If belonging is the effect of tightly stabilised coupling, then conflict between nationalisms cannot be understood as a clash of beliefs.
It must be understood as an interaction between couplings.
Not disagreement.
Not misunderstanding.
But incompatibility.
1. The standard framing
National conflict is typically described as:
- competing claims
- opposing histories
- conflicting identities
From this perspective, resolution is imagined as:
- negotiation
- compromise
- mutual understanding
if each side recognises the other’s position, agreement becomes possible.
This assumes that conflict takes place within a shared space.
But this assumption does not hold.
2. Couplings that do not align
Each nationalism constitutes its own coupling:
- territory construed in specific ways
- identity defined through particular categories
- history organised into distinct narratives
- alignment structured through its own practices and affect
These are not variations on a common structure.
They are distinct configurations.
Each produces its own:
- sense of reality
- field of relevance
- horizon of legitimacy
3. The absence of shared ground
When two such couplings interact, they do not meet on neutral terrain.
- the same land is construed differently
- the same history is narrated differently
- the same identity categories do not coincide
- the same actions carry different meanings
What appears as a shared object—territory, for instance—is embedded in different relational systems.
There is no single space in which both positions fully coincide.
4. Misrecognising incompatibility
From within each system, the other appears:
- mistaken
- irrational
- illegitimate
Because:
- their construals do not match
- their alignments do not conform
- their narratives do not cohere
This is often interpreted as:
failure to understand.
But the issue is deeper.
there may be no shared structure within which understanding can stabilise.
5. Dialogue without convergence
Dialogue presupposes:
- shared meanings
- compatible forms of participation
- overlapping evaluative frameworks
Where couplings diverge significantly:
- terms do not align
- references shift
- arguments fail to register
Dialogue does not necessarily produce convergence.
It may:
- expose divergence
- intensify disagreement
- fail to establish mutual intelligibility
6. Incommensurability of belonging
What is at stake is not simply different claims about the same reality.
It is:
different realities produced by different couplings.
- one system’s homeland is another’s occupation
- one system’s history is another’s erasure
- one system’s identity is another’s exclusion
These are not disagreements within a shared frame.
They are incommensurable constructions.
7. Persistence of conflict
Despite the lack of shared ground, conflict persists.
Not because resolution is near.
But because:
- each coupling continues to reproduce itself
- each recruits participation
- each stabilises its own coherence
Conflict is not a temporary breakdown.
It is a stable interaction between incompatible systems.
8. The limits of persuasion
Persuasion assumes:
- shared criteria of evidence
- shared standards of reasoning
- shared narrative structures
Without these:
- arguments do not translate
- evidence does not carry
- appeals do not resonate
what counts as a reason in one system may not exist in another.
9. Boundary interaction
Conflict occurs at the boundary between couplings:
- signals are reinterpreted
- actions are reframed
- intentions are reassigned
Each system processes the other through its own structure.
There is no direct transfer of meaning.
Only transformation.
10. Escalation and reinforcement
At points of tension, reinforcement intensifies:
- narratives are sharpened
- identities are hardened
- participation is policed
- affect is amplified
Not to discover truth.
But to stabilise the coupling under threat.
11. The illusion of solvability
Conflict is often framed as:
- a problem to be solved
- a misunderstanding to be corrected
- a dispute to be resolved
But this presumes a shared ground that can be recovered.
In many cases, that ground does not exist.
the conflict is structural, not accidental.
12. No neutral arbiter
Attempts to introduce neutrality assume:
- an external vantage point
- a shared framework of evaluation
But any such position is itself:
- a construal
- embedded in a value system
- part of another coupling
There is no position outside the structure.
Only positions that are more or less reflexive about their own conditions.
13. What conflict reveals
Conflict, in this frame, is diagnostic:
it reveals the presence of incompatible couplings of belonging.
Where convergence fails, we do not find error alone.
We find:
- divergent histories
- distinct identities
- incompatible alignments
- irreducible differences in how meaning and value are coupled
14. Beyond belief
At this point, belief drops out entirely:
- not competing beliefs
- not differing opinions
But:
incompatible configurations of meaning, value, and affect.
Conflict is not between minds.
It is between relations.
15. The final step
If conflict does not occur between unified subjects holding beliefs, then the subject itself must be reconsidered.
The “national subject” cannot remain intact.