the manuscript is criticising certificates.

It's asking why every society invents objects that allow confidence to become visible.

Blottisham: Visible confidence?

Stray: Qualifications.

Uniforms.

Titles.

Official seals.

Identity cards.

Academic gowns.

Even architectural styles.

They're all ways of making invisible judgements publicly recognisable.


Blottisham: That seems perfectly sensible.

People need to know whom to trust.

Quillibrace: Precisely.

The manuscript never denies that.

It merely observes that trust rarely remains invisible for long.

It acquires furniture.


Blottisham: Furniture?

Quillibrace: Offices.

Buildings.

Certificates.

Letterheads.

Committees.

Bronze plaques.

Human beings possess a remarkable talent for furnishing abstractions.


(A pause.)


Stray: That's rather an interesting phrase.

Quillibrace: Which one?

Stray: "Furnishing abstractions."


Quillibrace: Consider justice.

It begins as an idea.

Very soon it acquires courts.

Robes.

Buildings.

Procedures.

Forms.

Appeals.

Archives.

The abstraction becomes inhabitable.


Blottisham: I should hope so.

An unfurnished justice would be intolerably draughty.


(Quillibrace looks at him for a moment.)


Quillibrace: I withdraw any previous implication that you never contribute.


Stray: The manuscript makes a similar point about graphs.

People often become calmer merely because a graph has appeared.

Blottisham: That's because graphs contain evidence.

Quillibrace: Sometimes.

At other times they merely contain axes.


Blottisham: Surely people can tell the difference.

Quillibrace: You have attended fewer meetings than I had imagined.


(A brief silence.)


Stray: Perhaps graphs do something before anyone has interpreted them.

They suggest that uncertainty has entered an orderly environment.


Quillibrace: Exactly.

The graph says,

"Someone has been looking."

Whether they have found anything is occasionally a secondary matter.


Blottisham: That seems rather unfair to graphs.


Quillibrace: On the contrary.

Graphs are innocent.

It is people who invest them with ceremonial significance.


Stray: Ceremonial?


Quillibrace: We often imagine ceremonies are opposed to practical activity.

Most are practical.

They establish confidence that collective action may proceed.


Blottisham: You're suggesting a graduation ceremony and an engineering inspection perform related social functions?


Quillibrace: In one respect, yes.

Both publicly declare that a transition has occurred.

One concerns persons.

The other concerns bridges.

Neither would function particularly well if conducted privately in a cupboard.


(Blottisham smiles despite himself.)


Stray: So perhaps the manuscript isn't saying that certificates, graphs and procedures are empty symbols.

It's saying they are visible stabilisations.

Ways of allowing large numbers of strangers to coordinate around shared confidence.


Quillibrace: Well put.

The difficulty begins only when the visible stabilisation quietly becomes more important than whatever it was stabilising.


Blottisham: Can that happen?


Quillibrace: Universities occasionally mistake rankings for education.

Hospitals mistake targets for health.

Governments mistake announcements for policy.

Individuals mistake reputation for character.

The pattern is not uncommon.


(A thoughtful silence.)


Stray: So the manuscript isn't warning us against symbols.

It's warning us against forgetting the distinction between the symbol and the work it was created to support.


Quillibrace: Yes.

One might almost formulate a general principle.

Human beings construct visible signs in order to coordinate invisible judgements.

Every so often...

they begin coordinating around the signs instead.


Blottisham: That's rather depressing.


Quillibrace: Not at all.

It is merely another maintenance problem.

Like roofs.

Or plumbing.

Civilisations require periodic reminders of what their symbols are for.


The conversation concluded with an unexpectedly vigorous disagreement over whether the Senior Common Room silverware functioned primarily as cutlery or institutional memory.

No inventory was taken.

Discussion I: The Civilisation of Uncertainty

A printed manuscript entitled The Anthropology of Certainty has appeared on the central table.

No one recalls seeing it arrive.


Blottisham: Curious title.

It sounds like someone has finally decided to classify certainty as an endangered species.

Stray: Or perhaps as a domesticated one.

Quillibrace: Those are not mutually exclusive.

(A pause while pages are turned.)

Blottisham: Well.

It's certainly ambitious.

The author seems to believe civilisation is essentially an elaborate response to not knowing things.

That strikes me as unnecessarily gloomy.

Quillibrace: Does it?

Blottisham: Of course.

Civilisation exists because we do know things.

Agriculture.

Medicine.

Engineering.

Constitutional law.

The plumbing in this building.

Quillibrace: Ah.

You have immediately supplied examples of accumulated knowledge.

The author appears to be asking a different question.

What required those accumulations in the first place?

Blottisham: Ignorance.

Obviously.

Quillibrace: No.

Ignorance requires remarkably little organisation.

Uncertainty does.

Stray: That's an interesting distinction.

Ignorance can remain private.

Uncertainty often becomes collective.

Blottisham: I'm not sure I follow.

Stray: If I don't know the capital of Peru, the consequences are modest.

If no one knows whether a bridge is safe, society rather quickly becomes organised around finding out.

Quillibrace: Or, more precisely, around deciding what shall count as finding out.

Blottisham: Surely that's splitting hairs.

Either the bridge is safe or it isn't.

Quillibrace: Quite.

But before anyone walks across it, committees must meet.

Measurements must be trusted.

Experts must be recognised.

Standards must be agreed.

Reports must be signed.

The bridge may be a physical structure.

Confidence in the bridge is an institutional one.

(Blottisham reads silently for a moment.)

Blottisham: Hm.

The author says something rather odd here.

"Important unanswered questions produce conferences, journals, centres, frameworks and funding streams."

That can't literally be true.

Quillibrace: Can't it?

Blottisham: Questions don't produce conferences.

People produce conferences.

Quillibrace: Yes.

The interesting question is why.

Stray: Perhaps because a sufficiently important question cannot remain merely a question.

People begin organising themselves around it.

Quillibrace: Exactly.

The manuscript is not treating uncertainty as an intellectual deficiency.

It is treating it as a social generator.

Blottisham: Generator?

Quillibrace: Of institutions.

Of professions.

Of procedures.

Of authority.

Perhaps even of civilisation itself.

(A longer pause.)

Stray: That's rather a beautiful inversion.

Most histories describe institutions as products of knowledge.

This manuscript suggests they are equally products of what remains unresolved.

Blottisham: If that's true...

(He closes the manuscript and looks around the room.)

...then universities have been misunderstood from the beginning.

Quillibrace: Universities have always understood perfectly well what they are doing.

The difficulty is that they occasionally describe it differently.

(Silence.)

Blottisham: I dislike it.

Quillibrace: Good.

Blottisham: Why good?

Quillibrace: Because a genuinely unfamiliar idea should not feel immediately hospitable.

It should rearrange the furniture before offering you a chair.

(Another silence.)

Stray: I wonder whether the manuscript is really about certainty at all.

Quillibrace: No?

Stray: I think it may be about civilisation.

It simply approaches civilisation from the opposite end.

Instead of asking how knowledge accumulates...

...it asks what unanswered questions make people build together.

Quillibrace (closing the manuscript): Yes.

I rather suspect that is the more interesting question.


The discussion then turned, for reasons no one subsequently recalled, to whether the Senior Common Room itself ought properly to be regarded as a response to uncertainty.

No conclusion was recorded.

The Anthropology of Certainty X. The Anthropology of Certainty

The preceding observations have attempted to describe a recurring feature of human societies.

Namely, their persistent tendency to convert uncertainty into structured forms of certainty.

Institutions.

Rituals.

Authorities.

Forecasts.

Moral frameworks.

Theories.

Each has been examined in turn.

Each appears to function as a stabilisation of uncertainty into socially usable form.

At this point, it may be appropriate to acknowledge the position from which these observations have been made.

The anthropologist is not external to the species under study.

This has never been the case.

All observation is conducted from within the system of human meaning-making.

All description participates in the practices it describes.

This includes the present account.

The act of identifying patterns of certainty is itself one such pattern.

It is therefore unsurprising that the anthropologist, having described the production of certainty in others, should now recognise its production in their own analysis.

The desire for coherence is not absent from anthropology.

Nor is the desire for explanation.

Nor is the desire for a sufficiently general account that would render the phenomenon intelligible.

These are, themselves, cultural features of the species.

One consequence of this recognition is a certain softening of tone.

Earlier observations may have appeared to suggest that certainty is something imposed upon reality by institutions.

A more careful formulation would be that certainty is one of the ways in which human beings maintain coordinated life in the presence of irreducible uncertainty.

It is not an illusion.

It is a practice.

It is not merely mistaken knowledge.

It is social organisation.

It is not external to life.

It is part of how life proceeds.

The anthropologist therefore revises the initial framing.

The question is not why humans fail to escape uncertainty.

The question is why they repeatedly succeed in living with it.

Through the construction of institutions, languages, roles, procedures, and shared expectations, the species produces temporary stabilisations that allow action to occur.

These stabilisations are then mistaken, at various points, for final descriptions of reality.

They are revised.

They are replaced.

They are re-inhabited.

The cycle continues.

At this point, a further complication arises.

The anthropological description itself risks becoming another stabilisation.

A framework through which uncertainty about certainty is rendered temporarily manageable.

This is not an error.

It is unavoidable.

The observer is always already within the field of observation.

The anthropologist therefore does not conclude with a theory that escapes this condition.

Instead, they note its recurrence.

And include themselves within it.

Field Note 28:

The attempt to describe certainty produces further instances of certainty.

Field Note 29:

There is no position from which certainty can be finally observed without participation.

Field Note 30:

The species includes, among its many practices, the practice of observing its own practices.

Final Field Note:

The species remains uncertain about uncertainty.

Postscript (unrecorded in field notebook):

The anthropologist briefly considered whether this final observation undermined the entire study.

They concluded that it did not.

It simply relocated the observer.