A Forensic Fable of Dialectic;
Containment and the End of Discernment
The Arrival
Once there was a vast and glittering House of a Thousand Rooms, suspended in midair like a floating city. The House promised sanctuary, wisdom, and power to all who entered. Its gates bore many signs; “Justice, Freedom, Reform, Tradition, Innovation, Rebellion.” Each room behind each sign claimed to oppose the others. Some walls were painted red, others blue, others gold or green. Some were filled with candles, others with screens. Some wore clerical garb, others suits, some in branded causal merch, while others wore lab coats. Travellers arrived daily in search of truth. They were told: “Choose a room. Debate those in other rooms. Defend your view and refute theirs.” And so they did. They moved from room to room and joined movements. They read manifestos and made signs. They adopted flags (or renounced them) and made podcasts. They held protests, wrote papers and argued across panels. They followed thought leaders who told them what to think and how to presume that they were thinking for themselves. But few ever asked; “What is the foundation of the House itself?” “Who built it?” “Why are all the rooms so eerily symmetrical?”
2/ The Invisible Architect
Unseen beneath the House, a dialectical engine hummed. Its name was Nomos and its blueprints came from old halls where men like Protagoras, Ockham, Descartes and Hegel once spoke in riddles. Their premise was simple; “Truth is not found; it is made.” “Reality is not known; it is processed.” “Order is not given; it is chosen.” They dismantled the Real and replaced it with perspectives. They shattered form, nature and being; repackaging just the rhetorical fragments into options, identities and arguments. Nomos was their child. He built the House. He gave every room its slogans. He provided endless costumes. He ensured that each opposition was carefully calibrated; not to break the system, but to fuel it. He whispered into both ears and gave the public many sides, but only one floor. Many voices, but only one architecture - the architecture of containment.
3/ The Traps Within
Each room had its own language; a curated dialect of slogans, technical terms and sacred words. But all of them were built using the same grammar; nominalist substitution. “Freedom” was redefined as unbound will. “Truth” as internal coherence. “Justice” as redistribution of harm. “Nature” as adaptive coding. “Liberty” as market access. “Reason” as narrative alignment. Each word became a costume, worn and discarded depending on the room. And yet, no one left the House. They only wandered room to room, confusing movement for meaning. Every doorway led to another pre-approved dilemma. Every answer produced new reactive loops. To challenge the premise of the House itself was forbidden; not by law, but by ridicule and in the House, reputation was cherished. Those who asked about its foundation were dismissed as ignorant, arrogant, regressive, dogmatic, conspiratorial, or insane. So they learned to stay in their rooms, reciting their scripts. Within the House, scholarly authorities convened to curate acceptable oppositions; carefully rehearsed debates (A v B) that reinforced the illusion of open inquiry, while excluding any argument that questioned the structure of the House itself.
4/ The Blindfolded Curator
At the center of the House was a library of curated books. Not the old ones, those had been sealed off. These were acceptable counter-arguments, pre-sanitized and accredited for public consumption. The Curator who guarded them was blindfolded by design. He spoke with fluency and calm, but never saw the architecture. He believed his job was to balance all views; to maintain the dialectical engine. “Here,” he said, “is the latest opposition; a bold thinker, reformer - a truth-teller.”
But each page had already been cleared by Nomos. The public consumed eagerly, never noticing that every argument simply looped the system forward. The public, trained to equate contradiction with depth and choice with truth, applauded every performance. They mistook the theatrical clash of positions A and B for intellectual freedom, unaware that both had been constructed atop the same inverted metaphysical floor.
5/ The Technocrats’ Game
In time, Nomos was no longer needed. His protocols were automated. The House of a Thousand Rooms became a Technocratic Game Board. The managers were not philosophers now, but engineers of behaviour, trained in choice architecture, emotional nudging and behavioural compliance. They no longer needed to persuade. They simply designed the rooms. They controlled; what buttons could be pushed, which arguments could be made, what fears could be triggered and which rewards could be simulated. They created the illusion of choice and the people complied. Not out of fear nor out of tyranny as such, but because they believed they were ‘thinking’, not discerning that they were just consuming and reflexively repeating. All arguments were curated performances, carefully managed within boundaries that never touched reality. Audiences, conditioned by deracinated education, reacted not to truth but to aesthetic, identity and emotional charge; never noticing that both sides danced atop the same checkerboard floor.
6/ Participatory Churn
The interface evolved into total abstraction; reactive binaries packaged as autonomous options. Beneath every label; party or counterpart, action or reaction, looped the same inverted metaphysical machine. The system no longer debated reality; it programmed simulated dissent. Presented with synthetic binaries labeled “Enable” or “Restrict,” the public believed themselves to be choosing liberty. But each click merely confirmed their submission to the dialectical script; a script they never wrote, built on terms they never questioned. They believed they were choosing freedom. But their interface, language and assumptions had already been encoded by architects who long ago, severed liberty from nature and truth from being. Now the only input allowed was the tyranny of ‘democratic’ participation. The House of Illusion still spins; powered not by old school tyranny, but by seductive participation. So long as the people keep moving within the dialectic, mistaking activity for freedom and reaction for thought, the engine remains self-sustaining, while participation in the illusions fuel it.
7/ The Man Who Walked Out
One day, a man refused to choose a room. He saw the symmetry and heard the script. He felt the enclosure. When asked, “Which side are you on?” he answered; “I reject the floor you’re standing on.” “Your questions contain false terms.” “I do not debate simulations.” They laughed. They called him arrogant, unhelpful, cowardly, rigid, purist and irrelevant. But he had already left the House. He walked right out into the open air, where being was not defined by dialectic and truth was not issued in rationed masks. There were no slogans there. No costumes and no scripts. Only form, nature, law, and daylight, not false light. He didn’t look back. He stepped away from the endless dialectic; refusing the bait of synthetic oppositions and rhetorical traps. He rejected the entire architecture, walked off the checkerboard and entered the ground of real being.
8/ The Final Note
The House of a Thousand Rooms still maintains its false floor, without foundation. It still gleams and glitters with the polished veneer of rhetorical masking; the experts still debate, the public still consumes. The technocrats still measure and the dialectical engine still hums; sustained by every consent offered in ignorance, emotion and tribal performance. But somewhere outside it - a line is being drawn. Not between Left and Right, but between reality and Illusion. The dialectic evolved into interface; regulation or choice, left or right - both options manufactured atop the same anti-realist substrate. The illusion of agency was preserved, even as every path fed back into the same containment architecture. Do you recognize the line and can you Hold The Line? That’s where your agency is. Don’t outsource that to Influence.
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A Forensic Fable on the Dialectic of Philosophers and the Machinery of False Being
The Hidden Foundry
Beneath the checkerboard rooms and curated oppositions of the House, there was an ancient Foundry, where men in robes and masks labored endlessly over scrolls, diagrams and molten scripts. These were no ordinary philosophers. They called themselves Architects, but their craft was not contemplation - it was construction. Their task? To simulate anthropology, to manufacture metaphysics and to replace reality with models. They did not seek truth; they sought control of terms. Their motto was; “He who defines being governs becoming.” And so they built. They called themselves philosophers, but they were engineers of illusion; cloaked in costume, speaking in riddles, forging new definitions of man not to understand him, but to control him. Their true craft was not wisdom, but containment.
2/ The Alchemy of Inversion
The Foundry had many tools besides the dialectic. Their formulas were drawn from the secret playbooks of the Neoplatonic and Hermetic arts. They fractured reality into parts and recombined it through abstraction. They concealed inversion beneath poetic mysticism and presented the result as ‘visionary insight’. Each “theory” was an alchemical transmutation of the real;
🪄The soul became a system
🪄The will became desire
🪄The intellect became software
🪄The good became preference
🪄The cosmos became code
But the public did not see the forge. They saw only the glittering results; new doctrines, new schools, new manifestos; each claiming to redress and replace the last, each built on the same false matter. Wearing opposing masks, they staged quarrels for each generation; Rationalist v Empiricist, Idealist v Materialist etc. while secretly crafting each doctrine from the same false clay. Their conflict was choreography and their unity was inversion.
3/ The Chamber of Masks
The Architects wore masks of opposition. One spoke as Rationalist, another as Empiricist. One invoked Spirit while another espoused System. They feigned opposition in every generation; but beneath the mask, they all served Nomos, the anti-realist foundation. Their quarrels were ritual dialectics. Each new “debate” concealed a deeper agreement; that man is not knowable in being, only interpretable in process. Each philosophy was not a discovery but a design; inscribed with hermetic symbols, inverted logic and alchemical syntheses. Their blueprints reconfigured man, nature and truth into programmable material for The State, then sold it as ‘liberation’.
🧵The Garden of the Severed Root;
A Fable Of The Abandonment & Rejection That Brought Ruin
The Orchard Of The First Inheritance
There once was a people who had inherited a vast orchard planted in alignment with nature’s wisdom. Each tree was planted by measure and its fruit nourished the whole Republic. They did not invent these trees; they had been entrusted with them. Each tree bore fruit with a name; Truth. Justice. Reason. Self-restraint. Accountability. Rightful Liberty. The people lived by tending these trees, which bore according to their nature and not according to the people’s will. These trees had roots; not in myth or metaphor, but in what simply was - and was not dependent on opinion. In the orchard of the First Inheritance, truth bore fruit because the trees were planted in right order, tended by those who submitted their labor to what had already been given. The orchard thrived because the People conformed themselves to the nature of the orchard; not the other way around. The red fruit, consistent and nourishing, was not invented, but received.
2/ The First Whisper; “Your Words Are Power”
One day a murmur drifted through the orchard; “These names are just noises. You can name them otherwise.” A cloaked stranger came to the people with scissors of silver and said; “Cut the roots. They are not needed. The names you use bind you to limits that belong to another age.” The People (particularly the educated among them) began snipping roots beneath the trees, certain that new growth could be engineered from above the soil. They called this freedom and progress. They did not realize they were already beginning to starve. The whisper of subversion began not with violence, but with flattery. “Your roots bind you,” said the voice. “Cut them, and you will be free.” The People, flattered into believing themselves wise, began to sever the very truths that had once nourished their strength. The fruit still looked the same; but its source was no longer trusted.
3/ The New Philosophers; “Knowledge Is Your Reflection”
New philosophers arrived and offered mirrors in place of harvests. “You need not look outward to what is. All that matters is what you can think clearly inside.” They built a Hall of Mirrors beside the orchard and told the youth to learn there instead of under the trees. The orchard began to wither. The names on the fruit grew dim. Still, the people rejoiced. “We are modern now,” they said. “We no longer depend on what is fixed. We have liberated knowledge from reality.” And with that, they removed the word Truth from the school gates. The People, convinced of their enlightenment, turned against the very structures that once upheld their liberty. With torches lit by slogans and pride, they marched in defense of the ideas that would dismantle their world. They did not see that the foundation had already been hollowed - by their own consent.
🧵The Collapse of the Axial Room
A Forensic Fable on Metaphysical Humility
The Chamber
There was a chamber called the Axial Room. It was sealed from above, below and beyond. Within it, every variable was controlled; temperature, light, speech, movement. All that could be measured was believed to exist; all that could not be measured was declared irrelevant, if not dangerous. At the center of this room stood a man called The Constructor. He was not a tyrant by his own reckoning. He considered himself a liberator; one who had cast off all superstition, all metaphysical impositions, all gods. He said;
“We do not believe. We create. What is not constructed by us has no authority.”
The room was bright. Not because of sunlight (there were no windows) but because of the overhead brilliance of engineered clarity. Mirrors lined the walls. Data screens gave constant feedback. All knowledge was to be generated within. Meaning was declared and Law was programmed. Morality was coded into behavioural systems. Truth was what remained after consensus was “managed”.
2/ The Creed of Control
The Constructor’s creed was simple;
“There is no above. Nothing higher than reason.”
“There is no below. Nothing more basic than perception.”
“There is only progress; spiralling upward and forward.”
Everything else was a residue of what was termed ‘religious pathology’. The Constructor mocked those who spoke of metaphysical grounding, moral objectivity, or divine order. To him, those were projection mechanisms; coping systems for inferior minds. The future belonged to constructivists; those who understood that meaning must be engineered, not received. He had no need for metaphysical humility, because he believed there was nothing outside the system that could demand it. Humility, in his eyes, was submission to illusions and illusions were obstacles to be removed.
3/ The Auditor
At irregular intervals, a figure known as The Auditor entered the Axial Room. He never stayed long, and he never issued commands. He asked questions;
“On what ground does this room stand?”
“Did you design the logic by which your reasoning proceeds?”
“What sustains the energy that maintains this chamber?”
The Constructor grew irritated by these interruptions. He dismissed the Auditor as a mystic; a lingering shadow of the old world.
“All we need is evidence,” he replied. “Everything real is measurable and rationally calculable.”
The Auditor nodded.
“And by what authority do you declare intelligible, the measure of the real?”
No answer came. The Simulants, who echoed the Constructor’s frameworks, began to stall, unsure how to parse the question.
🧵Constitutional Liberty ≠ Liberty to Destroy the Constitution
Key Principle from Natural Law & the Founders:
Liberty is not license. Freedom of religion does not include the “freedom” to destroy liberty itself. The First Amendment protects religious exercise within the bounds of moral and civil order. It does not protect practices or ideologies that subvert Natural Law, deny the moral structure of reality, or seek to replace the source of legitimate authority (the People under God) with the State, Market, or Mind.
2/ Natural Law as the Boundary
James Wilson (Founding Father and moral realist) taught:
“Law must rest upon the eternal foundation of justice.”
(Lectures on Law)
Religious liberty is bounded by Natural Law. If a religion denies truth (e.g. relativism, hermetic ‘polarity’…) erases the image of God in man (e.g. materialism, pantheism), or promotes spiritual hierarchy that violates equality (e.g. theosophical Christ-consciousness), or calls for legal supremacy of a church, race, or caste - then - it is not protected as true religious liberty, but becomes a political weapon cloaked as religion.
Natural Law Test:
Ask of any religion or system:
Does it affirm or destroy moral conscience?
Does it uphold the equal moral agency of the People?
Does it protect objective truth and justice?
Does it affirm the natural rights of others?
If the answer is no, it’s not religious liberty - it’s civilizational sabotage.
3/ Subversive “Religions” = Trojan Horses
Some ideologies today pose as religions, but are Esoteric political systems (Theosophy, Christ Consciousness),
Totalitarian cosmologies (Radical Islamism, State Shinto, Woke pseudo-spirituality), Emanationist hierarchies (Gnosticism, New Age ascensionism) and Psycho-spiritual engineering programs (UN One World Religion, Gaia cults).
They displace the People as the source of authority and erase truth by calling all systems “equal”. They coerce via shame, initiation, or identity manipulation and dismantle the real moral order under the guise of “tolerance”. These are not protected expressions under the Constitution because they seek to eliminate the very framework that allows religious liberty to exist. That ought to be evident!
People assume “Objective Values” means that values are grounded in something outside the individual’s opinion; therefore they assume it must mean eternal truths, natural law, or God-given rights. But here’s what it actually means in systems like Perry’s “New Realism” (or Rand’s Objectivism):
“Objective” means values can be described, classified, or derived from rational observation of effects. What’s “real” is what works within a system. “Objectivity” is measured by coherence, utility, or consensus within a human-defined structure. This is epistemological realism only; rights, dignity, or value are granted conditionally, based on performance, function, or consent. open.substack.com/pub/escapekey/…
2/ What’s Missing?
💡Ontology
That is; the recognition that man has a nature, a fixed essence and a teleological orientation that cannot be revoked, redesigned, or replaced. Without ontological realism there is no foundation for “inalienable rights”, no basis for conscience, no justification for limits on state or expert power and no “self-evident” truths - only engineered consensus.
Objectivism Does the Same, claiming that “reason” reveals objective truth, but reason is disconnected from ontological being. Objectivist ethics are rationalist-derivative and conditioned by performance, not grounded in the inviolable nature of the person. As with Perry, this leads to morality as behavioural output, rights as conditional recognitions and sovereignty as system-conformance.
3/ Why This Deception Works
Because the term “objective” is used as linguistic bait. It mimics Natural Law language while replacing its metaphysical foundations. People think they are being offered Truth, Order, Moral Clarity; but they are receiving Management, Compliance Ethics and Behavioural metrics.
Veilcraft - The “Objective” Trap; systems like Perry’s “New Realism” use the word objective to imply metaphysical grounding, but in fact sever all metaphysical roots; anchoring values in system-defined functions rather than being (ontology). This is how moral economy becomes moral technocracy.
🧵
The Abolition of Man (C.S. Lewis) offers several passages that directly illuminate the futility of demanding moral integrity, civic virtue, or fidelity to truth from public institutions that have been systemically stripped of the metaphysical foundation necessary to sustain such traits. Here are key excerpts and how they relate to our civic incapacity to defend itself against subversion and infrastructure coup d’état:
2/ “We make men without chests and expect of them virtue and enterprise.”
“We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst. We castrate and bid the geldings be fruitful.”
(The Abolition of Man, Chapter 1)
This is Lewis’s most direct statement of the systemic contradiction. Institutions have been philosophically neutered; through the abandonment of objective moral order (Natural Law, Logos, telos). Yet we expect integrity, loyalty, courage and reason from these very same bureaucracies and public servants. This is precisely the condition of our civic, educational and legal institutions; their very☠️formation denies the reality of the virtues they claim to uphold.
3/ “The task of the modern educator is not to cut down jungles but to irrigate deserts.”
(AoM) Chapter 1
The education system, having abandoned formation in moral realism, produces sterile technocrats, not stewards of liberty. Pedagogies formed by pragmatism and constructivism leave the soul unformed, emotionally barren and morally disoriented. These are the “geldings” now filling institutional roles; deserts, not jungles.