Philosophics 
— Philosophical and Political Ramblings podcast

The Ontological Grammar of Political Impasse

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Language philosopher Bry Willis argues that political gridlock persists because disputes are rooted in unconscious ontological commitments rather than simple factual disagreements. These foundational assumptions about the nature of humanity and reality act as framing conditions, dictating how individuals interpret evidence and define concepts like justice. Communication often fails because language creates a grammatical disguise, making abstract, subjective ideas appear as stable, physical objects when they actually lack a shared meaning. Willis introduces the Language Insufficiency Hypothesis, suggesting that as concepts become more complex, they cross an Effectiveness Horizon where dialogue merely mimics understanding without achieving it. Ultimately, voting becomes a high-stakes selection of reality, where the winning perspective renders the loser's worldview structurally invisible and "illegible" within the state. Acknowledging these structural limits of language can foster epistemic humility, shifting focus from blaming an opponent's perceived stupidity to recognising the incommensurable frameworks at play.


👉 https://open.substack.com/pub/brywillis634737/p/why-they-arent-idiots-and-neither

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