Friday, 17 April 2026

The Regimes of the Real — 10 The Open System: Why there will never be a final theory

Every intellectual tradition carries, somewhere within it, a quiet hope:

that the work might one day be finished.

A final theory.
A complete account.
A system that closes without remainder.

Science imagines it as a unified set of laws.
Philosophy as a fully grounded system of thought.
Myth, at times, as a total narrative that leaves nothing outside its frame.

Different forms. Same impulse:

closure.


1. The Shape of the Hope

Closure promises:

  • no unanswered questions
  • no unresolved tensions
  • no need for further revision

Everything would be:

  • explained
  • integrated
  • stabilised

A system complete in itself.

It is an appealing vision.

It is also impossible.


2. The System Reconsidered

The difficulty begins with the notion of system itself.

A system is often imagined as:

  • a bounded structure
  • containing a set of elements
  • governed by internal relations

Something that could, in principle, be fully mapped.

But this assumes what must be questioned.

A system, in the sense developed here, is not a closed container.

It is:

a structured space of potential

Not a list of what is,
but a field of what can be actualised.


3. Inexhaustibility

If a system is structured potential, then it is inexhaustible.

Not because it is infinite in a simple numerical sense,
but because:

  • new distinctions can always be drawn
  • new relations can always be configured
  • new constraints can always be imposed

Every actualisation:

  • selects
  • stabilises
  • excludes

And in doing so, it leaves open further possibilities.

No instance can exhaust the system that affords it.


4. Instantiation as Cutting

To actualise is to cut.

Not to create something from nothing,
but to draw a distinction within the field:

  • this, not that
  • here, not there
  • now, not then

Each instantiation is a perspectival cut:

  • it brings a pattern into stability
  • it suppresses alternatives
  • it renders some possibilities visible and others inaccessible

But the cut never consumes the field.

It only configures a region of it.


5. Endless Reconfiguration

Because the field remains, cuts can be redrawn.

  • new perspectives emerge
  • constraints shift
  • previously excluded possibilities are reintroduced

This is not an error to be corrected.

It is the condition of the system’s operation.

What appears, from within a given regime, as:

  • anomaly
  • contradiction
  • incompleteness

is simply the pressure of unactualised potential.


6. The Illusion of Final Theory

A final theory would require:

  • a complete mapping of the system
  • a closure of all possible distinctions
  • an exhaustion of all potential

But this would mean:

  • no further cuts could be made
  • no new perspectives could emerge
  • no alternative configurations could be stabilised

In other words, the system would cease to function.

A “complete” theory would not be the culmination of inquiry.

It would be its termination.


7. Why Closure Appears

And yet, closure repeatedly appears—locally, temporarily, convincingly.

A theory stabilises:

  • its concepts align
  • its predictions hold
  • its domain appears complete

A philosophy resolves its tensions.
A myth integrates its patterns.

For a moment, the system feels closed.

This is not an illusion in the trivial sense.

It is a local stabilisation.

A region of the field where:

  • constraints hold tightly
  • variation is suppressed
  • coherence is high

But this stability is always conditional.


8. The Return of the Open

Closure never holds indefinitely.

Pressure builds:

  • new data
  • new distinctions
  • new demands

The system begins to strain.

What was excluded returns.
What was stable begins to shift.

The closed system opens.

Not because it failed,
but because it could not exhaust the field from which it drew.


9. Science, Philosophy, Myth Revisited

Each regime encounters this in its own way.

Science:

  • extends its laws until they fracture at the edges
  • generates new theories that reconfigure the field

Philosophy:

  • constructs systems that reveal their own limits
  • reopens questions it seemed to settle

Myth:

  • stabilises narratives that are retold, revised, transformed
  • never fully containing the possibilities they encode

None can close.

All persist by reopening.


10. No Final Word

There will be no final theory.

Not because we lack intelligence.
Not because reality is too complex.
Not because knowledge is limited.

But because:

the system is not an object to be completed
it is a field to be continually actualised


11. Thinking in the Open

To think within this condition is to abandon a certain expectation:

  • that inquiry will end
  • that contradictions will disappear
  • that a final ground will be secured

In its place:

  • thinking becomes an ongoing practice of cutting and re-cutting
  • systems are built, stabilised, and transformed
  • meaning is continually actualised under shifting constraints

This is not a failure of completion.

It is the operation of the system itself.


12. Re-opening

So there is no conclusion to offer.

No final synthesis that gathers everything and seals it.

Only this:

  • a field of structured potential
  • multiple regimes of constraint
  • endless acts of actualisation

What has been unfolded here does not resolve into a single position.

It repositions the act of positioning.


And so the series does not end.

It returns—to the point that was never a beginning:

not “what is the real?”
but
what can be made to hold—and for how long?

The Regimes of the Real — 9 The Ethics of Construal: What responsibility looks like without foundations

At this point, a familiar demand reappears—more urgent now than before:

If there is no ultimate ground…
what constrains action?

If meaning is constructed, if regimes can be designed, if no external authority guarantees correctness—

then what prevents anything from being permitted?

This is the moment where many systems quietly smuggle foundations back in:

  • human nature
  • rational necessity
  • moral law
  • survival

Somewhere, it is assumed, there must be a final constraint.

There isn’t.

But that does not leave us unconstrained.

It leaves us differently constrained.


1. The End of External Guarantees

Without an ultimate ground:

  • no action is justified by appeal to an absolute
  • no system is secured by reference to a final truth
  • no regime is beyond revision

This removes a powerful form of certainty.

It also removes a powerful form of evasion.

There is no longer anywhere to stand outside the systems we construct and say:

“This is right because reality, reason, or nature demands it.”

That move is no longer available.


2. Constraint From Within

What remains are internal constraints.

Every regime of construal—scientific, philosophical, mythic, or hybrid—must:

  • stabilise itself
  • maintain coherence
  • enable continuation

If it fails to do so, it collapses.

Not because it is false in some ultimate sense,
but because it cannot hold.

This gives us a different way of thinking about responsibility.

Not as obedience to external law,
but as participation in the maintenance and transformation of constraint systems.


3. Three Operational Criteria

Without foundations, evaluation does not disappear.

It becomes operational.

Three criteria begin to emerge—not as absolutes, but as conditions of viability:


Stability

  • Can the system hold under repeated instantiation?
  • Does it resist fragmentation across contexts?

A regime that cannot stabilise does not persist.


Coherence

  • Do its distinctions and relations maintain consistency?
  • Can it integrate new elements without contradiction?

A regime that cannot cohere collapses under its own tensions.


Generativity

  • Does it open new possibilities of action and meaning?
  • Can it adapt, extend, and evolve?

A regime that cannot generate becomes sterile.


These are not moral principles.

They are constraints on the continued existence of a system.


4. The Tension Between Them

Crucially, these criteria do not align perfectly.

  • Maximum stability can suppress generativity
  • Maximum coherence can limit adaptability
  • Maximum generativity can destabilise structure

Every regime must negotiate these tensions.

There is no final solution.

Only different balances—each with consequences.


5. Pathological Regimes

This is where the real danger appears.

Not in the absence of constraint,
but in the emergence of pathological constraint systems.


Totalising Myths

  • impose rigid narrative structures
  • suppress alternative interpretations
  • enforce identity through exclusion

They achieve stability at the cost of generativity and openness.


Rigid Sciences

  • overextend their domain of validity
  • dismiss what cannot be measured or repeated
  • resist revision despite accumulating anomalies

They achieve coherence at the cost of adaptability.


Closed Philosophies

  • become self-referential and insulated
  • resolve tension by redefining it away
  • lose contact with other regimes

They achieve internal consistency at the cost of relevance.


Each pathology is a distortion of constraint:

  • too tight
  • too closed
  • too resistant to transformation

6. No Neutral Arbiter

At this point, the temptation is to ask:

Who decides when a regime has become pathological?

There is no external authority.

No final judge.

Evaluation occurs within and across regimes:

  • through breakdown
  • through conflict
  • through the emergence of alternatives

A system reveals its limits when it:

  • can no longer stabilise
  • can no longer integrate
  • can no longer generate

Its failure is not declared.

It is enacted.


7. Responsibility Reframed

Responsibility, then, is not adherence to universal rules.

It is something more demanding:

the active navigation of constraint systems, with awareness of their effects

This includes:

  • recognising the limits of the regimes one inhabits
  • resisting the closure of systems that suppress possibility
  • contributing to the maintenance of structures that enable coordination and meaning
  • participating in the transformation of regimes when they become pathological

There is no guarantee of correctness.

Only consequences.


8. The Cost of Clarity

This position is often resisted because it removes a form of comfort.

No ultimate justification.
No final ground.
No absolute protection against error.

But that comfort was always conditional.

What replaces it is sharper:

  • every system is contingent
  • every constraint is enacted
  • every stabilisation has a cost

Nothing is beyond question.

But nothing is without consequence.


9. Closing the Escape Routes

At earlier stages, it was still possible to retreat:

  • to science as the final arbiter of reality
  • to philosophy as the ground of truth
  • to myth as the bearer of meaning

Those exits are now closed.

Each has been shown to be:

  • a regime of construal
  • a system of constraint
  • a mode of actualisation

None can step outside the field.


10. What Remains

What remains is not relativism.

It is exposure.

There is no foundation beneath our systems.
There is only the ongoing work of stabilising, coordinating, and transforming them.

Ethics, in this light, is not a set of rules.

It is the practice of sustaining viable worlds.

Worlds that:

  • hold together
  • remain open to revision
  • enable forms of life that can continue

And this leaves one final step.

If there is no ground,
and no escape,
and only the field of possible actualisations—

then the question is no longer how to justify what we know,
or how to explain what we experience.

It is:

what it means to think at all, when thinking itself is part of the system it seeks to understand.

The Regimes of the Real — 8 Engineering Meaning: Can mythology be designed?

Up to this point, a certain restraint has been maintained.

Science was repositioned, but not diminished.
Philosophy was displaced, but not discarded.
Myth was revalued, but not romanticised.

Now that restraint becomes harder to justify.

Because a consequence has been quietly accumulating:

If myth is a compression engine for possibility…
and if its structure can be analysed…
then it can, in principle, be designed.

This is where the ground—what little remained of it—gives way.


1. From Inheritance to Construction

Myths have traditionally been inherited.

They emerge over time:

  • shaped by collective experience
  • stabilised through repetition
  • transmitted across generations

No single agent designs them.
They are sedimented, not engineered.

This gives them their authority:

  • they feel given
  • they feel inevitable
  • they feel deeper than choice

But once myth is understood as a constraint system—a way of compressing and stabilising patterns—this aura begins to thin.

What has been inherited can, in principle, be constructed.


2. What It Means to Design a Myth

To design a myth is not to invent a story.

Stories are cheap. They proliferate without effect.

A myth, in the sense developed here, is something else:

  • it stabilises patterns across multiple contexts
  • it compresses experience into generative structures
  • it coordinates perception, interpretation, and action

Designing such a system means working at the level of constraint, not content.

It involves:

  • selecting which transformations to encode
  • determining how tightly they are constrained
  • shaping the degree of openness for reinterpretation
  • embedding attractors that guide construal without fixing it

The goal is not narrative coherence alone.

It is operational stability across variation.


3. Narrative Constraint Systems

A designed myth would function as a narrative constraint system:

  • it would define roles (not fixed characters, but positions in a structure)
  • it would establish permissible transitions (what can happen, and in what order)
  • it would regulate tension and resolution
  • it would allow variation without losing identity

Think less in terms of plot, more in terms of grammar.

Not a single story, but a system that can generate many stories—each recognisably part of the same structure.

This is how traditional myths work.

The difference is that here, the structure is explicitly engineered.


4. Attractors by Design

If archetypes are attractors in a space of possible construals, then design means:

placing attractors deliberately.

This is delicate.

Too rigid, and the system becomes brittle—unable to adapt, quickly abandoned.
Too loose, and it dissipates—failing to stabilise anything at all.

The challenge is to create structures that:

  • draw diverse experiences into alignment
  • without collapsing their specificity
  • and without requiring explicit enforcement

In other words, to engineer resonant constraint.


5. Hybrid Regimes

At this point, the regimes begin to mix.

A designed mythology need not remain purely narrative.

It can incorporate:

  • scientific constraint (measurement, feedback, iteration)
  • philosophical differentiation (explicit mapping of assumptions and limits)
  • mythic compression (narrative structures that stabilise transformation)

The result is a hybrid regime:

  • experimentally informed
  • conceptually explicit
  • narratively generative

Such a system could:

  • adapt in response to feedback (like science)
  • maintain internal coherence (like philosophy)
  • generate lived meaning (like myth)

This is not a synthesis in the sense of blending everything into sameness.

It is a designed interplay of constraint architectures.


6. Meaning as Constructed Stability

This reframes meaning itself.

Meaning is often treated as:

  • discovered (hidden in the world)
  • or interpreted (projected by subjects)

Both assume a separation that no longer holds.

Meaning, in this framework, is:

the stable coordination of construal under a given set of constraints

It is not found.
It is not merely imposed.

It is built.

Built through:

  • the design of constraint systems
  • the stabilisation of patterns
  • the coordination of perspectives

This is what myth has always done implicitly.

Engineering meaning makes it explicit.


7. The Risk of Design

At this point, the tone shifts.

Because design introduces intention.

And intention introduces power.

A designed myth could:

  • coordinate large groups with precision
  • stabilise identities and values
  • guide perception and action at scale

This is not hypothetical.

Fragments of this already exist:

  • in political narratives
  • in corporate branding systems
  • in media ecosystems

But these are crude, often unstable, frequently incoherent.

A deliberately engineered mythology would be something else:

  • more precise
  • more adaptive
  • more difficult to resist

8. Against Naivety

It would be a mistake to assume that making myth explicit neutralises its force.

Understanding a constraint system does not remove its effects.

Scientists know their protocols are constructed.
This does not make experiments optional.

Similarly, participants in a designed mythology would still:

  • inhabit its structures
  • be shaped by its constraints
  • experience its meanings as real

Reflexivity does not dissolve participation.

It complicates it.


9. Toward Deliberate Worlds

If meaning can be engineered, then worlds—lived, shared, stabilised worlds—can be shaped with increasing precision.

Not arbitrarily.
Constraints remain.

But no longer passively inherited.

Actively configured.

The question shifts from:

  • “What does this myth mean?”

to:

  • “What does this system of constraints make possible?”
  • “What patterns does it stabilise?”
  • “What forms of life does it enable—or suppress?”

10. The Dangerous Clarity

This is where it becomes dangerous.

Not because something has gone wrong,
but because something has become clear.

Meaning is not given.
It is not guaranteed.
It is not beyond intervention.

It is designable.


There is no easy way to close this.

No return to innocence, where myths are simply inherited and science simply discovers.

Only a new condition:

  • where constraint can be analysed
  • where systems can be built
  • where meaning can be engineered

Which leaves one final pressure point.

If we can design the systems that stabilise meaning—

what, if anything, constrains how we should design them?

That is no longer a technical question.

It is an ethical one.

The Regimes of the Real — 7 Three Regimes, One Field: Science, philosophy, myth as modes of actualisation

By now, the pieces are in place.

Science no longer reveals a law-governed reality.
Philosophy no longer grounds thought in first principles.
Myth no longer explains the world through primitive narrative.

Each has been displaced—quietly, but decisively.

What remains is not a competition between them, but a question:

If none of these domains describes reality as it is…
what are they doing?


1. The Field They Share

They do not operate on different worlds.

There is no separate domain for:

  • objective facts
  • conceptual analysis
  • symbolic narrative

There is only a single field:

  • structured, but not fixed
  • constrained, but not determined
  • open, but not arbitrary

A field of potential.

What differs is not the object, but the mode of actualisation.


2. Three Ways of Cutting

Each regime cuts this field differently.

Not metaphorically—operationally.

Each imposes a distinct architecture of constraint, within which certain patterns can stabilise.


Science

  • constrains through protocol, measurement, and repetition
  • stabilises invariance
  • coordinates construal across distributed observers

It narrows the field until something holds still.


Philosophy

  • constrains through conceptual differentiation
  • stabilises relational consistency
  • maps the dependencies and limits of distinction

It does not narrow the field so much as re-articulate its structure.


Myth

  • constrains through narrative form and resonance
  • stabilises transformative possibility
  • compresses patterns into generative schemas

It shapes the field into patterns that can be lived.


Three regimes.
One field.


3. No Hierarchy

The familiar temptation is to rank them.

  • science as most advanced
  • philosophy as foundational
  • myth as primitive

Or, in more recent reversals:

  • myth as deeper
  • philosophy as critical
  • science as limited

All such hierarchies fail for the same reason.

They assume a single standard—truth, reality, meaning—against which all regimes can be measured.

But no such neutral standard exists.

Each regime:

  • defines its own constraints
  • stabilises its own criteria
  • evaluates success internally

There is no external vantage point from which to declare one superior.


4. No Reduction

If hierarchy fails, reduction is the next move.

  • myth is “really” psychology
  • philosophy is “really” language analysis
  • science is “really” social construction

Each attempt tries to collapse the others into its own terms.

But reduction destroys what it seeks to explain.

To reduce myth to science is to strip it of narrative compression.
To reduce science to myth is to ignore its precision of constraint.
To reduce philosophy to either is to lose its capacity for differentiation.

What disappears in each case is the specific architecture of constraint that makes the regime what it is.


5. Constraint Architectures

This is the key.

Each regime is defined not by its subject matter,
but by how it constrains construal.

  • Science: constraint through formalised repetition and measurement
  • Philosophy: constraint through relational consistency of distinction
  • Myth: constraint through narrative compression and resonance

These are not interchangeable.

They produce different kinds of stability:

  • invariance
  • coherence
  • transformation

None can be derived from the others.


6. Modes of Actualisation

What, then, is being produced?

Not descriptions of a pre-given reality.

But actualisations.

Each regime:

  • takes the structured potential of the field
  • imposes its own constraints
  • stabilises a particular class of instances

Science actualises worlds that hold under repetition.
Philosophy actualises worlds that hold under reflection.
Myth actualises worlds that hold under transformation.

These are not different “views” of the same world.

They are different ways of making worlds hold.


7. Points of Contact

Despite their differences, the regimes are not isolated.

They interact, overlap, and sometimes interfere.

  • scientific theories borrow narrative coherence
  • myths incorporate observational regularities
  • philosophy reflects on both and reconfigures their distinctions

But these interactions do not collapse the regimes into one another.

They create hybrid zones:

  • unstable
  • productive
  • often the site of transformation

It is here that new forms begin to emerge.


8. The Cost of Each Regime

Each architecture of constraint comes with a cost.

Science:

  • sacrifices breadth for precision
  • excludes what cannot be measured or repeated

Philosophy:

  • risks abstraction detached from lived experience
  • can dissolve stability faster than it rebuilds it

Myth:

  • sacrifices explicitness for resonance
  • can stabilise patterns that resist revision

No regime is neutral.
Each opens possibilities—and forecloses others.


9. The End of the Boundary Dispute

At this point, the old disputes begin to look misplaced.

  • Is science more real than myth?
  • Does philosophy ground science?
  • Is myth merely symbolic?

These questions assume separations that no longer hold.

The regimes are not competing descriptions of reality.

They are different operations on the same field.

The issue is not which is true.

It is:

what each makes possible—and what it prevents.


10. The Keystone

This is the pivot the entire series has been moving toward:

Science, philosophy, and myth are not rivals.
They are distinct modes of actualisation within a shared field of structured potential.

No hierarchy.
No reduction.
Only different ways of constraining and stabilising.


And once that is seen, a new possibility opens.

If these regimes differ only in their architectures of constraint—

then those architectures are not fixed.

They can be:

  • analysed
  • modified
  • combined

Which leads to the next, unavoidable step:

What would it mean to design new regimes—deliberately?

The Regimes of the Real — 6 The Mythic Structure of Theory: Why theories behave like stories

If myth is not failed science, and science is not free of ritual, then the boundary between them is already under strain.

But the real fracture appears elsewhere—where science is most confident in its abstraction:

theory.

Theories are supposed to be the cleanest part of science:

  • formal
  • precise
  • stripped of narrative excess

And yet, look closely at how theories function, how they are built, how they are replaced—

—and something familiar begins to emerge.

Not despite their rigour, but through it:

theories behave like stories.


1. The Hidden Narrative

A scientific theory is often presented as a system of propositions:

  • definitions
  • equations
  • derivations

But no one encounters a theory this way alone.

It is always embedded in a narrative structure:

  • there are entities (fields, particles, forces)
  • they interact according to rules
  • they produce observable outcomes
  • anomalies appear and must be resolved

This is not decorative.

It is how the theory organises intelligibility.

Without this narrative scaffolding, the formal structure does not stabilise as meaning.


2. Theoretical Entities as Stabilisers

Consider the role of entities like:

  • electrons
  • gravitational fields
  • spacetime curvature

These are often treated as discoveries—things that exist independently, now successfully described.

But within the functioning of theory, they do something more specific.

They act as stabilisers.

They:

  • anchor relations between otherwise disparate observations
  • allow predictions to be generated coherently
  • maintain continuity across different domains of application

Remove them, and the theory fragments.

Not because reality disappears, but because the narrative coherence collapses.

A theoretical entity is not just something that exists.

It is something that holds the story together.


3. The Economy of Elegance

Now consider how theories are evaluated.

Beyond empirical adequacy, physicists and philosophers routinely appeal to:

  • simplicity
  • elegance
  • symmetry
  • beauty

These are often treated as heuristic preferences.

But their role is more decisive than that.

They function as selection pressures.

Given multiple ways to stabilise a set of phenomena, certain configurations are preferred—not because they are “truer” in any direct sense, but because they:

  • compress more with less
  • extend more smoothly
  • maintain coherence under transformation

In other words, they exhibit the same kind of generative efficiency we saw in myth.

A beautiful theory is not just pleasing.

It is highly compressive.


4. Compression Across Domains

A successful theory does not merely account for known data.

It:

  • unifies disparate phenomena
  • extends into new regimes
  • generates unexpected connections

This is a form of compression.

Multiple domains—previously treated separately—are drawn into a single structure.

Electricity and magnetism.
Space and time.
Energy and mass.

These are not just empirical discoveries.

They are narrative consolidations.

The theory tells a tighter story—one in which more can be said with less.


5. When the Story Breaks

But no story holds indefinitely.

Anomalies accumulate:

  • predictions fail at the margins
  • measurements resist integration
  • internal tensions increase

At first, these are managed:

  • auxiliary hypotheses are introduced
  • parameters are adjusted
  • exceptions are tolerated

But eventually, the strain becomes too great.

The narrative no longer stabilises.

This is the moment often described as crisis.


6. Paradigm as World-Story

What follows is not simply the replacement of one set of propositions with another.

It is a reconfiguration of the entire narrative structure.

What Thomas Kuhn called a paradigm shift is often framed as a change in scientific worldview.

Seen from here, it is more precise—and more unsettling:

a shift from one stabilised story of the world to another.

Entities change.
Relations change.
What counts as a valid question changes.

The world does not simply look different.

It is re-articulated.


7. Transformation, Not Correction

This is why paradigm shifts resist being described as straightforward progress.

They are not just corrections of error.

They are transformations of the space of possible construal.

From this side:

  • earlier theories appear limited, partial, superseded

From within their own regime:

  • they were stable, coherent, powerful

The shift is not from falsehood to truth.

It is from one narrative stabilisation to another.


8. Theory and Myth, Rejoined

At this point, the resemblance to myth is no longer avoidable.

Myth:

  • stabilises patterns of transformation through narrative compression

Theory:

  • stabilises patterns of invariance through formal-narrative compression

Both:

  • organise experience into coherent structures
  • rely on generative constraints
  • are selected for their ability to hold and extend

The difference is not that one is true and the other false.

It is:

  • how explicit the constraints are
  • how tightly they are enforced
  • how they are validated and revised

9. The Blurring Line

This does not collapse theory into myth.

It reframes both.

Theories are not secretly myths in disguise.
Myths are not primitive theories.

They are parallel technologies of stabilisation:

  • one formal, explicit, experimentally constrained
  • the other narrative, implicit, culturally resonant

But both depend on:

  • compression
  • coherence
  • generative power

And both are subject to transformation when their structures can no longer hold.


10. The Story Science Tells Itself

Science tells a story about itself:

  • that it moves from myth to theory
  • from story to structure
  • from narrative to truth

But this story is itself… a story.

A powerful one. A stabilising one.

But still:

a narrative about how narratives are transcended.

Seen clearly, what science has done is not eliminate story.

It has refined and constrained it to an extraordinary degree.


And this brings us to the threshold of synthesis.

If:

  • experiments are ritualised constraint systems
  • theories are narrative stabilisation structures
  • myths are compression engines of transformation

then the boundaries between them begin to dissolve.

Not into confusion, but into something more precise:

different regimes for actualising and stabilising the same field of possibility.

The question is no longer where the line is drawn.

It is:

what kind of cut is being made—and what it allows to hold.