Categories
politics

Populism: Flirting with Disaster

Populism gains traction by pointing at real pressures: housing stress, cost-of-living anxiety, cultural dislocation, institutional distance, a sense that no one is steering. These are not imagined problems. They are the very real conditions that make people receptive to blunt answers and strong voices. The tragedy is that the tools populism offers to address these […]

Categories
culture

Bad Bunny: Culture trumps Politics

America is presently in a phase of contraction rather than confidence: heightened suspicion of difference, attempts to reassert a singular national story, and a political atmosphere animated less by vision than by grievance and enforcement. Cultural life has not escaped this. Language, migration, race, and belonging are being pulled back into blunt, exclusionary frames, while […]

Categories
politics

Catastrophic Populism

In the United States, the early twenty-first-century autocratic turn emerges from a system that was already structurally fragile. Long before any individual leader came to dominate the political field, democratic legitimacy had thinned, institutional trust had decayed, and communicative coherence had been weakened by inequality, media saturation, and sustained disinvestment in public understanding. Into this […]

Categories
Philosophy

Point in fact

The world does not need to collapse this hard or this fast. There are people who benefit from disorder and others who profit by it, but none of them are outside the structure they exploit. Everyone is anchored to the same reef of dependencies, because at this scale disagreement does not create separation. Dense intercommunication […]

Categories
Philosophy

Borobudur: The Architecture of Empty Fullness

Borobudur is a temple built around an unusual absence, one that quietly reshapes how meaning, worship, psychological insight, and spiritual experience function. Borobudur, in Central Java, Indonesia, is a ninth-century Mahāyāna Buddhist monument constructed as a terraced hill rather than a hollow sanctuary. Its mass is largely earth and stone; there is no interior chamber […]

Categories
Philosophy

Where the real Platonic forms are

Negation is the only additive move available to a unified, self-referential system, because with no outside to draw from, coherence grows solely through internal differentiation that preserves the invariants allowing the whole to continue without collapse. The Platonic forms are not objects, templates, or ideals waiting somewhere else. They are the invariants of a unified […]

Categories
language

Etymology: wank

The word wank enters English as a piece of slang with a narrow, blunt function, but its deeper linguistic roots sit elsewhere. In Germanic languages the family points to motion rather than obscenity: wanken, wankelen, a sense of swaying, instability, loss of balance. The sexual meaning is comparatively recent, parochial, and culturally loud, amplified by […]

Categories
Philosophy

Subscription

In a world that has deeply and intractably commercialised the concept and experience of individuality, the very last thing actually required of us is to be different. We are sorted and we voluntarily self-sort into labels and categories, compressing ourselves into neat, data-ready boxes that serve as containers for self-managed subscription into vast machines of […]

Categories
cybernetics logic Philosophy systems

The Problem of Many Spaces

Living systems, space, and coherence Living systems do not operate in a single space in the sense of a bounded domain, nor do they truly inhabit many distinct ones; rather, they instance a continuous relational field whose articulation into behavioural, transcriptional, morphological, physiological, and symbolic sub-spaces constitutes its harmonic structure, not a reduction of it. […]

Categories
Philosophy

In Diversity, United

E pluribus unum, a phrase born of an early republic trying to hold together difference without crushing it, means quite plainly out of many, one, yet its force lies not in patriotism or unanimity but in the harder truth that a coherent whole does not precede its parts but arises only because distinct lives, voices, […]

Categories
AI ethics

AI Ethics and the Limits of Institutional Thinking

The contemporary ethics of artificial intelligence is dominated by institutional reports, advisory panels, and compliance frameworks that focus on bias mitigation, transparency checklists, and downstream harm reduction. These efforts are not meaningless, but they are constrained by the same political, legal, and economic structures that fund them and define their remit. As a result, the […]

Categories
Philosophy

Superficial Expertise

I have spent a long time studying the language of communication: signalling, framing, coupling, recursion, delay. The way meaning moves, mutates, collapses, and reconstitutes itself inside complex systems. That work remains endlessly compelling. What was deeply disappointing was my brief entanglement with the university. Not simply because of what I myself was going through at […]