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CONCEPT

The Fishbowl Is Not Chosen

The Mannheimian sharpening of Segal's fishbowl metaphor — the recognition that fishbowls are not personal quirks but social products, structurally produced by institutions rather than individually assembled.
Segal's fishbowl metaphor — everyone swims in assumptions so familiar they have become invisible — captures something essential about cognitive partiality. What the metaphor tends to obscure, and what Mannheim's framework makes unavoidable, is that fishbowls are not natural formations. They are socially produced. They are shaped by educational institutions, professional cultures, economic incentives, and the accumulated weight of traditions that have been filtering reality through the same lens for so long that the lens has become indistinguishable from the eye. Uri does not demand rigor because he is temperamentally inclined toward precision; he demands rigor because decades inside the research university, the peer review process, and the grant-funding apparatus have systematically rewarded certain cognitive dispositions and punished others.

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The distinction matters because it changes what the metaphor implies about escape. If fishbowls are personal quirks, individual effort — "pressing your face against the glass," as Segal writes — can in principle crack them. If fishbowls are social products, individual

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