
Failure Diagnostics: Meaning, Access, Adjudication
The provided text introduces a family of analytical frameworks—the Language Insufficiency Hypothesis (LIH), the Mediated Encounter Ontology of the World (MEOW), and Disagreement Without Referees—which are described as lenses or diagnostics rather than a unified system or grand theory. These frameworks target three specific sites where traditional Enlightenment expectations fail: language, ontological access, and moral/political adjudication. Each lens explains why a crucial function fails reliably yet stubbornly persists, focusing on representational limits in language, the unmediated nature of experience, and the absence of neutral ground for resolving profound conflict. The source emphasises that these frameworks refuse the instinct to rebuild or offer solutions, instead operating as a post-foundational critique that highlights the problematic nature of the demand for closure and final answers. Ultimately, they share the posture of having no privileged access, no neutral ground, and no final synthesis.👉 http://philosophics.blog
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