The rain had returned in a lighter register, as though the weather itself had downgraded the intensity of its argument. In the Senior Common Room at St Anselm’s, the fire burned with the calm persistence of something that had seen many conceptual systems come and go.
Mr Blottisham broke the silence first.
“I’m not sure I like this idea that the self is just… a stabilisation strategy.”
Quillibrace looked up from his chair.
“That is because it removes some of the metaphysical upholstery.”
Blottisham frowned.
“It reduces everything to structure.”
Miss Elowen Stray closed her notebook with a soft, precise motion.
“It does not reduce,” she said. “It relocates explanatory emphasis.”
Blottisham gestured vaguely.
“That sounds like reduction with better branding.”
Quillibrace allowed a faint smile.
“Branding is often what happens when ontology becomes socially inconvenient.”
Blottisham ignored this.
“So now we’re saying the soul isn’t real, it’s just… a continuity device?”
Quillibrace considered this.
“That depends on what you mean by ‘just’.”
Blottisham leaned forward.
“Well, something people invented to deal with death.”
Miss Stray tilted her head slightly.
“Not invented,” she said. “Stabilised.”
Blottisham frowned.
“That sounds suspiciously like the same thing again.”
“It is not,” Quillibrace said calmly. “Invention implies intention. Stabilisation implies constraint.”
A silence settled.
Blottisham shook his head.
“So the soul is just a way of making identity continuous across time.”
“One way,” Quillibrace agreed. “Among several.”
Miss Stray added gently:
“A solution to a specific structural pressure: how the ‘I’ remains the same across change, embodiment, and finitude.”
Blottisham looked uneasy.
“That makes it sound rather… technical.”
Quillibrace nodded.
“Many metaphysical objects become less comforting when described precisely.”
Blottisham frowned.
“But people feel like they are continuous.”
“Yes,” said Miss Stray. “That feeling is real.”
Blottisham brightened slightly.
“So that proves something.”
Quillibrace shook his head.
“It proves that continuity is experienced, not that it is ontologically simple.”
Blottisham exhaled.
“This is very frustrating.”
“That,” Quillibrace said, “is a common side effect of distinguishing function from metaphysical substance.”
Blottisham leaned back.
“So what you’re saying is: the soul is basically a narrative device.”
“Among other functions,” Miss Stray said.
Blottisham gestured.
“For identity.”
“For continuity under temporal pressure,” Quillibrace corrected.
Blottisham frowned.
“And death is what creates that pressure.”
“Yes,” said Miss Stray.
Blottisham hesitated.
“So without death… we wouldn’t need the soul?”
Quillibrace considered this carefully.
“We would still require continuity structures,” he said. “But their form would be different.”
Blottisham looked unconvinced.
“That sounds like you’re making everything depend on mortality.”
Miss Stray nodded slightly.
“In part, yes.”
Blottisham frowned.
“That feels reductive.”
“It feels destabilising,” Quillibrace corrected.
Blottisham sighed.
“I preferred it when identity was just… me.”
Quillibrace looked at him.
“And what, precisely, is ‘me’ in that formulation?”
Blottisham hesitated.
“…the thing inside.”
Miss Stray spoke softly.
“The interior model.”
Blottisham gestured vaguely.
“Yes. The observer. The self. Whatever you want to call it.”
Quillibrace nodded.
“The homunculus, then.”
Blottisham frowned.
“If you must.”
A pause.
Miss Stray opened her notebook again.
“Part of the difficulty,” she said, “is that once experience is organised as interior, it becomes natural to posit something inside it that remains constant.”
Blottisham looked at her.
“Because there is something constant.”
“Or,” Quillibrace said, “because continuity is required for explanation.”
Blottisham rubbed his temple.
“This is making me suspect philosophy is just removing things.”
Miss Stray smiled faintly.
“It is often removing unnecessary ontological commitments.”
Blottisham sighed.
“I liked some of those commitments.”
Quillibrace nodded.
“So did civilisation.”
A silence.
The fire shifted slightly.
Blottisham spoke more quietly.
“So if the soul is just continuity… what happens when continuity breaks?”
Miss Stray answered gently.
“Then new continuity structures are formed.”
Blottisham frowned.
“That sounds very cold.”
“It is not cold,” Quillibrace said. “It is structural.”
Blottisham leaned back.
“I still think people are more than structures.”
Miss Stray closed her notebook softly.
“They are,” she said. “But not in the way the homunculus required.”
Quillibrace added, almost absently:
“The homunculus was never a thing inside the system.”
“It was the system’s way of narrating itself as a thing.”
Silence settled again, longer this time.
Blottisham stared into the fire.
“So what remains,” he said finally, “if you take that away?”
Quillibrace considered the question.
“Experience,” he said.
Miss Stray nodded.
“Relational participation.”
Blottisham frowned.
“That’s not very comforting.”
Quillibrace looked at him with something like quiet sympathy.
“No,” he said. “But it is harder to mistake for something it is not.”
The fire continued its steady work.
Outside, the rain began again—lightly, as if continuing a thought rather than initiating one.