CONCEPT
The Boundary Dweller
Ludwik Fleck's figure for the epistemologically demanding position of living between thought collectives—holding awareness of multiple thought styles simultaneously without resolution into any single one—and the reason the silent middle of the AI discourse is silent: the forum does not reward its epistemic honesty.
Every thought collective provides its members a specific form of certainty: the certainty that comes from seeing the world through a shared framework that validates perception and confirms evaluative standards. The builder is certain the AI transition is qualitative and irreversible. The elegist is certain that something irreplaceable is being lost. The critic is certain that productive compulsion is pathological. Each certainty is real. Each is also partial, shaped by the thought style of the collective that produced it, making certain features of the AI transition vivid and rendering others invisible with equal thoroughness. The boundary dweller is the person who refuses to accept this partiality as the whole truth—who holds awareness of multiple thought styles simultaneously, perceiving what each reveals and what each conceals, tolerating the dissonance that arises when two genuine perceptions contradict without resolving. Ludwik Fleck described this position as both cognitively necessary—the boundary between thought styles is
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