Sunday, 17 May 2026

8. On Mr Blottisham's Unfortunate Experience in the Elevator

The Senior Common Room at St Anselm's had settled into one of those contemplative silences in which the rain at the windows seemed to possess stronger opinions than the faculty.

Professor Quillibrace sat beside the fire.

Miss Elowen Stray was making notes with increasing concentration.

Mr Blottisham entered looking exceptionally pleased.

Quillibrace looked up.

Then narrowed his eyes.

"You appear encouraged."

"I am."

"Oh dear."


Blottisham sat down triumphantly.

"I've solved the matter."

Elowen looked cautious.

"Reality again?"

"No."

Quillibrace looked relieved.

"Good."

"A smaller problem."

Quillibrace became suspicious again.

"Which smaller problem?"

"Gravity."

Long silence.


Quillibrace closed his eyes briefly.

"My dear fellow..."

"What?"

"...we only recently dismantled gravity."

Blottisham waved dismissively.

"Yes, yes. But now I understand it."

"Oh no."


Blottisham leaned forward enthusiastically.

"I've been thinking about Einstein's elevator."

Quillibrace looked suddenly wary.

"Have you indeed."

"Certainly."

He spread his hands.

"If I stand in a sealed elevator and feel myself pressed against the floor, either gravity is pulling me downward or the elevator is accelerating upward."

"Yes."

"And Einstein says I cannot tell which."

"Yes."

Blottisham sat back smiling.

"Simple."

Silence.


Elowen looked up.

"Simple?"

"Of course."

He nodded confidently.

"The explanation is obvious."

Quillibrace stared at him.

"My dear Mr Blottisham..."

"Yes?"

"...I have developed a growing fear of that phrase."


Blottisham folded his arms.

"Clearly one of the two situations must be real."

Silence.

Quillibrace looked toward the ceiling.

Elowen covered her mouth.


After a while Quillibrace spoke quietly.

"Real."

"Yes."

"The genuine situation."

"Precisely."

"The one secretly hiding beneath appearances."

"Exactly."

Long silence.


"My dear fellow," said Quillibrace gently, "the equivalence principle exists almost entirely to destroy that sentence."


Blottisham blinked.

"I don't follow."

Quillibrace stood and wandered toward the windows.

"The classical imagination depends upon sharp distinctions."

He counted on his fingers.

"Gravity is gravity."

"Yes."

"Acceleration is acceleration."

"Yes."

"Inertia is inertia."

"Yes."

"And each possesses some stable identity independently of context."

"Precisely."

Quillibrace turned.

"And Einstein quietly removes the floor from beneath all of them."


Blottisham looked uneasy.

"But surely if I inspect things carefully enough—"

"Ah."

Quillibrace raised a finger.

"There it is."

"There what is?"

"The final refuge."


Elowen looked thoughtful.

"The assumption that sufficiently local examination eventually reveals reality as it truly is."

Quillibrace pointed approvingly.

"Very good."

Blottisham frowned.

"But isn't that reasonable?"

Quillibrace sat down again.

"Ordinarily, yes."

"Excellent."

"But unfortunately reality appears not to have consulted us."


Silence.


Quillibrace continued.

"The astonishing feature of the equivalence principle is that local structure underdetermines interpretation."

Blottisham blinked.

"Meaning?"

"Meaning that what you encounter locally does not uniquely tell you what you are."

Silence.

Blottisham stared.

Then stared harder.


Elowen leaned forward.

"So acceleration and gravitation become locally indistinguishable."

"Exactly."

"And therefore their apparent distinction cannot arise from local structure alone."

"Precisely."

Blottisham looked alarmed.


"So gravity disappears?"

Quillibrace nodded.

"Locally, yes."

"That seems extremely suspicious."

"Does it?"

"A proper force should remain where one left it."

Quillibrace looked at him.

"My dear Mr Blottisham..."

"Yes?"

"...you've accidentally rediscovered why Einstein found this so remarkable."


Blottisham sat very still.

"So if I examine only what happens inside the elevator..."

"Yes?"

"...I cannot determine some final hidden truth about what is occurring."

"No."

"Because the local situation participates in multiple larger relational organisations."

"No less than exactly so."

Silence.


Blottisham stared into the fire.

"My God."


After some time he spoke quietly.

"So reality isn't locally self-explanatory."

"No."

"And local appearance carries no final ontological authority."

"No."

"And things only become intelligible through broader transformational relations."

Quillibrace slowly put down his teacup.

"My dear Mr Blottisham..."

"Yes?"

"...you are becoming increasingly dangerous."


Rain tapped softly against the windows.

Nobody spoke for a while.

Then Blottisham frowned.

"Though one issue remains."

Quillibrace looked exhausted already.

"Naturally."

"If local phenomena cannot determine their own interpretation..."

"Yes?"

"...does this explain why Cook's puddings always seem either impossibly heavy or mysteriously light depending upon where one sits in the dining hall?"

Quillibrace looked toward the ceiling.

"My dear fellow," he said quietly, "I have long suspected locally variable dessert geometry."

7. On Mr Blottisham's Distressing Encounter with Rubber Sheets

The Senior Common Room at St Anselm's possessed that particular afternoon quietness in which rain murmured at the windows and intellectual disasters could unfold with proper dignity.

Professor Quillibrace sat by the fire.

Miss Elowen Stray was reading.

Mr Blottisham entered carrying an expression of considerable confidence and several sheets of paper.

Quillibrace looked immediately suspicious.

"You've brought diagrams."

"Yes."

"Oh dear."


Blottisham spread the papers triumphantly across the table.

"I've understood curvature."

Silence.

Elowen looked up slowly.

"You have?"

"Completely."

Quillibrace removed his spectacles.

"My dear fellow, recent history advises caution."


Blottisham jabbed at the drawings.

"There."

On the page were several enthusiastic sketches of stretched sheets with depressions in them.

"Heavier objects make dents, smaller objects roll around inside the dents, gravity explained."

He leaned back happily.

"I've restored order."

Quillibrace stared at the papers for several long seconds.

Then:

"Oh no."


Blottisham frowned.

"What?"

Quillibrace looked genuinely pained.

"My dear fellow."

"Yes?"

"You have fallen victim to the rubber sheet."

"The what?"

"The most successful pedagogical disaster in modern physics."


Elowen lowered her notebook.

"The issue is that the sheet becomes a thing."

Quillibrace pointed at her approvingly.

"Exactly."

Blottisham looked puzzled.

"But spacetime is a thing."

Long silence.

Quillibrace stared at him.

Elowen stared at him.

Blottisham gradually became uncomfortable.


Quillibrace folded his hands.

"Observe what your picture quietly assumes."

He tapped the page.

"There is a sheet."

"Yes."

"The sheet exists independently."

"Yes."

"The sheet bends."

"Yes."

"The sheet sits within some larger surrounding structure."

Blottisham paused.

"...yes."

Quillibrace looked at him sadly.

"My dear Mr Blottisham."

"Yes?"

"You have smuggled container metaphysics back through the side door."


Blottisham looked wounded.

"I've smuggled it?"

"Entirely."

Elowen smiled faintly.

"You've reconstructed the thing we spent several discussions dismantling."

Blottisham looked horrified.

"I have?"

Quillibrace nodded gravely.

"You've built spacetime furniture."


A long silence followed.

Then Blottisham frowned.

"But if curvature isn't bending a thing..."

"Yes?"

"...what exactly is it?"

Quillibrace sat back.

"Ah."

He looked unexpectedly pleased.

"That is the correct question."


Elowen leaned forward.

"Curvature changes the local relational constraints."

Quillibrace nodded.

"It alters how trajectories, durations, and separations can remain coherent."

Blottisham blinked.

"So..."

He hesitated.

"...it doesn't push anything?"

"No."

"It doesn't pull anything?"

"No."

"It doesn't bend anything?"

"No."

Silence.


Blottisham looked at the drawings.

Then at Quillibrace.

Then back at the drawings.

Slowly he slid the papers away.

"I suddenly distrust my diagrams."

Quillibrace looked satisfied.

"Healthy progress."


Elowen looked thoughtful.

"So instead of imagining distorted shapes..."

She glanced at her notes.

"...we should think of different local conditions for coherent actualisation."

"Very good."

"And geodesics wouldn't be paths through a pre-existing geometry."

"No."

"They would be expressions of maximal relational coherence under local constraints."

Quillibrace smiled.

"Excellent."


Blottisham looked uneasy again.

"I think I've understood something."

Quillibrace looked wary.

"If curvature changes local relational possibility..."

"Yes?"

"...then different regions of reality possess different conditions for coherent unfolding."

Silence.

Elowen slowly looked up.

Quillibrace froze.

"My God," whispered Blottisham.


Quillibrace sat down carefully.

"My dear Mr Blottisham..."

"Yes?"

"...you continue to stumble into understanding with the determination of a man falling downstairs."

Blottisham looked pleased.

"I do seem to arrive eventually."


Rain drifted softly against the windows.

For a while nobody spoke.

Then Blottisham frowned.

"Though one concern remains."

Quillibrace closed his eyes.

"Naturally."

"If curvature is really differential organisation of relational possibility..."

"Yes?"

"...does this explain why the corridor outside the dining hall becomes impossibly crowded five minutes before lunch?"

Quillibrace looked toward the ceiling.

"My dear fellow," he said quietly, "I have long suspected a local increase in trajectory convergence."

6. On the Disturbing Discovery That Gravity Had Been Faking It

The Senior Common Room at St Anselm's had acquired that peculiar afternoon stillness in which tea cooled unnoticed and metaphysical certainties approached extinction.

Professor Quillibrace sat beside the fire.

Miss Elowen Stray was reading with an expression suggesting increasing concern for the fate of reality.

Mr Blottisham entered carrying an apple.

He looked triumphant.

Quillibrace immediately narrowed his eyes.

"You've brought fruit."

"Yes."

"You appear confident."

"Very."

Quillibrace sighed.

"Oh dear."


Blottisham sat down and held up the apple.

"I've solved the matter."

"The matter of reality?"

"Gravity."

Silence.

Elowen slowly looked up.

"Gravity."

"Yes."

Blottisham waved the apple cheerfully.

"At last we reach firm ground."

Quillibrace stared at him.

"My dear fellow, nothing in recent history suggests this outcome."


Blottisham continued undeterred.

"Gravity is obvious."

He released the apple.

It fell neatly into his lap.

"There."

He spread his hands.

"Things fall because something pulls them downward."

Quillibrace looked at him sadly.

"Ah."

Elowen closed her notebook with measured caution.


Quillibrace folded his hands.

"For centuries, Mr Blottisham, everyone would have agreed with you."

Blottisham looked pleased.

"I knew it."

"Do not celebrate prematurely."


Quillibrace stood.

"The classical picture is wonderfully straightforward."

He began pacing slowly.

"There are objects."

"Yes."

"There are forces."

"Yes."

"There are trajectories."

"Yes."

"And there is a geometrical arena within which these things interact."

Blottisham nodded happily.

"Beautiful."

Quillibrace turned.

"And general relativity quietly murders the central character."

Silence.


Blottisham frowned.

"The central character?"

"Force."

The apple nearly slipped from Blottisham's hand.

"Force?"

"Gravity ceases to be one."

Long silence.

Blottisham blinked.

Then blinked again.

"No."

Quillibrace sat down.

"I'm afraid so."

"No."

"Yes."

"No."

"Mr Blottisham, repeating the word does not reconstruct Newtonian mechanics."


Elowen looked thoughtful.

"Because freely falling objects are no longer being acted upon."

Quillibrace nodded.

"They are simply following geodesics."

Blottisham stared.

"Following what?"

"The locally coherent trajectories permitted by the relational organisation of spacetime."

Silence.

"I preferred force."


Quillibrace smiled faintly.

"Naturally."

He leaned forward.

"The extraordinary move Einstein makes is this: under gravity, bodies are not being compelled."

Blottisham looked deeply suspicious.

"They aren't?"

"No."

"They're simply moving in the locally coherent way available to them."

Blottisham stared.

"So planets aren't being pulled around stars?"

"No."

"The apple isn't being dragged downward?"

"No."

Silence.


Blottisham looked slowly at the apple.

Then back at Quillibrace.

"So gravity..."

"...yes?"

"...has been pretending to be a force."

Quillibrace considered this.

Then nodded.

"That is unexpectedly acceptable."

Elowen laughed softly.


She leaned forward.

"So what looked like causal interaction becomes structural coherence."

"Precisely."

"And motion becomes actualisation within relational constraints rather than response to external cause."

Quillibrace pointed approvingly.

"Very good."


Blottisham looked uneasy.

"I don't like where this is heading."

"Really?"

"You're removing causes now."

Quillibrace frowned.

"No."

"I'm not?"

"No."

"We are reorganising them."


Blottisham narrowed his eyes.

"I suspect this may be one of those distinctions professors make before stealing something."

Quillibrace ignored him.

"The problem lies with a particular picture of causation."

He stood and wandered toward the windows.

"Mechanistic thinking imagines independent objects connected by transmitted influence."

"Pushes and pulls."

"Yes."

"But general relativity dissolves the separation between object and environment."

He turned.

"So motion no longer requires externally imposed cause."

Silence.

"It emerges through relational coherence."


Elowen's eyes widened.

"So gravity disappears locally."

Quillibrace nodded.

"The equivalence principle."

"Because a freely falling observer experiences weightlessness."

"Exactly."

Blottisham frowned.

"One moment."

He sat upright.

"If gravity vanishes depending on one's frame..."

"Yes?"

"...that seems extremely suspicious."

"Why?"

"A proper force ought to remain where one left it."


Quillibrace stared at him.

Then very slowly smiled.

"My dear Mr Blottisham..."

"Yes?"

"...that is actually rather good."

Blottisham looked delighted.


A silence settled over the room.

Rain brushed softly against the windows.

Finally Blottisham looked down at the apple in his hand.

"So the apple does not fall because something reaches out and drags it downward."

"No."

"It falls because falling is simply the locally coherent trajectory available within the relational organisation of the world."

Silence.

Quillibrace looked at him.

Elowen looked at him.

Blottisham looked at the apple.

"My God."


After several moments he frowned.

"Though one issue remains."

Quillibrace looked tired already.

"Naturally."

"If gravity isn't a force..."

He glanced toward the dining hall door.

"...what exactly explains the force with which Cook insists on serving cabbage every Thursday?"

Quillibrace removed his spectacles.

"My dear fellow," he said quietly, "there are trajectories from which escape appears locally impossible."

5. On the Day Geometry Joined the Conspiracy

The Senior Common Room at St Anselm's was wrapped in the sort of grey morning that seemed to have resigned itself to permanence.

Professor Quillibrace sat quietly by the fire.

Miss Elowen Stray had accumulated several notebooks and the expression of someone beginning to suspect that reality was becoming increasingly procedural.

Mr Blottisham entered carrying tea.

He looked unusually cheerful.

Quillibrace looked immediately suspicious.

"You appear encouraged."

"I am."

"Oh dear."

Blottisham sat down triumphantly.

"I've solved the problem."

"Which one?"

"Reality."

Quillibrace closed his eyes briefly.

"Naturally."


Blottisham spread his hands confidently.

"I now understand the situation perfectly."

Elowen looked cautious.

"You do?"

"Certainly. Time has gone. Universal viewpoints have gone. Hidden substances have gone. Fine."

He nodded decisively.

"But one thing remains untouched."

Quillibrace slowly lowered his teacup.

"Ah."

"Geometry."

Silence.

"Oh dear," said Elowen quietly.


Blottisham frowned.

"What?"

Quillibrace looked at him with visible pity.

"My dear fellow."

"Yes?"

"You have found the final innocent bystander."

"The what?"

"The last thing quietly standing in the corner pretending not to be involved."

Blottisham blinked.

"I don't understand."

Quillibrace sighed.

"Geometry spent centuries cultivating an image of complete respectability."


He stood and wandered toward the windows.

"For a very long time geometry occupied a privileged position."

He turned.

"Space provided the container."

"Yes."

"Time supplied the ordering."

"Yes."

"Geometry stabilised everything."

Blottisham nodded enthusiastically.

"Precisely."

"It sat beneath physics like a stage beneath actors."

"Exactly."

Quillibrace stared at him.

"And general relativity enters carrying matches."


Blottisham looked alarmed.

"I dislike this already."

Quillibrace folded his hands.

"Even special relativity preserved a certain innocence."

"Innocence?"

"The geometry remained fixed."

"Oh."

"Frames changed, relations shifted, simultaneity vanished—but the background itself remained untouched."

Blottisham relaxed slightly.

"Good."

"General relativity abolishes that."

Blottisham stopped relaxing.


Elowen looked thoughtful.

"Because geometry itself becomes dynamically implicated."

Quillibrace nodded.

"Matter-energy and spacetime become coupled."

"So geometry stops being external to physical process."

"Exactly."

Blottisham frowned.

"I don't see the problem."

Quillibrace looked at him.

"You don't?"

"No."

"If the stage changes in response to the actors..."

He paused.

"...there is no stage."

Silence.


Blottisham stared.

Then stared harder.

Elowen's eyes widened slightly.

"Oh."

Quillibrace nodded.

"That distinction only worked because one assumed independent entities."

He walked slowly back toward his chair.

"But if geometry and matter-energy mutually constrain one another, then the old hierarchy collapses."

Blottisham looked uneasy.

"So space and time aren't merely hosting events."

"No."

"They've joined the events."

"Precisely."


Blottisham frowned suddenly.

"But everyone explains this with sheets of rubber."

Quillibrace froze.

Slowly turned.

"Rubber sheets."

"Yes. Heavy things make dents and objects roll around."

Quillibrace looked as though he had bitten into something unpleasant.

"My dear Mr Blottisham."

"Yes?"

"That infernal rubber sheet has caused generations of suffering."


Elowen smiled into her notebook.

Quillibrace continued.

"The difficulty is subtle."

He sat down.

"The sheet quietly reinstates precisely what general relativity destroys."

Blottisham blinked.

"It does?"

"Of course."

"The sheet is still a thing."

Silence.

"It remains a substrate sitting somewhere and undergoing deformation."

Blottisham's expression changed.

"Oh."

"So the innocent stage has merely returned disguised as upholstery."

Quillibrace looked at him.

Elowen looked at him.

Blottisham looked surprised.


Elowen leaned forward.

"So curvature isn't a thing bending."

"No."

"It's a change in the relational constraints governing trajectories, durations, and separations."

Quillibrace pointed approvingly.

"Very good."

"And geometry itself becomes an effect of relational organisation."

"Exactly."

Blottisham stared into empty space.


"So nothing remains outside the process."

"No."

"No untouched container survives."

"No."

"No final background."

"No."

Silence.

Blottisham looked as though reality had become unexpectedly slippery.


After a while he spoke.

"So reality isn't objects moving around inside a world."

"No."

"It's relational organisation generating both the objects and the world together."

Quillibrace slowly set down his teacup.

"My dear Mr Blottisham..."

"Yes?"

"...you continue to improve at an alarming rate."

Blottisham looked deeply pleased.


Rain drifted softly across the windows.

No one spoke for some time.

Then Blottisham frowned.

"Though one concern remains."

Quillibrace looked tired already.

"Naturally."

"If geometry is dynamically implicated in events..."

"Yes?"

"...does this mean Cook's dining arrangements are also participating in reality rather than merely hosting it?"

Silence.

Quillibrace looked toward the ceiling.

"My dear fellow," he said quietly, "I have long suspected that the seating plan possesses curvature."

4. On the Disturbing Persistence of Things That Are Not Things

The Senior Common Room at St Anselm's sat beneath a morning sky of great philosophical promise and limited meteorological ambition.

Professor Quillibrace was reading quietly.

Miss Elowen Stray was making notes.

Mr Blottisham entered carrying toast, marmalade, and an expression of deep determination.

"I've found it."

Quillibrace did not look up.

"The universal present?"

"No."

"The privileged frame?"

"No."

"The hidden coordinate system?"

"No."

Quillibrace lowered his book cautiously.

"What, then?"

Blottisham smiled triumphantly.

"The thing underneath everything."

Silence.

Elowen closed her notebook very gently.

Quillibrace stared at him.

"The thing underneath everything."

"Yes."

"You've found it."

"Yes."

Quillibrace removed his spectacles.

"My dear fellow, after three weeks of discussion, you have decided that reality must still contain a secret basement."


Blottisham sat down.

"Look here. Something must remain unchanged."

"Must it?"

"Of course. Otherwise change itself becomes impossible."

Quillibrace folded his hands.

"An ancient instinct."

Blottisham looked pleased.

"Thank you."

"It was not praise."


Quillibrace leaned back.

"For a very long time metaphysics proceeded by a simple intuition."

He held up a finger.

"Change requires a stable thing beneath change."

"A sensible arrangement."

"Indeed."

He raised a second finger.

"So one searches for matter, substance, essence, spacetime, laws—something which remains self-identical while appearances shift around it."

Blottisham nodded vigorously.

"Exactly."

Quillibrace looked at him.

"And special relativity spends its entire existence quietly stealing these away."

Blottisham frowned.

"It does seem to have developed unpleasant habits."


Elowen looked thoughtful.

"Because we've been removing every candidate for absolute persistence."

Quillibrace nodded.

"No universal present."

"No invariant duration."

"No invariant distance."

"No privileged frame."

"No globally binding ordering."

Blottisham's expression gradually darkened.

"Oh dear."

"And every time," Elowen continued, "what looked fundamental turned out to depend on a system of relations."

"Exactly."


Blottisham looked uneasy.

"But something still survives."

Quillibrace smiled faintly.

"Ah yes."

He leaned forward.

"The interesting question is not whether something survives."

"It's what kind of thing survives."

Blottisham relaxed.

"Good."

"No objects survive."

Blottisham tensed again.

"No background structure survives."

"Oh."

"No universal ordering survives."

"Oh dear."

"What survives are relational constraints."

Silence.


Blottisham blinked several times.

"Constraints."

"Yes."

"You mean rules."

"Broadly speaking."

"You mean reality is held together by rules."

"Broadly speaking."

Blottisham looked appalled.

"Reality has become bureaucracy."


Elowen laughed quietly into her tea.

Quillibrace ignored this.

"The important shift is subtle."

He stood and wandered toward the fireplace.

"In classical thinking, one begins with stable being and explains variation."

"Yes."

"But relativity inverts this."

He turned.

"Transformation becomes primary."

Silence.

"And stability emerges from the lawful constraints governing transformation itself."

Blottisham stared.


Elowen's eyes narrowed thoughtfully.

"So invariance isn't some hidden thing resisting change."

"No."

"It's coherence surviving re-expression."

"Precisely."

"And objectivity wouldn't mean escaping perspective—"

Quillibrace lifted a finger.

"Careful."

Elowen smiled.

"—escaping construal."

"Better."

She continued:

"It would mean remaining consistently translatable across systems of construal."

Quillibrace nodded approvingly.

"Very good."


Blottisham looked alarmed.

"One moment."

"Yes?"

"I've just realised something."

Quillibrace looked wary.

"If no final perspective exists..."

"Go on."

"And if no hidden reality sits underneath..."

"Yes..."

Blottisham leaned forward.

"...then reality isn't a completed picture at all."

Silence.

Elowen looked up.

Quillibrace froze.

Blottisham blinked.

"My God."


Quillibrace sat down very slowly.

"My dear Mr Blottisham."

"Yes?"

"I believe you may accidentally have reached the centre of the argument."

Blottisham stared.

"I have?"

"Reality ceases to be a finished object gathered into one view."

He paused.

"It becomes the structured possibility of coherent transformation."

Silence.

Blottisham looked as though he had unexpectedly found himself standing on a cliff edge.


Rain tapped gently against the windows.

No one spoke for a while.

Then Blottisham frowned.

"Though one issue remains."

Quillibrace sighed.

"Naturally."

"If reality is ultimately lawful transformability—"

"Yes?"

"—how does Cook consistently transform potatoes into seventeen entirely different meals?"

Quillibrace looked toward the ceiling.

"My dear fellow," he said quietly, "some invariants exceed current theory."

3. On Why Mr Blottisham Began Distrusting Coordinates

The Senior Common Room at St Anselm's had reached the dangerous phase of late morning where intellectual confidence had begun to exceed intellectual nutrition.

Mr Blottisham sat with folded arms and an expression of recovered equilibrium.

"I've repaired matters."

Professor Quillibrace did not look up from his book.

"Again?"

"Yes. Time has disappeared, apparently. Perspectives have become world-generating machines. Very unsettling. But fortunately one thing remains secure."

Miss Elowen Stray looked up cautiously.

"What is that?"

"Coordinates."

Silence.

Quillibrace slowly lowered the book.

"Coordinates."

"Certainly. One may shift systems and change viewpoints and so forth, but underneath it all reality must still sit there obediently while one changes labels."

Quillibrace closed his eyes.

"Ah."

Elowen sighed quietly.

Blottisham looked between them.

"What?"

"My dear fellow," said Quillibrace, "you have located the final Newtonian hiding place."

"I have?"

"You have retreated into graph paper."


Quillibrace placed his book aside.

"Tell me: when we transform coordinates, what do you imagine is occurring?"

Blottisham shrugged.

"One changes descriptions while reality remains where it is."

"Like translating French into English?"

"Precisely."

Quillibrace stared at him for several moments.

"Mr Blottisham."

"Yes?"

"Have you ever translated French?"

"No."

"I see."

Elowen smiled faintly into her tea.

Quillibrace continued.

"The problem is subtle. Classical intuition imagines a stable stage upon which events sit like furniture. One changes coordinates much as one might change labels on chairs."

Blottisham nodded enthusiastically.

"Exactly."

"But special relativity begins quietly sawing through the stage."

Blottisham frowned.

"I dislike how often carpentry appears in these discussions."


Elowen leaned forward.

"Because coordinates only make sense once relations have already been established?"

Quillibrace pointed approvingly.

"Exactly."

He turned back to Blottisham.

"In classical thinking one assumes an independent structure already exists, and transformations merely describe it differently."

"Yes."

"But in relativity, temporal and spatial relations themselves vary with the constraining system that generates them."

Blottisham blinked.

"So...the transformation isn't acting on the furniture."

"No."

"It's acting on..."

He looked helpless.

Elowen glanced at her notes.

"...the arrangement rules?"

Quillibrace smiled.

"Very good."

Blottisham looked suspicious.

"You both appear alarmingly pleased."


Quillibrace stood and wandered toward the fireplace.

"The Lorentz transformations are commonly presented as coordinate changes."

"Yes."

"But that is rather like describing grammar as moving words around."

Blottisham frowned.

"Isn't grammar moving words around?"

"No."

"It isn't?"

"No, Mr Blottisham. Grammar specifies the conditions under which words become meaningful relations at all."

Blottisham stared.

Then stared harder.

Elowen's eyes widened slightly.

"Oh."

Quillibrace turned.

"So if frames are systems of construal..."

"...then Lorentz transformations..." Elowen began slowly.

"...map between systems of construal," Quillibrace finished.

Silence.

Blottisham looked increasingly concerned.


"So they don't merely translate outputs?"

"No."

"They translate..." He hesitated.

"...generative rules?"

Quillibrace looked momentarily startled.

"My God."

Blottisham straightened.

"Have I done something?"

Elowen looked astonished.

"You've done it again."

Blottisham looked delighted.

"I seem to be developing a gift."


Quillibrace sat down carefully.

"Think of it this way."

He gestured toward Elowen's notebook.

"Suppose two languages possess entirely different grammars."

Blottisham nodded.

"Very well."

"One does not merely replace individual words."

"No."

"One must preserve relations of meaning across different systems of construction."

Blottisham's face slowly changed.

"So Lorentz transformations aren't moving events around inside a world."

"No."

"They're preserving coherence between different ways of making worlds coherent."

Silence.

Quillibrace stared at him.

Elowen stared at him.

Blottisham stared into empty space.


Elowen spoke softly.

"So what remains invariant isn't some hidden object underneath everything."

"No."

"It's the constraints that survive re-expression."

"Exactly."

"And that's why invariance isn't persistence of substance."

Quillibrace nodded.

"It's compatibility across systems of instantiation."

Blottisham looked uneasy.

"I feel as though reality has become strangely economical."

"Economical?"

"Yes. We keep removing enormous invisible structures and replacing them with transformation rules."

Quillibrace smiled faintly.

"An excellent observation."


A long silence followed.

Rain tapped gently against the windows.

Finally Blottisham spoke.

"So there isn't a secret universal reality sitting underneath everything."

"No."

"There are structured systems generating coherent worlds, with strict rules preserving consistency between them."

"Yes."

Blottisham sat motionless.

Then:

"...I don't trust it."

Quillibrace looked unsurprised.

"No?"

"No. It feels suspiciously efficient."


After another silence Blottisham frowned.

"Though one question remains."

Quillibrace looked tired already.

"Naturally."

"If Lorentz transformations preserve meaning across systems..."

He looked toward the sideboard.

"...why does Cook's recipe for spotted dick become entirely unrecognisable whenever she writes it down?"

Quillibrace removed his spectacles and pinched the bridge of his nose.

"My dear Mr Blottisham," he said quietly, "there are transformations for which no invariant structure has yet been discovered."

2. On the Dangerous Multiplication of Worlds

The Senior Common Room at St Anselm's had entered the subdued phase of the morning in which tea had been replenished and intellectual disasters could proceed at a measured pace.

Mr Blottisham sat in evident satisfaction.

"Well," he said, "I believe matters have recovered nicely."

Professor Quillibrace looked up slowly.

"Recovered?"

"Indeed. Last time you informed me that universal time had been abolished and that reality was no longer one gigantic committee meeting. Disturbing, naturally. But I have since reflected and found the solution."

Miss Elowen Stray glanced up from her notes.

"You've found one?"

"Certainly." He waved a hand confidently. "Different people simply have different perspectives on the same world."

Quillibrace stared into the middle distance.

"Oh dear."

Blottisham frowned.

"What now?"

"My dear fellow, you have merely rebuilt the demolished house and painted it a different colour."

"I have?"

"Entirely."

Elowen tilted her head.

"Because 'perspective' still assumes a world already sitting there waiting to be viewed?"

Quillibrace pointed at her with his teacup.

"Exactly."

Blottisham looked suspicious.

"I dislike agreement occurring before I've understood anything."

Quillibrace settled back into his chair.

"Consider what a frame is usually said to be. Popular accounts describe it as a kind of viewpoint—as though reality were a landscape and each observer merely stood on a different hill."

"Perfectly sensible."

"It is also disastrously misleading."

Blottisham sighed.

"I had feared that."

Quillibrace folded his hands.

"A viewpoint presupposes a completed object being viewed. One imagines a fixed world and different positions from which to inspect it."

"Yes."

"But special relativity does not merely rearrange viewpoints."

He paused.

"It rearranges what counts as a coherent world in the first place."

Blottisham blinked several times.

Elowen had become very still.

"So a frame isn't describing an already organised set of events."

"No."

"It's generating one."

Quillibrace smiled faintly.

"Precisely."

Blottisham stared.

"I beg your pardon?"

"A frame," Quillibrace continued, "is not a coordinate grid laid gently over reality like graph paper over a map."

"Good."

"It is a rule-governed system specifying how events become related at all."

Blottisham's brow furrowed dangerously.

Elowen looked thoughtful.

"So from a relational perspective, a frame behaves less like a picture and more like a system of construal."

Quillibrace nodded.

"Construal before representation."

Blottisham groaned softly.

"I remember this word."

"Representation assumes an object awaiting description," said Quillibrace. "Construal does not. Construal is constitutive. It actualises a determinate field from a wider relational potential."

"So the frame isn't observing the world."

"No."

"It is cutting a world from relational possibility."

"Yes."

Blottisham looked around uneasily.

"How many worlds are there now?"

Quillibrace rubbed his temples.

"One must be careful."

"There it is," said Blottisham. "The sentence professors utter immediately before catastrophe."

Quillibrace ignored him.

"We should not imagine countless universes multiplying like rabbits in a field. The issue is not multiple realities in that sense."

He lifted a finger.

"It is multiple coherent regimes of relational ordering."

Blottisham looked injured.

"You've somehow made it worse."

Elowen had resumed writing.

"Within a frame, everything appears stable. Events occur in order. Distances remain measurable. Simultaneity is coherent."

"Exactly."

"But from outside—though outside already means another construal—we see that this stability depends upon the constraints generating it."

Quillibrace nodded approvingly.

"So within a frame, events appear given and relations measured."

"And outside?"

"Relations are generating the events themselves."

Blottisham looked alarmed.

"You appear to be telling me that the furniture has become secondary to the arrangement of the room."

Quillibrace blinked.

Then blinked again.

Elowen looked surprised.

"That's...rather good."

Blottisham looked pleased.

"I've been improving."

Quillibrace looked reluctant.

"There may be traces of understanding emerging."

Blottisham sat up.

"Excellent."

Then his expression darkened.

"Though something troubles me."

"Predictably."

"If each frame constructs its own coherent ordering, how does anyone ever agree about anything?"

Quillibrace leaned forward.

"Ah."

He smiled.

"This is where people imagine everything collapsing into relativism."

Elowen looked up.

"But it doesn't."

"No."

"Because the frames aren't arbitrary."

"Exactly."

Quillibrace stood and wandered toward the window.

"The Lorentz transformations ensure something extraordinary."

Blottisham narrowed his eyes suspiciously.

"I distrust anything described as extraordinary."

"They ensure that different systems of construal remain mutually coherent."

He turned.

"So the frames do not share a single world-slice."

Silence.

"They share rules governing conversion between world-slices."

Blottisham stared.

Elowen's face slowly brightened.

"So the unity isn't in the content."

"No."

"It's in the transformations."

Quillibrace nodded.

"Very good."

Blottisham sat very still.

Then he said:

"So reality isn't one giant atlas seen from different angles."

"No."

"It's a collection of internally complete maps with strict translation rules."

Silence.

Quillibrace looked at him.

Elowen looked at him.

Blottisham looked at himself.

"My God," he whispered, "I've done it again."

Quillibrace sat down slowly.

"Mr Blottisham, I fear you may be becoming dangerous."

Blottisham frowned.

"Though I still have one concern."

"Yes?"

"If reality is generated through systems of construal..."

He glanced anxiously toward the door.

"...how exactly does Cook generate the pudding menu?"

Quillibrace stared at him for several seconds.

"My dear fellow," he said quietly, "there are domains in which even invariant transformations offer no assistance."