The Fleckian analysis presented in this book sees what its thought style makes visible: the social dynamics of perception, the structural nature of communication barriers, the genesis of facts through collective negotiation. It does not see — because no thought style can see — the features of the AI transition that this thought style renders invisible. What might those invisible features be? The analysis has been stronger on the social dynamics of how AI is perceived than on the material reality of what AI does. It has traced how thought collectives form around the AI transition but has been less attentive to the engineering realities visible primarily from within the builder collective itself.
This reflexive acknowledgment is not a weakness of the analysis. It is its most Fleckian feature. Fleck insisted that every knower must recognize the conditioning of their own perception — must see the glass of their own fishbowl as well as the water they breathe. The recognition does not relativize the analysis into uselessness. It positions the analysis honestly: as one perspective among several, generating insights that are genuine within its domain and requiring complementation by perspectives it cannot itself produce.
The reflexive imperative has practical consequences for the AI moment. It forbids the analyst from occupying a position of superior wisdom over the contending thought collectives. It requires acknowledging that the very framework used to diagnose others' blind spots has its own. And it suggests that the most productive analytical posture is not the view from above but the effort to see one's own perception clearly enough to hold it open to correction by perspectives one cannot produce from within.
Segal's epilogue enacts this imperative explicitly. The builder who wrote You On AI recognizes that the clarity he feels is itself conditioned, that the thought collective he now belongs to makes certain things visible and renders others invisible, and that the durable understanding of the AI transition will emerge at the boundaries between his perception and the perceptions of collectives he cannot inhabit. This acknowledgment is not weakness. It is the most epistemologically mature posture Fleck's framework makes available.
The reflexive imperative is implicit throughout Fleck's work but becomes explicit in his postwar essays, particularly in his reflections on how his own framework was shaped by the specific historical conditions of his training and practice. It is subsequently developed in Pierre Bourdieu's reflexive sociology and in Bruno Latour's actor-network theory.
No view from above. The analyst cannot occupy a position of thought-style-independent insight; every analysis is itself conditioned.
Framework as thought style. Fleck's own framework is a product of a specific intellectual collective with its own foregrounds and blind spots.
Reflexivity as Fleckian honesty. Acknowledging conditioning is not weakness but the most mature form of the framework's own demands.
Practical consequences. The reflexive posture forbids claims to superior wisdom and requires openness to perspectives the framework cannot produce.
Segal's epilogue enacts it. The builder recognizes his own fishbowl, modeling the posture the analysis demands.