Conceptual ecosystems possess histories. Their organisation continually evolves through successive patterns of participation.
Every conceptual ecosystem exists within time.
Its organisations participate.
Its relationships evolve.
Its niches continually adapt.
The ecology is never simply given.
It has become what it is through its own history.
This historical character resembles what ecologists describe as succession.
Natural ecosystems gradually reorganise themselves through changing patterns of participation.
Earlier stages prepare conditions for later ones.
New relationships become possible.
The ecosystem acquires an increasingly rich history of organisation.
Conceptual ecosystems exhibit a comparable pattern.
Borrowings accumulate.
Inherited distinctions acquire new significance.
Conceptual niches diversify.
Patterns of participation become increasingly intricate.
The ecology gradually develops characteristics that could not have existed at an earlier stage.
Its history becomes part of its organisation.
Succession should not be mistaken for progress.
Later conceptual ecosystems are not necessarily superior to earlier ones.
Nor do they approach a final or ideal condition.
Each stage simply reorganises the possibilities inherited from previous participation.
The history is developmental without being predetermined.
This observation helps explain why conceptual landscapes often appear historically distinctive.
Different periods exhibit different ecological organisations.
Some encourage remarkable conceptual diversity.
Others become comparatively specialised.
Some preserve many alternative inheritances.
Others concentrate intellectual activity around fewer organising relationships.
Each ecology reflects its own history of participation.
Succession also changes the meaning of historical continuity.
Continuity does not require an ecosystem to remain unchanged.
On the contrary, continuity often depends upon continual ecological reorganisation.
Each successive organisation inherits the possibilities prepared by earlier ones while simultaneously preparing possibilities that future ecosystems will inherit.
History becomes cumulative through transformation.
The reciprocal relationship is equally important.
Each new stage also reorganises the significance of earlier stages.
What once appeared peripheral may later become foundational.
Earlier inheritances acquire new meanings within changing ecological organisations.
The ecosystem continually rereads its own history.
Seen in this way, conceptual succession resembles neither linear development nor repetitive cycles.
It is better understood as an evolving ecology continually reorganising the significance of its own past while preparing conditions for its own future.
The history of participation itself becomes historically productive.
This perspective encourages another form of intellectual patience.
The significance of a conceptual organisation cannot always be recognised within the ecological stage in which it first appears.
Some possibilities remain comparatively quiet until later reorganisations allow them to participate differently.
Succession continually reveals possibilities that earlier ecosystems could scarcely have recognised.
Perhaps this is why intellectual history repeatedly surprises its own participants.
Living within one ecological stage makes later organisations difficult to imagine.
Only retrospectively do the successive reorganisations become clearly visible.
The ecology has quietly become something different.
Conceptual succession therefore reveals another characteristic of organised possibility.
Conceptual ecosystems continually inherit, reorganise, and prepare themselves through their own histories.
Their evolution lies not in approaching completion but in remaining historically capable of further ecological transformation.
The next essay explores another ecological characteristic that follows naturally from succession.
As conceptual ecosystems acquire increasingly rich histories, entirely new ecological properties begin to emerge.
The whole gradually becomes capable of possibilities that none of its individual participants could have produced alone.
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