The fire had burned low.
Outside, the quadrangle was unusually still.
Mr Blottisham was looking thoughtfully around the Senior Common Room.
Professor Quillibrace noticed.
"You appear unusually reflective."
"I've been wondering something."
"Dangerous."
"I know."
Miss Elowen Stray smiled.
"What is it?"
Blottisham hesitated.
"I've begun to wonder whether we've spent the past several weeks discussing artificial intelligence..."
"...or something else."
Quillibrace did not answer immediately.
Instead he asked,
"What was the first question we considered?"
Blottisham thought.
"How scientific ideas become possible."
"And after that?"
"How anomalies reshape possibilities."
"And then?"
"Theories."
"Language."
"Scientific entities."
"Conceptual ecologies."
"Dark matter."
"Inflation."
"Quantum mechanics."
"The multiverse."
He stopped.
"It all seems rather connected."
Miss Stray looked slowly around the room.
"I've noticed something."
"What is it?"
"We keep using the same words."
"Do we?"
"'Gardens.'"
"Yes."
"'Scaffolding.'"
"Indeed."
"'Biographies.'"
"'Brass plaques.'"
"'Trellises.'"
"'Ecologies.'"
She paused.
"It is almost as though..."
"...yes?"
"...our own conversations have developed a vocabulary."
Quillibrace smiled.
"They have."
Blottisham laughed.
"So we've built a theory."
"I should be careful."
"A framework, then."
"Better."
"But why does it now seem easier to think about these things than it did at the beginning?"
No one answered immediately.
The silence itself seemed to contain the reply.
At length Miss Stray spoke.
"Perhaps..."
"...yes?"
"...because each conversation made the next one possible."
Quillibrace looked at her with unmistakable pleasure.
"My dear Miss Stray..."
"Yes?"
"...I believe you have just summarised the entire series."
Blottisham leaned back.
"So artificial intelligence..."
"...yes?"
"...isn't really different."
"In what respect?"
"It is another idea whose ecology is growing."
Quillibrace nodded.
"Consider how people first described these systems."
"They predicted words."
"Quite."
"Then they reasoned."
"Indeed."
"Then they understood."
"So it was said."
"Then they became intelligent."
"Sometimes."
"Then conscious."
"Occasionally."
"And eventually..."
He smiled.
"...they began acquiring rights."
Miss Stray looked thoughtful.
"The systems certainly changed."
"They did."
"But the language changed even faster."
Quillibrace rose and wandered slowly to the window.
"The observations improved."
"Yes."
"The capabilities expanded."
"Indeed."
"But alongside them..."
"...yes?"
"...an entire civilisation began constructing meanings."
Outside, a group of students crossed the quadrangle, animatedly debating something none of the three could hear.
One gestured energetically.
Another shook her head.
A third laughed.
The conversation disappeared into the library.
Blottisham watched them.
"They're probably discussing AI."
"They may be."
"Or consciousness."
"Perhaps."
"Or ethics."
"Quite."
"It all seems connected."
Miss Stray smiled.
"The ecology has escaped."
Quillibrace laughed softly.
"A delightful way of putting it."
For a while none of them spoke.
The fire settled quietly into glowing embers.
Then Blottisham asked,
"Do you think artificial intelligence is conscious?"
Quillibrace looked at him over the rim of his spectacles.
"My dear Blottisham..."
"Yes?"
"I notice that, several weeks ago, you would have asked whether it is conscious."
"And now?"
"Now you have asked what I think."
Blottisham looked surprised.
"I have."
"You no longer imagine the question has an immediate answer."
Miss Stray looked from one to the other.
"I wonder whether that is what philosophy contributes."
"What?"
"Not certainty."
"No."
"Better questions."
Quillibrace nodded.
"Science observes the world."
"Yes."
"Philosophy occasionally observes science."
"And?"
She looked slowly around the familiar room.
"Perhaps, every so often..."
"...yes?"
"...it also observes the observer."
The chapel bell sounded Compline.
The three scholars remained seated for a while longer.
The conversation had nowhere further to go.
Or perhaps it had finally arrived where it had always been travelling.
At length Quillibrace rose.
"We have spent many evenings discussing conceptual ecologies."
"We have."
"But I rather suspect..."
He glanced around the old Common Room.
"...that one has quietly been growing here as well."
They gathered their books.
As they reached the door, Blottisham paused.
"I've just realised something."
Quillibrace waited.
"When we began..."
"...yes?"
"...I thought these conversations were about science."
"And now?"
"I think they were about thinking."
Quillibrace smiled.
"A distinction worthy of St Anselm's."
The three stepped into the cloister.
Behind them, the Common Room fell silent once more.
The chairs remained where they had always stood.
The fire continued to glow.
Nothing visible had changed.
Yet the room now contained a history that had not existed when the first conversation began.
Not because the furniture had altered.
But because a shared way of seeing had quietly taken root within it.
Perhaps that, Miss Stray reflected as the chapel door closed behind them, was how every genuine intellectual tradition begins.
Not with answers.
But with a conversation that gradually teaches itself how to ask better questions.