Friday, 15 May 2026

Power through the Lens of Relational Ontology — 1. Power is Not a Property, It is a Capacity of Constraint Modulation

The most persistent error in thinking about power is to treat it as something that entities possess.

On this view:

  • individuals have power,
  • institutions hold power,
  • states exercise power,
  • groups gain or lose power.

Power is thereby reified as a property attached to agents, as though it were a kind of substance distributed unevenly across a social field.

Relational ontology rejects this framing at the root.

Power is not a property.

It is:

a capacity of constraint modulation within relational systems that produce and sustain worldhood.

This shift is not semantic. It is structural.

From possession to modulation

To say that power is a property is to assume:

  • stable entities precede relations,
  • and relations are secondary effects of those entities acting.

But in a relational ontology:

  • entities are stabilised outcomes of relational processes,
  • and what we call “agents” are themselves effects of constraint organisation.

So power cannot be located in agents as a possession.

Instead:

power is what certain configurations of relational systems can do to the distribution, stability, and transformation of constraints.

What is a constraint?

A constraint is not simply a restriction.

It is:

a structured limitation on what can be actualised within a relational field.

Constraints define:

  • what counts as a viable action,
  • what counts as a coherent identity,
  • what counts as a legitimate interpretation,
  • what counts as a stable coordination pattern.

Without constraints, there is no worldhood — only undifferentiated possibility.

Worlds are:

stabilised constraint configurations.

Power as modulation of constraint space

Power, then, is not about force imposed on already-formed actors.

It is about:

the capacity to shape, maintain, redistribute, or destabilise the constraint structures that organise what can appear as an actionable world.

This includes the ability to:

  • introduce new distinctions,
  • stabilise categories,
  • enforce or relax normative expectations,
  • reorganise temporal sequences,
  • and restructure pathways of coordination.

Power is therefore:

world-shaping at the level of possibility space.

Why “influence” is not enough

It is tempting to reduce power to influence, persuasion, or coercion.

But these are already derivative phenomena.

They presuppose:

  • a structured field of intelligible actions,
  • within which influence can be exerted.

Power operates one level deeper:

it configures the field within which influence becomes possible and meaningful.

It is not simply what happens within a world.

It is what determines:

what kind of world is operationally available.

Institutions as stabilised modulation systems

Once this is understood, institutions can be reinterpreted more precisely.

Institutions are not merely:

  • repositories of authority,
  • or organisational structures.

They are:

stabilised systems for the continuous modulation of relational constraints.

They:

  • encode categories into durable forms,
  • distribute decision pathways across procedures,
  • stabilise expectations across time,
  • and reproduce coordination patterns without requiring continuous individual intent.

Institutions are therefore not “holders” of power.

They are:

persistent operational architectures of constraint modulation.

Distributed nature of power

If power is constraint modulation, it cannot be centrally located.

It must be:

  • distributed,
  • layered,
  • and unevenly concentrated across relational systems.

Different nodes in a system may have different capacities to:

  • alter constraints,
  • enforce stabilisation,
  • or reconfigure coordination structures.

Power therefore appears as:

differential capacity within a field of relational modulation.

Not possession.
Not essence.
But gradient.

Why power is often invisible

Power tends to disappear when constraint modulation is successful.

When constraints are stable:

  • actions feel natural,
  • categories feel obvious,
  • institutions feel neutral,
  • and norms feel self-evident.

At that point:

power no longer appears as power.

It appears as reality.

This is not deception. It is structural.

When modulation succeeds, it ceases to be experienced as modulation.

It becomes:

the background condition of intelligibility.

Why change feels like resistance

When constraint structures are altered, what changes is not just behaviour, but worldhood itself.

This is why power struggles often feel disproportionate to their surface content.

What is at stake is not simply:

  • policy,
  • resources,
  • or representation,

but:

the structure of what can count as a coherent and actionable world.

Power without a centre

From this perspective, there is no single locus of power.

There are only:

  • overlapping constraint systems,
  • competing modulation capacities,
  • and distributed architectures of stabilisation and transformation.

“Centres of power” are themselves:

emergent stabilisations within relational fields.

They are effects of coordination density, not origins of it.

Closing: power as world-operation

Power, then, is not what some actors have and others lack.

It is:

the operational capacity of relational systems to organise, maintain, and reconfigure the constraint conditions under which worlds become actualisable.

To study power is not to track who dominates whom.

It is to analyse:

  • how constraint structures are produced,
  • how they stabilise,
  • how they fail,
  • and how they are reconfigured.

In short:

power is not a thing in the world.

It is the set of operations by which worlds continue to take shape at all.

Ideology through the Lens of Relational Ontology: 7. What Remains When No World is Final

The preceding analyses converge on a troubling implication for any theory of ideology:

If worlds are sustained through:

  • constraint saturation,
  • institutional persistence,
  • narrative coherence,
  • emotional synchronisation,
  • and material coordination,

then “reality” as ordinarily experienced is not a final substrate.

It is:

relationally stabilised worldhood under historically specific conditions of constraint.

This raises a question that cannot be resolved within any single ideological system:

What remains when no world is final?

The illusion of final worlds

Most symbolic systems implicitly behave as if they are complete.

They may not claim perfection explicitly, but they tend to stabilise:

  • norms as necessary,
  • institutions as natural,
  • identities as given,
  • and narratives as inevitable.

This produces the experiential effect of closure:

the sense that the current world is not merely one arrangement among others, but the only coherent form reality can take.

But this sense of closure is itself an effect of:

  • constraint saturation.

No world achieves total closure because:

  • relational systems always exceed their current stabilisation.

Excess as structural condition

At the heart of relational ontology lies a simple but destabilising claim:

No system fully exhausts the relational field it actualises.

Every stabilised world leaves behind:

  • unselected possibilities,
  • uncoordinated relations,
  • unactualised meanings,
  • and alternative trajectories of constraint.

This excess is not external to the system.

It is:

constitutive of its very possibility.

A world is always:

  • a selection,
    not a totality.

Critique as de-saturation

Critique, in this framework, is not simply opposition or negation.

It is:

the partial de-saturation of stabilised constraint systems.

Critique does not stand outside ideology in a neutral space.

It operates by:

  • exposing contingency,
  • loosening necessity,
  • interrupting narrative closure,
  • and revealing alternative relational configurations.

But critique alone does not produce a new world.

It produces:

instability in the conditions of worldhood.

Why no critique is final

If all worlds are relationally stabilised, then critique itself cannot occupy a final position.

Every critical framework:

  • relies on its own stabilising constraints,
  • depends on its own narrative coherence,
  • and produces its own forms of intelligibility.

There is no view from nowhere.

There is only:

shifting regimes of relational actualisation.

This does not undermine critique.

It situates it.

Critique becomes:

a transformation within relational fields, not an exit from them.

Openness as structural feature, not moral ideal

Openness is often treated as an ethical value:

  • tolerance,
  • pluralism,
  • flexibility,
  • epistemic humility.

But relational ontology reframes openness more fundamentally.

Openness is not primarily a virtue.

It is:

the structural consequence of non-final relational systems.

Because no world fully closes:

  • alternative actualisations remain possible,
  • new constraint configurations can emerge,
  • and stabilised meanings can be reorganised.

Openness is therefore:

ontological surplus within constrained systems.

Transformation is always re-actualisation

Change is not the replacement of one completed world with another.

It is:

the reorganisation of relational constraints that produce worldhood itself.

Transformation occurs when:

  • institutions shift,
  • narratives reconfigure,
  • identities are renegotiated,
  • material systems reorganise,
  • and temporal structures are re-sequenced.

But critically:

  • transformation never begins from outside relational reality.

It arises from:

tensions, excesses, and instabilities within it.

Every world contains the seeds of its own reconfiguration.

Why stability and instability coexist

A key mistake in thinking about ideology is to treat stability and instability as opposites.

In relational terms, they coexist.

Stability arises from:

  • recursive reinforcement of constraints.

Instability arises from:

  • unintegrated excess within those same systems.

A world is therefore never purely stable or unstable.

It is:

dynamically sustained tension between saturation and excess.

The fragility of “common sense”

What appears as common sense is not foundational truth.

It is:

the most densely stabilised zone of relational coordination.

But because it depends on ongoing reinforcement:

  • it can weaken,
  • fragment,
  • or reorganise.

When this happens, what once appeared obvious becomes:

  • visible as constructed,
  • and therefore transformable.

Common sense is not false.

It is:

historically stabilised construal that can lose its coherence conditions.

Reconfiguration without transcendence

Transformation is often mistakenly imagined as transcendence:

  • stepping outside ideology,
  • accessing pure truth,
  • or escaping relational mediation.

But relational ontology denies this possibility.

There is no outside.

There is only:

reconfiguration of relational systems from within relational systems.

New worlds emerge not through exit,
but through:

  • re-organisation of constraint architectures.

Why breakdown is not liberation

Collapse of a stabilised world is not automatically emancipatory.

When constraint systems weaken too rapidly:

  • coordination fails,
  • meaning fragments,
  • identity destabilises,
  • and temporal coherence dissolves.

What follows may be:

  • violence,
  • confusion,
  • or re-stabilisation under new constraints that are not necessarily more open.

Breakdown reveals:

that worldhood itself is a fragile achievement, not a permanent possession.

The role of imagination

Imagination is often treated as a psychological faculty.

Here it has a more structural role.

Imagination is:

the capacity to traverse unactualised relational configurations within constraint-limited worlds.

It allows:

  • alternative coordinations to be tested,
  • narratives to be re-sequenced,
  • and identities to be reconfigured prior to institutional stabilisation.

But imagination alone is insufficient.

For worlds to change, imagination must be coupled with:

  • material reorganisation,
  • institutional transformation,
  • and narrative re-coordination.

Why no world is ultimate

Every ideological system tends toward self-stabilisation.

But no system can fully eliminate:

  • contradiction,
  • excess,
  • reinterpretation,
  • or historical disruption.

This means:

no world is ultimately finalisable.

Not because all worlds are equal,
but because:

relational systems always exceed their stabilised forms.

What remains

When no world is final, what remains is not emptiness.

What remains is:

relational possibility under continuously reconfigurable constraint.

This includes:

  • the capacity for new institutions,
  • the emergence of new narratives,
  • the reorganisation of identities,
  • and the transformation of temporal horizons.

But none of these are guaranteed.

Possibility is not promise.

It is:

structural openness within constrained actualisation.

Closing: relational transformation

Relational ontology does not offer a position beyond ideology.

It offers something more precise and more demanding:

A recognition that all worlds are:

  • stabilised,
  • contingent,
  • partial,
  • and historically actualised.

And therefore:

  • transformable.

Not from outside,
but from within the very systems that produce their apparent necessity.

What remains when no world is final is not certainty.

It is:

the ongoing capacity for worlds to reconfigure the conditions of their own reality.

And in that sense, ideology is never simply what binds us.

It is also:

the field within which transformation continually becomes possible.

Ideology through the Lens of Relational Ontology: 6. Why Ideologies Feel Like Reality

One of the most persistent misunderstandings about ideology is the assumption that people consciously mistake illusion for reality.

On this model:

  • ideology deceives,
  • critique reveals truth,
  • and liberation occurs once people recognise the error.

But this framework cannot explain something fundamental:

Why do ideological worlds often feel more real than critique itself?

Why do institutional norms,
social hierarchies,
economic systems,
and collective narratives frequently appear:

  • obvious,
  • practical,
  • inevitable,
  • and experientially undeniable?

And why do alternative possibilities so often feel:

  • unrealistic,
  • naĂŻve,
  • abstract,
  • or socially unintelligible?

Relational ontology reframes the problem entirely.

Ideologies do not feel real primarily because people are irrational or manipulated.

They feel real because:

symbolic constraints become so deeply saturated across lived coordination that the ideological world acquires experiential continuity, perceptual obviousness, and practical inevitability.

This is:

lived worldhood under conditions of constraint saturation.

Ideology and the texture of experience

Ideology does not operate only at the level of explicit belief.

Its deepest operations occur through:

  • perception,
  • expectation,
  • emotional orientation,
  • narrative continuity,
  • bodily habit,
  • institutional participation,
  • and social coordination.

By the time a person consciously reflects upon a world, that world has often already been:

  • semantically organised,
  • emotionally stabilised,
  • temporally coordinated,
  • and institutionally reinforced.

Ideology therefore feels real because:

it organises the relational conditions of ordinary experience itself.

What is constraint saturation?

Constraint saturation occurs when symbolic structures become recursively reinforced across:

  • institutions,
  • language,
  • narrative,
  • material organisation,
  • emotional regulation,
  • temporal rhythms,
  • and everyday practice.

At this point, ideological coordination no longer appears:

  • partial,
  • historical,
  • or constructed.

Instead, it becomes:

infrastructural to social existence.

The world ceases feeling like:

  • one possible arrangement among others.

It begins feeling:

  • synonymous with reality itself.

Why repetition becomes ontology

Human beings inhabit worlds through repetition.

Daily participation within:

  • schools,
  • workplaces,
  • media environments,
  • bureaucratic systems,
  • legal structures,
  • economic routines,
  • and linguistic patterns

gradually stabilises:

  • expectations,
  • behavioural compatibility,
  • emotional orientation,
  • and perceptual salience.

Repeated coordination produces:

experiential solidity.

What is continuously reinforced begins acquiring:

  • ontological weight.

This is why ideology does not require constant persuasion.

Repetition itself becomes:

world-production.

The invisibility of successful ideology

Ideological systems become most powerful when they cease appearing ideological at all.

At early stages, systems often remain visibly contested.

But once constraint saturation deepens, ideological structures disappear into:

  • common sense,
  • practicality,
  • professionalism,
  • maturity,
  • realism,
  • and ordinary life.

This is crucial.

People rarely experience themselves as:

  • inhabiting ideology.

They experience themselves as:

simply inhabiting reality.

Why alternatives feel impossible

One of ideology’s deepest effects is the production of construal asymmetry.

Certain futures become:

  • imaginable,
  • discussable,
  • institutionally supported,
  • emotionally plausible,
  • and narratively coherent.

Others become:

  • absurd,
  • irresponsible,
  • utopian,
  • dangerous,
  • or literally difficult to conceive.

Importantly, this does not necessarily require censorship.

Constraint saturation itself narrows:

socially actualisable possibility space.

Alternative worlds fail not because they are logically impossible, but because:

  • existing relational systems overwhelmingly reinforce the current world’s intelligibility.

Material organisation and lived reality

Ideological worlds feel real because they are materially inhabited.

People do not merely think within ideology.

They:

  • work,
  • travel,
  • consume,
  • communicate,
  • learn,
  • compete,
  • obey,
  • desire,
  • and survive

within institutionally organised environments.

Economic systems,
architectures,
technologies,
bureaucracies,
and infrastructures all recursively reinforce:

  • symbolic coordination.

Reality therefore becomes:

materially saturated semiosis.

This is why ideological systems cannot be dissolved merely through argument.

They are:

  • lived,
  • embodied,
  • proceduralised,
  • and infrastructurally actualised.

Emotional realism

Ideological worlds also regulate affect.

They shape:

  • fear,
  • shame,
  • aspiration,
  • pride,
  • anxiety,
  • legitimacy,
  • and belonging.

Over time, emotional orientations synchronise with:

  • institutional expectations,
  • normative identities,
  • and dominant narratives.

This creates:

emotional realism.

The ideological world feels true because:

  • emotions themselves become relationally coordinated within it.

People do not merely think the world is real.

They:

  • feel it as real.

Time and inevitability

Constraint saturation also reorganises temporality.

Dominant worlds begin appearing:

  • historically inevitable,
  • naturally evolved,
  • or permanently enduring.

Alternative futures become increasingly difficult to imagine coherently.

Narrative therefore stabilises not only:

  • memory,
    but:
  • inevitability.

The existing order comes to feel:

temporally necessary.

This is one reason ideological systems survive even during visible contradiction or crisis.

People often struggle to imagine:

  • how another world could actually function experientially.

Why contradiction does not dissolve ideology

Ideological worlds frequently contain obvious contradictions.

Yet they persist.

This is because worldhood is not maintained through:

  • perfect logical consistency.

It is maintained through:

sufficient relational coherence across lived coordination.

As long as institutions,
emotions,
narratives,
identities,
and material systems continue aligning effectively enough,
the world retains:

  • experiential solidity.

People tolerate contradictions because:

  • social reality is stabilised relationally rather than deductively.

Subjectivity and worldhood

Subjects themselves become synchronised with ideological reality.

People learn:

  • what ambitions are reasonable,
  • what identities are legitimate,
  • what emotions are appropriate,
  • what futures are plausible,
  • and what behaviours are practical.

The self therefore becomes partially:

calibrated to the prevailing world.

This calibration deepens ideological realism enormously.

The world feels natural because:

  • subjectivity itself has become coordinated within its constraints.

Why critique often feels unreal

Critique frequently struggles because it operates against:

  • fully saturated lived worlds.

Alternative analyses may be:

  • logically compelling,
  • morally persuasive,
  • or empirically supported,

yet still feel:

  • socially thin,
  • emotionally implausible,
  • or practically detached.

This occurs because critique alone often lacks:

  • institutional reinforcement,
  • narrative continuity,
  • material embodiment,
  • emotional synchronisation,
  • and temporal infrastructure.

A world cannot be destabilised solely propositionally.

It must lose:

relational coherence density.

Crisis and destabilisation

Ideological worlds become vulnerable when constraint saturation weakens.

This may occur through:

  • economic collapse,
  • technological disruption,
  • institutional fragmentation,
  • narrative breakdown,
  • ecological crisis,
  • or competing symbolic systems.

At such moments:

  • previously invisible assumptions become perceptible,
  • normality destabilises,
  • and reality itself begins feeling uncertain.

People experience this not merely as:

  • disagreement,
    but as:

ontological destabilisation.

Because what weakens is:

  • worldhood itself.

Why people cling to collapsing worlds

When ideological worlds destabilise, individuals often intensify attachment to them.

This is not merely irrational defensiveness.

Collapsing worlds threaten:

  • identity continuity,
  • emotional orientation,
  • social intelligibility,
  • temporal coherence,
  • and existential stability.

People defend ideological systems partly because:

those systems organise the conditions under which life remains experientially navigable.

A collapsing ideology feels like:

  • reality dissolving beneath one’s feet.

Constraint saturation and civilisation

Large-scale civilisations depend upon:

  • highly saturated symbolic coordination systems.

Without:

  • common narratives,
  • institutional persistence,
  • normative expectations,
  • semantic compatibility,
  • and temporal continuity,

collective coordination fragments rapidly.

Ideology therefore cannot simply be dismissed as:

  • distortion.

It is also:

one of the mechanisms through which large-scale social reality becomes sustainably actualisable.

The question is never:

  • whether symbolic saturation exists.

It is:

what kinds of worlds saturation stabilises.

Why no world is fully complete

Relational ontology nevertheless rejects the idea that any ideological world can achieve final closure.

No system perfectly saturates:

  • all construal,
  • all experience,
  • or all possibility.

Contradictions persist.
Alternative meanings emerge.
New technologies reorganise coordination.
Historical conditions shift.
Narratives fracture.
Institutions weaken.

Every world therefore contains:

unrealised relational excess beyond its current stabilisation.

This is why transformation remains possible.

Reality and relational stabilisation

Ideology feels real not because people are simply deceived.

It feels real because:

sufficiently stabilised symbolic constraints become infrastructural to lived worldhood itself.

Reality, as socially inhabited, emerges through:

  • recursive coordination,
  • institutional persistence,
  • emotional synchronisation,
  • narrative continuity,
  • material organisation,
  • and distributed semiosis.

This does not make reality unreal.

It means:

social reality is relationally actualised rather than independently self-given.

Closing lived worldhood

Ideological systems become powerful when symbolic constraints achieve saturation across:

  • institutions,
  • bodies,
  • emotions,
  • narratives,
  • temporal structures,
  • infrastructures,
  • and everyday practice.

At this point, ideology no longer appears:

  • interpretive,
  • historical,
  • or constructed.

It becomes:

lived reality itself.

People do not merely believe ideological worlds.

They:

  • inhabit them,
  • feel through them,
  • remember through them,
  • desire through them,
  • and organise existence through them.

This is why ideological systems persist so deeply.

Because wherever constraint saturation succeeds,
particular worlds become capable not merely of reproducing themselves,
but of being experienced as reality prior to question.

Ideology through the Lens of Relational Ontology: 5. Narrative, Power, and Historical Memory

No society survives through coordination in the present alone.

For symbolic worlds to persist, they must organise not only:

  • behaviour,
  • institutions,
  • and identity,

but:

temporality itself.

This is one of narrative’s deepest ideological functions.

Narrative does not merely describe history.

It organises:

  • collective memory,
  • temporal continuity,
  • legitimacy,
  • causality,
  • destiny,
  • and historical intelligibility.

Relational ontology therefore reframes narrative fundamentally.

Narrative is not simply:

  • storytelling,
  • representation,
  • or cultural ornament.

It is:

large-scale temporal coordination within symbolic worlds.

And because shared worlds depend upon temporal coherence, control over narrative becomes inseparable from power.

Why societies require temporal coherence

No collective world can persist without some degree of historical continuity.

People must be able to construe:

  • where they came from,
  • what their present means,
  • and what futures remain possible.

Without temporal organisation:

  • institutions lose legitimacy,
  • identities fragment,
  • norms destabilise,
  • and coordination weakens.

Narrative solves this problem.

It stabilises:

socially intelligible continuity across time.

Narratives connect:

  • past events,
  • present conditions,
  • and future possibilities

into:

  • coherent symbolic trajectories.

Narrative as relational time-organisation

Earlier series argued that narrative reorganises temporality itself.

Now the ideological implications become clearer.

Narrative transforms:

  • disconnected occurrences
    into:
  • meaningful historical sequences.

This sequencing is never neutral.

Narratives determine:

  • what counts as an origin,
  • what becomes remembered,
  • what appears inevitable,
  • what is treated as progress,
  • and what futures seem imaginable.

Narrative therefore functions as:

symbolic constraint upon historical intelligibility.

Historical memory is not passive storage

Societies often imagine memory as:

  • preservation of facts about the past.

But collective memory is not merely archival retrieval.

It is:

active reconstruction within present symbolic constraints.

Historical memory is continually reorganised through:

  • institutions,
  • education,
  • media,
  • ritual,
  • commemoration,
  • and political struggle.

What is remembered matters.

But equally important is:

  • how events are framed,
  • what causal patterns are stabilised,
  • and what emotional orientations become attached to them.

Memory therefore operates not as:

  • neutral recollection,
    but as:

ideological temporal coordination.

Why power requires narrative control

Power depends profoundly upon control over temporal coherence.

A system capable of organising:

  • collective memory,
  • historical legitimacy,
  • and future expectation

possesses extraordinary ideological stability.

This is because narrative shapes:

  • what appears historically justified,
  • what becomes morally intelligible,
  • and what futures feel realistic.

Political systems therefore compete not merely over:

  • resources,
    or
  • institutions,

but over:

historical narrative itself.

Struggles over memory are struggles over:

  • legitimacy,
  • identity,
  • and possible futures.

The production of origins

One of narrative’s most important functions is the production of origins.

Societies stabilise themselves by constructing:

  • founding moments,
  • ancestral continuity,
  • revolutionary beginnings,
  • sacred histories,
  • or civilisational inheritances.

Origins provide:

  • legitimacy,
  • identity coherence,
  • and temporal grounding.

Importantly, origins are never merely historical descriptions.

They are:

present-oriented symbolic constructions organising collective continuity.

The question is not simply:

  • “what happened?”

But:

“what kind of world does this past allow the present to become?”

Narrative and legitimacy

Institutions depend heavily upon narrative legitimacy.

Governments,
legal systems,
educational structures,
economic arrangements,
and national identities all require:

temporal justification.

Narrative supplies this by organising:

  • continuity,
  • necessity,
  • sacrifice,
  • progress,
  • and historical inevitability.

A system becomes stable when it no longer appears merely contingent.

Instead, it appears:

  • historically earned,
  • civilisationally necessary,
  • morally continuous,
  • or naturally evolved.

Narrative therefore converts:

  • historical contingency
    into:
  • temporal legitimacy.

Why forgetting matters

Ideological memory always involves selective forgetting.

No narrative can preserve everything.

Certain events become:

  • central,
  • commemorated,
  • emotionally charged,
  • and institutionally reinforced.

Others become:

  • marginalised,
  • softened,
  • fragmented,
  • or erased.

Forgetting is therefore not simply absence.

It is:

active constraint on historical intelligibility.

Power shapes not only:

  • what societies remember,
    but:
  • what becomes difficult to remember coherently at all.

Trauma and narrative instability

Historical trauma becomes especially destabilising when it resists narrative integration.

Events such as:

  • war,
  • genocide,
  • collapse,
  • colonisation,
  • or systemic violence

often disrupt:

  • temporal continuity,
  • moral coherence,
  • and collective identity.

Societies then struggle to:

  • narratively contain the rupture.

This produces:

  • denial,
  • fragmentation,
  • mythologisation,
  • repetition,
  • or ideological intensification.

Trauma therefore reveals something profound:

symbolic worlds require temporal coherence to remain socially stable.

Media and temporal synchronisation

Modern media systems dramatically intensify narrative coordination.

They synchronise:

  • attention,
  • emotional response,
  • historical framing,
  • and collective temporality

across enormous populations.

Media therefore functions not merely as:

  • information distribution,
    but as:

large-scale temporal environment management.

Continuous narrative circulation stabilises:

  • public memory,
  • political urgency,
  • generational identity,
  • and historical orientation.

This gives media extraordinary ideological significance.

Control over narrative circulation becomes partially:

control over historical reality itself.

National identity and narrative continuity

Nations depend heavily upon narrative construction.

National identity emerges through:

  • shared historical memory,
  • mythic continuity,
  • commemorative ritual,
  • symbolic sacrifice,
  • and imagined temporal unity.

People who never meet nevertheless experience themselves as:

  • historically connected participants within a shared narrative world.

This continuity is not imaginary in the sense of unreal.

It is:

relationally actualised through narrative coordination.

Nations persist because narrative allows:

  • distributed populations
    to inhabit:
  • synchronised temporal identity.

Progress narratives and ideological time

Many modern ideological systems stabilise themselves through:

  • progress narratives.

History becomes construed as:

  • advancement,
  • development,
  • liberation,
  • innovation,
  • or inevitable improvement.

These narratives organise:

  • aspiration,
  • legitimacy,
  • and future orientation.

Importantly, progress narratives often conceal:

  • contradiction,
  • exclusion,
  • violence,
  • or systemic instability.

By organising history as:

  • directional necessity,

they constrain:

what kinds of futures remain socially imaginable.

Why alternative futures become difficult

Narrative shapes future possibility as much as past interpretation.

A society’s dominant narratives determine:

  • what futures appear realistic,
  • what transformations feel possible,
  • and what alternatives become unintelligible.

This is one of ideology’s deepest temporal operations.

Power stabilises itself partly by:

constraining imaginable futures through narrative organisation of the past.

Narrative and subjectivity

Subjects themselves depend upon narrative continuity.

People understand themselves through:

  • autobiographical integration,
  • inherited histories,
  • cultural memory,
  • and future projection.

Identity therefore becomes partially:

narratively stabilised participation within historical worlds.

Personal memory and collective memory recursively reinforce one another.

The self becomes intelligible through:

  • socially available temporal frameworks.

Why narratives survive contradiction

Narratives often persist despite:

  • factual inconsistency,
  • historical complexity,
  • or contradictory evidence.

This is because narrative coherence is not purely logical.

It is:

relationally stabilised temporal intelligibility.

Narratives survive when they successfully organise:

  • identity,
  • legitimacy,
  • emotional orientation,
  • and world-continuity.

Facts alone rarely destabilise them completely because:

  • narrative operates at the level of social temporal coordination itself.

Historical revision and ideological struggle

Conflicts over history are never merely academic.

They are struggles over:

  • legitimacy,
  • identity,
  • responsibility,
  • and future possibility.

To reinterpret the past is often to:

  • reorganise the present.

This is why debates over:

  • monuments,
  • curricula,
  • national memory,
  • historical violence,
  • and collective responsibility

become so emotionally intense.

Narrative revision threatens:

established temporal coherence structures.

The impossibility of fully neutral history

Relational ontology rejects the fantasy of perfectly neutral historical narration.

All historical accounts involve:

  • selection,
  • framing,
  • sequencing,
  • emphasis,
  • and symbolic organisation.

This does not make history meaningless.

But it means historical understanding is always:

relationally mediated construal within symbolic worlds.

The issue is therefore not:

  • whether narrative exists,
    but:
  • how narrative constraints organise historical intelligibility.

Narrative beyond domination

Narrative is not merely ideological manipulation.

No complex civilisation could exist without:

  • collective temporal coordination.

Narrative makes possible:

  • continuity,
  • identity,
  • memory,
  • aspiration,
  • and large-scale social coherence.

The question is not whether societies narrate.

It is:

what kinds of worlds their narratives make actualisable.

Closing temporal coherence

Narrative is not secondary decoration added onto historical reality.

It is:

one of the primary mechanisms through which historical reality becomes socially intelligible at all.

Through:

  • memory,
  • sequencing,
  • framing,
  • commemoration,
  • emotional coordination,
  • and future projection,

narrative stabilises:

  • legitimacy,
  • identity,
  • institutions,
  • and collective temporality.

Power therefore operates profoundly through:

control over temporal coherence.

Because societies persist not merely by coordinating in space,
but by coordinating:

  • memory,
  • continuity,
  • and imaginable futures across time.

And wherever narrative successfully stabilises temporal coherence,
particular worlds continue learning how to remember themselves into existence.