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CONCEPT

Lippmann and the Fishbowl

Segal's fishbowl metaphor—assumptions so familiar they are invisible—is the builder's vernacular translation of Lippmann's pseudo-environment. Lippmann's framework reveals that every fishbowl is constructed by structural forces its inhabitant cannot see, and that confidence is often the direct product of blindness.
When Edo Segal describes the fishbowl in You On AI—'the set of assumptions so familiar you've stopped noticing them. The water you breathe. The glass that shapes what you see'—he is translating Lippmann's pseudo-environment into the language of a builder rather than a political theorist. The fishbowl is Lippmann's concept adapted for practitioners: the cognitive enclosure that determines what is visible, what is thinkable, what counts as evidence. Lippmann's framework adds the dimension Segal gestures toward but does not fully develop: that every fishbowl is constructed—by structural forces (professional training, institutional incentives, media exposure, social networks), by cognitive forces (stereotypes, confirmation patterns, identity investments), and by algorithmic forces (personalized feeds that reinforce existing pictures). The inhabitant experiences the fishbowl as reality—the water is invisible, the glass is invisible, the construction is invisible. What Lippmann offers is the diagnostic lens revealing that confidence is often the direct product of blindness: the person most certain
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