Conceptual organisations often become most portable precisely when they have become least conspicuous.
Transparency and borrowing might at first appear unrelated.
One concerns familiarity.
The other concerns novelty.
The first describes stability.
The second introduces movement.
Yet conceptual history repeatedly suggests that the two are closely connected.
When a conceptual organisation first emerges, it remains highly visible.
Its assumptions attract attention.
Its vocabulary appears unfamiliar.
Its possibilities are actively explored.
At this stage, the organisation is still closely associated with the circumstances of its origin.
It has not yet become intellectually ordinary.
Over time, however, successful organisations undergo a subtle transformation.
Their organising relationships become increasingly familiar.
Attention shifts away from the organisation itself towards the work it enables.
The organisation becomes transparent.
Its conceptual character gradually withdraws from view.
This transparency has an unexpected consequence.
Because the organisation no longer appears unusual, it becomes easier to recognise similar relationships elsewhere.
What was once experienced as a distinctive intellectual achievement gradually appears as a natural way of organising thought.
Its portability quietly increases.
Borrowing therefore often begins long before anyone consciously decides to borrow.
A familiar organisation simply presents itself as an obvious way of approaching a new question.
The transfer may scarcely be noticed.
Indeed, the borrowing may not appear as borrowing at all.
This helps explain why some conceptual organisations travel so widely.
Their success does not merely consist in solving problems.
It also consists in becoming sufficiently familiar that their organisational character recedes into the background.
The more transparent the organisation becomes, the more readily it can participate in new conceptual landscapes.
Transparency therefore alters the conditions under which borrowing becomes possible.
It does not compel borrowing.
Nor does borrowing always follow.
Rather, transparency enlarges the range of contexts within which an organisation may begin to appear appropriate.
New possibilities quietly become available.
The relationship is reciprocal.
Borrowing may also transform transparency.
When an organisation enters an unfamiliar domain, assumptions that had long remained unnoticed often become newly visible.
Features once taken for granted suddenly attract attention.
Borrowing restores visibility to what transparency had concealed.
Conceptual history therefore exhibits an intriguing rhythm.
Transparency prepares organisations for borrowing.
Borrowing interrupts transparency.
What had become ordinary once again appears remarkable.
The organisation becomes visible precisely because it has begun to participate in a different conceptual landscape.
This reciprocal movement helps explain why conceptual evolution is simultaneously stable and creative.
Transparency provides continuity.
Borrowing introduces novelty.
Neither phenomenon is sufficient by itself.
Together they continually reshape conceptual possibility while preserving enough familiarity for understanding to remain possible.
Seen in this way, transparency is not merely the quiet conclusion of conceptual success.
It is also the beginning of future transformation.
The very condition that allows an organisation to become intellectually ordinary also prepares it for new conceptual journeys.
Stability quietly becomes possibility.
The next relationship extends this movement.
Borrowing seldom remains an isolated event.
Once an organisation has successfully entered a new conceptual landscape, it begins to acquire a history there.
Borrowing gradually gives way to migration.
The initial transfer becomes the beginning of a new conceptual life.
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