Sunday, 24 May 2026

The Ghosts of Modernity VII: The Ghost of Reduction

Some ghosts survive because they promise completion.

Reduction is one such ghost.

We ordinarily assume that explanation proceeds by moving downward.

To understand something fully, one breaks it apart into simpler components.

Complexity becomes combinations of simpler elements.

Higher levels become consequences of lower levels.

Reality appears to become increasingly intelligible as one approaches foundations.

The assumption feels natural.

A machine can be understood through its parts.

A sentence can be analysed into words.

A building can be understood through its materials.

The same logic is then projected onto reality itself.

Explanation appears to move toward smaller, simpler, more fundamental things.

Reduction begins to look inevitable.

Yet obviousness often conceals history.

The inherited solution

Reduction emerged because thought encountered a genuine problem.

How can explanation avoid endless complexity?

The world presents an overwhelming abundance of relations and interactions.

Without some stopping point, explanation threatens to become unmanageable.

Something appeared necessary to stabilise understanding.

Reduction became the solution.

Complex phenomena could now be explained through more basic components.

One could move downward toward increasingly simple foundations.

Complexity could become intelligible through decomposition.

The solution was powerful.

It solved a genuine difficulty.

But powerful solutions often become invisible assumptions.

The hidden architecture

Once reduction enters thought, a particular structure begins quietly organising explanation.

First there are fundamental elements.

Then increasingly complex arrangements emerge from them.

Explanatory authority begins moving downward.

The smallest becomes the most real.

The simplest becomes the most important.

The pattern begins repeating widely:

  • biology becomes chemistry
  • chemistry becomes physics
  • psychology becomes biology
  • society becomes individuals
  • meaning becomes neural activity

The same architecture appears repeatedly because the original solution continues extending itself.

Reduction stops functioning as an answer to a specific problem.

It becomes a general image of explanation itself.

Yet something curious begins to happen.

The fracture

Reduction explains complexity by dissolving it into simpler components.

But this creates a strange difficulty.

Where exactly does explanation end?

Suppose one explains a sentence through words.

Words through sounds.

Sounds through physical processes.

Physical processes through smaller structures.

Smaller structures through still smaller structures.

The movement downward appears to continue.

The supposedly fundamental level repeatedly retreats.

A further difficulty emerges.

Many phenomena seem to lose something important when reduced.

A melody does not disappear into frequencies.

A conversation does not disappear into sounds.

Meaning does not disappear into neural activity.

Society does not disappear into individuals.

The components remain present.

But the organisation through which distinguishable patterns emerge begins slipping away.

The explanatory completeness promised by reduction begins to weaken.

The ghost

The problem is not that reduction was irrational.

The problem is that the solution remained after becoming invisible.

Reduction became a ghost.

Ghosts persist because they continue organising questions without appearing as assumptions.

One no longer asks whether understanding requires reduction.

One simply assumes it.

The ghost then quietly returns:

What is consciousness really made of?

What is meaning really made of?

What is society really made of?

What is life really made of?

The same pattern repeats because the same architecture remains in place.

Consequences

If reduction is a historical solution rather than an unavoidable truth, then the world changes slightly.

The question is no longer:

What simpler thing explains this phenomenon?

The question becomes:

What organisation of relations makes this phenomenon distinguishable at all?

Components do not disappear.

Cells remain.

Neurons remain.

Molecules remain.

Distinctions remain.

But perhaps explanation never required dissolving phenomena into increasingly fundamental parts.

Perhaps what appeared as foundations were always cuts within ongoing patterns of relation.

And perhaps the ghost of reduction has been standing quietly at the end of the corridor all along — gathering many of the others around it.

The Ghosts of Modernity VI: The Ghost of Hierarchy

Some ghosts survive because they present themselves as simple organisation.

Hierarchy is one such ghost.

We ordinarily imagine reality as arranged in levels.

Atoms become molecules.

Molecules become cells.

Cells become organisms.

Organisms become societies.

Or alternatively:

Matter becomes life.

Life becomes mind.

Mind becomes culture.

The image feels natural.

Complexity appears to rise upward through a sequence of increasingly sophisticated stages.

Lower levels appear foundational.

Higher levels appear dependent.

Reality becomes a structure of stacked layers.

The assumption feels obvious.

How else could order emerge from complexity?

Yet obviousness often conceals history.

The inherited solution

Hierarchy emerged because thought encountered a genuine problem.

How can one organise overwhelming complexity?

The world presents countless relations occurring simultaneously.

Without some principle of organisation, explanation threatens to dissolve into unmanageable multiplicity.

Something appeared necessary to stabilise order.

Hierarchy became the solution.

Phenomena could now be arranged into levels.

Each level could explain the one above it while depending upon the one below it.

Reality could become intelligible through structured ordering.

The solution was powerful.

It solved a genuine difficulty.

But powerful solutions often become invisible assumptions.

The hidden architecture

Once hierarchy enters thought, a particular structure begins quietly organising explanation.

First there are foundational levels.

Then increasingly complex levels emerge above them.

Priority becomes attached to position.

Lower levels acquire explanatory privilege.

Higher levels become derivative.

The pattern begins repeating widely:

  • biology rests upon chemistry
  • psychology rests upon biology
  • society rests upon individuals
  • language rests upon minds
  • meaning rests upon matter

The same architecture appears repeatedly because the original solution continues extending itself.

Hierarchy stops functioning as an answer to a specific problem.

It becomes a general model of reality itself.

Yet something curious begins to happen.

The fracture

Hierarchy explains organisation by arranging phenomena into levels.

But this creates a strange difficulty.

Where exactly does one level end and another begin?

Consider language.

Does language emerge from minds?

Or do minds emerge partly through language?

Consider society.

Do societies arise from individuals?

Or do individuals emerge through social relations?

Consider meaning.

Does meaning arise from biological systems?

Or do biological and symbolic systems participate in different kinds of organisation?

The boundaries repeatedly begin to blur.

A further difficulty emerges.

Hierarchical explanations often assume one-way dependence.

Lower levels produce higher levels.

Foundations determine outcomes.

Yet many systems behave differently.

Higher-level organisation often alters the behaviour of components.

Social institutions shape individual action.

Languages shape possibilities for meaning.

Ecological organisation shapes the viability of organisms.

Relations increasingly appear reciprocal rather than merely vertical.

The explanatory simplicity of hierarchy begins to weaken.

The ghost

The problem is not that hierarchy was irrational.

The problem is that the solution remained long after becoming invisible.

Hierarchy became a ghost.

Ghosts persist because they continue organising questions without appearing as assumptions.

One no longer asks whether reality itself must be hierarchical.

One simply assumes it.

The ghost then quietly returns:

Which level is fundamental?

Which level explains the others?

Which level comes first?

Which level is most real?

The same pattern repeats because the same architecture remains in place.

Consequences

If hierarchy is a historical solution rather than an unavoidable truth, then the world changes slightly.

The question is no longer:

Which level stands beneath everything else?

The question becomes:

How do patterns of relation organise distinguishable forms of order?

Organisation does not disappear.

Structures remain.

Differences remain.

Patterns remain.

But perhaps reality was never a stack of levels resting upon hidden foundations.

Perhaps what appeared as hierarchies were often stabilised perspectives on ongoing networks of relation.

And perhaps the ghost of hierarchy has been standing quietly beside the others all along.

The Ghosts of Modernity V: The Ghost of Identity

Some ghosts are difficult to notice because they seem indistinguishable from reason itself.

Identity is one such ghost.

We ordinarily assume that things remain themselves.

A tree remains the same tree despite losing leaves.

A person remains the same person despite changing over time.

A nation remains the same nation despite generations passing.

The assumption feels obvious.

Without identity, recognition itself seems impossible.

How could one think, speak, or act if nothing remained the same?

Yet obviousness often conceals history.

The inherited solution

Identity emerged because thought encountered a genuine problem.

How can continuity survive change?

Everything appears to alter.

Bodies transform.

Languages evolve.

Relationships shift.

Cultures reorganise.

Even mountains slowly erode.

Yet experience continually presents patterns that seem recognisable across variation.

Something appeared necessary to preserve stability beneath change.

Identity became the solution.

Change could occur at the level of appearances while something deeper remained self-identical.

The world could now be organised around enduring sameness.

The solution was powerful.

It solved a genuine difficulty.

But powerful solutions often become invisible assumptions.

The hidden architecture

Once identity enters thought, a particular structure begins quietly organising explanation.

First there is an entity.

Then that entity persists through change.

Difference becomes something occurring around an enduring core.

The pattern begins repeating widely:

  • persons possess identities
  • objects retain identities
  • institutions preserve identities
  • cultures possess identities
  • concepts maintain identities

The same architecture appears repeatedly because the original solution continues extending itself.

Identity stops functioning as an answer to a particular problem.

It becomes a general structure for understanding reality.

Yet something curious begins to happen.

The fracture

Identity explains continuity by introducing sameness beneath change.

But this creates a strange difficulty.

Where exactly does this sameness reside?

Consider a person.

Bodies alter continuously.

Memories reorganise.

Relationships change.

Values shift.

Experiences accumulate.

Yet one still says:

It is the same person.

What exactly remains unchanged?

Whenever one attempts to identify the stable element itself, it repeatedly appears elsewhere.

One may say:

Identity is whatever remains identical.

But now the explanation begins circling back upon itself.

Identity is explained by identity.

The hidden core becomes difficult to locate independently of the continuity it was introduced to explain.

A further difficulty emerges.

Many phenomena remain recognisable precisely through transformation rather than despite it.

Languages survive by changing.

Communities survive by reorganising.

Living systems survive through continual exchange and adaptation.

Change increasingly begins to appear not as a threat to continuity but as one of its conditions.

The explanatory role of identity begins to weaken.

The ghost

The problem is not that identity was irrational.

The problem is that the solution remained after becoming invisible.

Identity became a ghost.

Ghosts persist because they continue organising questions without appearing as assumptions.

One no longer asks whether continuity requires identity.

One simply assumes it.

The ghost then quietly returns:

What is my true identity?

What is the identity of a nation?

What is the identity of a culture?

What is the identity of a species?

The same pattern repeats because the same architecture remains in place.

Consequences

If identity is a historical solution rather than an unavoidable truth, then the world changes slightly.

The question is no longer:

What remains identical beneath change?

The question becomes:

What patterns of relation maintain continuity across ongoing transformation?

Continuity does not disappear.

Persons remain.

Languages remain.

Communities remain.

Distinctions remain.

But perhaps continuity never depended upon hidden sameness beneath change.

Perhaps what appeared as identities were always relatively stable organisations emerging within ongoing patterns of relation.

And perhaps the ghost of identity has been standing quietly beside the ghosts of substance, essence, and representation all along.

The Ghosts of Modernity IV: The Ghost of Representation

Some ghosts become so successful that they disappear completely.

Representation is one such ghost.

We ordinarily assume that thought works by forming representations of reality.

The world exists outside us.

Minds construct images, concepts, symbols, or models of that world.

Knowledge then becomes a matter of how accurately those representations correspond to what is really there.

The picture feels obvious.

Maps represent territories.

Photographs represent scenes.

Words represent things.

The same logic is then quietly extended to thought itself.

The mind becomes a mirror.

Knowledge becomes reflection.

Reality becomes what is reflected.

The assumption feels natural.

Yet obviousness often conceals history.

The inherited solution

Representation emerged because thought encountered a genuine problem.

How can one explain knowledge while preserving separation between knower and known?

The world appears to exist independently.

Experience appears internal.

How then does the world become available to thought?

Some bridge seemed necessary.

Representation became the solution.

Thought no longer required direct participation in reality.

Instead, reality could produce internal representations that stand in for what exists outside.

Knowledge could now be explained as correspondence between representations and the world they depict.

The solution was powerful.

It solved a genuine difficulty.

But powerful solutions often become invisible assumptions.

The hidden architecture

Once representation enters thought, a particular structure begins quietly organising explanation.

First there is a world.

Then there are internal representations of that world.

Knowledge becomes comparison between the two.

Meaning becomes attachment between symbols and what they stand for.

The pattern begins repeating widely:

  • words represent objects
  • thoughts represent reality
  • theories represent nature
  • minds represent the world
  • language represents meaning

The same architecture appears repeatedly because the original solution continues extending itself.

Representation stops functioning as an answer to a specific question.

It becomes a general model of understanding.

Yet something curious begins to happen.

The fracture

Representation explains access by introducing an intermediary between mind and world.

But this creates a strange difficulty.

How does one compare a representation with reality itself?

If access to reality already occurs through representations, then comparison appears impossible.

One can compare one representation with another.

But reality itself seems to remain beyond direct reach.

The bridge begins to produce another gap.

A further difficulty emerges.

Representations themselves require explanation.

How does a pattern become about something?

How does a mark on paper become meaningful?

How does a sound become reference?

How does a neural pattern become knowledge?

The representation does not explain meaning.

It quietly assumes it.

The explanation begins turning back upon itself.

The ghost

The problem is not that representation was irrational.

The problem is that the solution remained long after becoming invisible.

Representation became a ghost.

Ghosts persist because they continue organising questions without appearing as assumptions.

One no longer asks whether thought requires representations.

One simply assumes it.

The ghost then quietly returns:

How accurately do words represent reality?

How accurately does science represent nature?

How accurately do thoughts represent the world?

How accurately does language represent meaning?

The same pattern repeats because the same architecture remains in place.

Consequences

If representation is a historical solution rather than an unavoidable truth, then the world changes slightly.

The question is no longer:

How accurately do representations correspond to reality?

The question becomes:

How do relations among experience, distinction, action, and construal make knowing possible?

Representations do not disappear.

Maps remain.

Models remain.

Descriptions remain.

Symbols remain.

But perhaps these were never mirrors standing between minds and reality.

Perhaps what appeared as representations were always resources participating in the ongoing organisation of meaning and experience.

And perhaps the ghost of representation has been standing quietly behind many of the others all along.

The Ghosts of Modernity III: The Ghost of Origin

Some questions seem impossible to resist.

Among the most persistent is this:

Where did it begin?

We ask where a river begins.

We ask where a civilisation began.

We ask where language began, where consciousness began, where the universe began.

Even when faced with complex processes unfolding across time, thought often continues searching for a singular point from which everything else emerges.

The impulse feels natural.

Explanations seem to require beginnings.

Effects seem to require causes.

Stories seem to require first events.

Origins appear necessary.

Yet obviousness often conceals history.

The inherited solution

Origin emerged because thought encountered a genuine problem.

How can one avoid endless regress?

Every explanation appears to invite another question.

Why did this happen?

Because of that.

Why did that happen?

Because of something earlier.

Why did that happen?

Again and again the chain continues.

Without some point of closure, explanation threatens to dissolve into an infinite retreat.

Origin became the solution.

One could stop the regress by identifying a beginning — a point from which everything else follows.

The world could now be organised around first causes, foundational events, and initial conditions.

The solution was powerful.

It solved a genuine difficulty.

But powerful solutions often become invisible assumptions.

The hidden architecture

Once origin enters thought, a particular structure begins quietly organising explanation.

First there is a beginning.

Then later events become consequences of that beginning.

Priority becomes explanatory authority.

What comes first becomes what matters most.

The pattern begins repeating widely:

  • childhood explains adulthood
  • founding events explain institutions
  • first causes explain outcomes
  • original meanings explain language
  • initial conditions explain systems

The same architecture appears repeatedly because the original solution continues extending itself.

Origin stops functioning as an answer to a specific problem.

It becomes a general model of explanation.

Yet something curious begins to happen.

The fracture

Origin explains continuity by locating an initial point.

But this creates a strange difficulty.

Where exactly does a beginning occur?

Consider language.

At what point did language begin?

With the first word?

The first symbol?

The first social practice?

The first meaningful distinction?

Each answer appears to push the problem elsewhere.

The same difficulty appears repeatedly.

Where did a culture begin?

Where did a species begin?

Where did a self begin?

Processes unfolding gradually across changing relations often resist singular starting points.

The supposedly clear beginning begins to blur.

A further difficulty emerges.

Even when beginnings can be identified, they rarely explain as much as expected.

Founding events do not determine entire histories.

Initial conditions do not eliminate ongoing transformation.

What comes first does not automatically remain most important.

The explanatory weight placed upon origins begins to weaken.

The ghost

The problem is not that origins were irrational.

The problem is that the solution remained long after becoming invisible.

Origin became a ghost.

Ghosts persist because they continue organising questions without appearing as assumptions.

One no longer asks whether explanations require beginnings.

One simply assumes they do.

The ghost then quietly returns:

What is the origin of consciousness?

What is the origin of meaning?

What is the origin of identity?

What is the origin of society?

The same pattern repeats because the same architecture remains in place.

Consequences

If origin is a historical solution rather than an unavoidable truth, then the world changes slightly.

The question is no longer:

What beginning produced this phenomenon?

The question becomes:

What ongoing organisation of relations continually actualises this phenomenon?

Beginnings do not disappear.

Births remain.

Historical events remain.

Foundations remain.

Distinctions remain.

But perhaps beginnings were never self-sufficient explanatory anchors standing outside the processes that followed them.

Perhaps what appeared as origins were always retrospective cuts within ongoing patterns of becoming.

And perhaps the ghost of origin has been quietly standing beside the ghosts of substance and essence all along.

The Ghosts of Modernity II: The Ghost of Essence

Some ghosts do not announce themselves.

They become so deeply woven into thought that they begin to feel indistinguishable from common sense.

Essence is one such ghost.

We ordinarily assume that things possess a defining nature — something that makes them what they truly are.

A tree possesses treeness.

A person possesses a true self.

A species possesses defining characteristics.

Even ideas are often imagined to possess an underlying nature waiting to be discovered.

The assumption feels obvious.

How else could we recognise anything at all?

Yet obviousness often conceals history.

The inherited solution

Essence emerged because thought encountered a genuine problem.

How does one recognise continuity across variation?

No two trees are identical.

No two birds are identical.

No two people are identical.

And yet we continually identify them as belonging to recognisable kinds.

Variation seemed to require stability.

Something appeared necessary beneath difference — some enduring principle capable of preserving identity across changing appearances.

Essence became the solution.

Objects could vary in accidental features while retaining a deeper defining nature.

The world became populated not merely with things, but with things possessing an intrinsic character.

The solution was powerful.

It solved a genuine difficulty.

But powerful solutions often become invisible assumptions.

The hidden architecture

Once essence enters thought, a particular structure begins quietly organising explanation.

First there is an underlying nature.

Then observable features become expressions of that nature.

Difference becomes secondary.

Variation becomes deviation from an underlying core.

The pattern repeats itself widely:

  • people possess true selves
  • cultures possess essential characteristics
  • species possess defining properties
  • concepts possess intrinsic meanings
  • identities possess underlying realities

The same architecture appears repeatedly because the original solution continues extending itself.

Essence stops functioning as an answer to a particular question.

It becomes a general model of reality.

Yet something curious begins to happen.

The fracture

Essence explains similarity by introducing a hidden principle beneath variation.

But this creates a strange difficulty.

Where exactly does essence reside?

No single characteristic appears sufficient.

Remove a leaf from a tree and it remains a tree.

Remove many leaves and it remains a tree.

Alter its size, colour, or shape and it remains recognisable.

The supposedly defining essence repeatedly seems to withdraw whenever one attempts to locate it.

One may say:

Essence is what makes the thing what it is.

But this explanation risks circling back upon itself.

The tree is a tree because of its treeness.

The person is a person because of personhood.

The explanation begins to resemble a naming procedure more than an account.

A further difficulty emerges.

Many things change profoundly while remaining recognisable.

Languages evolve.

Cultures transform.

Individuals alter across life.

Species themselves change across evolutionary history.

The apparently stable essence begins to look increasingly unstable.

The ghost

The problem is not that essence was irrational.

The problem is that the solution continued operating after becoming invisible.

Essence became a ghost.

Ghosts persist because they continue shaping questions long after their origins disappear.

One no longer asks whether things possess essences.

One simply assumes they do.

The ghost then quietly returns:

What is the true nature of humanity?

What is the essence of intelligence?

What is the essence of language?

What is the essence of identity?

The same pattern repeats because the same architecture remains in place.

Consequences

If essence is a historical solution rather than an unavoidable truth, then the world changes slightly.

The question is no longer:

What underlying nature makes a thing what it is?

The question becomes:

What patterns of relation stabilise recognisable distinctions?

Recognisable things do not disappear.

Trees remain.

People remain.

Languages remain.

Distinctions remain.

But perhaps recognisability never depended upon hidden defining cores beneath variation.

Perhaps what appeared as essences were always relatively stable patterns emerging within the ongoing organisation of relations.

And perhaps the ghost of essence has been quietly standing beside the ghost of substance all along.

The Ghosts of Modernity I: The Ghost of Substance

Some ideas become so familiar that they cease to appear as ideas at all.

They become part of the background architecture through which the world is understood.

Substance is one such idea.

We ordinarily assume that the world is made of things.

Tables, trees, mountains, atoms, people.

Each appears to possess its own independent existence. Relations then appear afterwards, connecting things that are already there.

The assumption feels obvious.

What else could the world be made of?

Yet obviousness often conceals history.

The inherited solution

Substance did not emerge because people enjoyed inventing abstractions.

It emerged because thought encountered a problem.

How does anything remain the same through change?

A tree grows.

Its leaves appear and disappear.

Its branches alter.

Its shape changes across years.

Yet we still say:

It is the same tree.

Something seemed required beneath variation — something capable of preserving continuity while properties shifted around it.

Substance became the solution.

Change could occur at the level of appearances while an underlying reality remained stable.

The world became populated with enduring entities carrying changing attributes.

The solution was powerful.

It solved a genuine problem.

But powerful solutions often become invisible assumptions.

The hidden architecture

Once substance enters thought, a particular structure begins quietly organising everything around it.

First there are things.

Then things possess properties.

Then things enter into relations.

Relations become secondary additions between already completed entities.

The pattern repeats almost everywhere:

  • objects possess characteristics
  • individuals possess identities
  • minds possess thoughts
  • societies contain individuals
  • language contains meanings

The same architecture appears repeatedly because the original solution continues extending itself.

Substance stops being an answer to a particular question.

It becomes a general template for reality itself.

Yet something curious begins to happen.

The fracture

Substance solves persistence by introducing a hidden carrier beneath change.

But this introduces a strange difficulty.

What exactly is the substance itself?

If all observable characteristics change, what remains?

One may say:

The substance is whatever supports the properties.

But now substance begins to resemble a placeholder rather than an explanation.

Properties depend upon substance.

Yet substance becomes difficult to describe except through properties.

The explanation circles back upon itself.

A further difficulty emerges.

Relations begin to appear strangely external.

If entities exist independently prior to relation, then relation becomes something added afterwards.

Yet many phenomena resist this separation.

Languages depend upon speakers and speakers upon language.

Individuals emerge through social relations and social relations through individuals.

Meaning emerges through systems of distinction.

The supposedly independent entities begin to look increasingly difficult to separate from the relations assumed to be secondary.

The hidden architecture begins to wobble.

The ghost

The problem is not that substance was irrational.

The problem is that the solution remained long after the question changed.

Substance became a ghost.

Ghosts persist because they continue organising thought after becoming invisible.

One no longer asks whether the world consists of substances.

One simply assumes it.

The ghost then silently reappears everywhere:

What thing carries identity?

What thing contains meaning?

What thing possesses knowledge?

What thing underlies change?

The same question repeats because the same architecture remains in place.

Consequences

If substance is a historical solution rather than an unavoidable truth, then the world changes slightly.

The question is no longer:

What things exist, and what properties do they possess?

The question becomes:

What patterns of relation make distinguishable entities possible?

Objects do not disappear.

Trees remain.

People remain.

Mountains remain.

Distinctions remain.

But perhaps distinguishable things were never self-contained substances standing behind relation.

Perhaps what appeared to be independent objects were always stabilised patterns emerging within the ongoing organisation of relations.

And perhaps the ghost of substance has been standing quietly in the background for far longer than anyone noticed.

The Great Inversions VIII: Knowledge Is Not Representation

We often speak about knowledge as though it were a picture of the world.

To know something is to represent it correctly.

Thought becomes a mirror.

The world becomes what is mirrored.

And knowledge becomes the internal image that corresponds to an external reality.

The metaphor is so deeply embedded that it often feels like the only serious option.

Science is described as building increasingly accurate representations.

Beliefs are evaluated by how well they match the world.

Errors are described as distorted or incomplete pictures.

Truth becomes correspondence between representation and reality.

Knowledge appears to be a structure inside the mind that reflects what exists outside it.

Yet familiar metaphors often conceal familiar assumptions.

The inherited construal

The inherited picture often assumes something like this:

  • the world exists as a set of objects and states of affairs
  • the mind forms internal representations of these objects
  • knowledge consists in accurate representation
  • truth is correspondence between representation and reality
  • error is misrepresentation

The image feels natural because it mirrors familiar optical experience.

A photograph resembles what it depicts.

A map corresponds to a territory.

A reflection appears in a mirror.

The same logic is then extended to thought itself.

Knowing becomes a kind of inner imaging process.

But something begins to shift when this model is pressed.

The hidden assumptions

Where exactly is the “representation”?

Is it a mental picture?

If so, what makes a mental picture about anything rather than simply another internal event?

Is it a sentence?

If so, how do marks or sounds acquire reference in the first place?

Is it a neural pattern?

If so, how does a physical configuration become meaningful rather than merely causal?

At every level, something essential seems to be missing: the bridge between structure and aboutness.

The representational model assumes this bridge, but does not explain it.

It assumes that representation is already meaningful.

But meaning itself becomes difficult to locate inside the model.

The fracture

A further difficulty emerges.

Knowing does not behave like passive copying.

We do not typically encounter the world and then construct an internal duplicate of it.

We act within situations.

We respond to constraints, possibilities, and distinctions that matter within ongoing activity.

What counts as “knowledge” often depends on what is being done, not on what is being stored.

A map is not useful because it resembles the terrain.

It is useful because it supports navigation.

A scientific theory is not knowledge because it mirrors reality.

It is knowledge because it participates in the organisation of prediction, intervention, and explanation.

Knowing appears less like representation and more like engagement.

The mirror begins to lose its central role.

The inversion

Suppose knowledge is not representation.

Suppose knowing is a form of participation in the ongoing organisation of relations.

On such a view, the world is not first given as a complete set of objects to be copied internally.

Rather, knowing emerges through situated activity within structured possibilities.

What we call “knowledge” would not be an internal picture of an external world.

It would be the patterned ability to navigate, distinguish, coordinate, and act within relations.

Truth would not primarily be correspondence between two independent domains.

It would be stability and coherence within systems of construal and engagement.

The inversion is subtle.

Yet its implications are profound.

Consequences

If knowledge is relational rather than representational, then epistemology shifts character.

The question is no longer:

How accurately does thought mirror reality?

The question becomes:

How are relations of engagement and construal organised such that distinctions, predictions, and actions become possible?

Error also changes character.

Error is no longer simply a distorted picture.

It becomes a breakdown in relational coordination.

Even objects of knowledge change their status.

They are no longer external things duplicated inside the mind.

They become stabilised patterns within systems of activity.

The world begins to look slightly different.

Theories remain.

Models remain.

Descriptions remain.

But perhaps knowledge was never a mirror held up to reality.

Perhaps it was always a way of participating in the ongoing organisation of what can be distinguished, enacted, and made to matter.

The Great Inversions VII: Identity Is Not Possession

We often speak about identity as though it were something we possess.

We ask people to find themselves.

We speak of having an identity.

We worry about losing it.

We defend it.

We protect it.

We search for our true identity, as if somewhere beneath changing circumstances there exists a stable thing waiting to be uncovered.

The language feels natural.

People possess names.

People possess histories.

People possess characteristics.

The same image is then projected onto identity itself.

Identity appears to be a possession.

Yet familiar metaphors often conceal familiar assumptions.

The inherited construal

The inherited picture often assumes something like this:

  • individuals possess identities
  • identity exists as a stable object beneath change
  • experiences accumulate around this identity
  • authentic living involves discovering or expressing the true identity one already possesses

The image appears intuitive because objects normally possess stable properties.

A book remains the same book despite acquiring scratches.

A house remains the same house despite changing occupants.

The same logic is projected inward.

Identity becomes something owned.

Change becomes something happening around it.

Identity appears to function as a hidden core beneath experience.

Yet something curious appears once we look more closely.

The hidden assumptions

Where exactly is identity located?

Is it found in memory?

Memories shift and reorganise.

Is it found in personality?

Personality changes across contexts and across time.

Is it found in the body?

Bodies transform continuously.

Is it found in values?

Values themselves emerge and alter through relationships and experience.

Whenever one attempts to locate identity as a stable thing, it often seems to retreat elsewhere.

The supposedly possessed object becomes strangely difficult to identify.

The image begins to wobble.

The fracture

A further difficulty emerges.

If identity were a possession existing independently of relations, then relationships should merely reveal what is already there.

Yet relationships often participate in changing who people become.

Friendships reshape possibilities.

Communities alter self-understanding.

Languages open and close ways of construing experience.

New situations make previously unavailable aspects of life possible.

Identity does not merely express itself through relations.

Identity appears to emerge through them.

The supposedly hidden possession begins to lose its apparent solidity.

Perhaps the problem lies in imagining identity as something owned.

The inversion

Suppose identity is not a possession.

Suppose identity emerges through ongoing relations among histories, meanings, bodies, social practices, and acts of construal.

On such a view, identity would not exist as a hidden object waiting beneath experience.

Nor would it be something one simply discovers and carries unchanged through life.

Identity would be continually actualised through organised relations.

Identity would not be something one has.

Identity would be something one becomes.

The inversion appears subtle.

Yet its implications are substantial.

Consequences

If identity is relational rather than possessive, then change changes character.

The question is no longer:

How does one preserve an unchanged identity?

The question becomes:

How are patterns of continuity continually actualised across changing relations?

Growth also changes character.

Growth no longer appears as adding experiences onto a completed self.

It becomes transformation within ongoing patterns of relation.

Even authenticity shifts slightly.

Authenticity no longer means uncovering a hidden object beneath appearances.

It becomes a way of participating in the ongoing organisation of one's becoming.

The world begins to look slightly different.

Names remain.

Histories remain.

Lives remain recognisably personal.

But perhaps identity was never a possession carried through life.

Perhaps identity was always emerging within the unfolding organisation of relations.