CONCEPT
Why the AI Discourse Generates Heat Instead of Light
Fleck's diagnostic for the
collision pattern of contemporary AI debate — not a failure of rationality but the structural consequence of multiple thought collectives operating within incompatible thought styles.
The AI discourse is not a debate. Calling it a debate implies that participants share a framework within which evidence can be presented, evaluated, and adjudicated — that they disagree about conclusions drawn from shared premises. Fleck's framework reveals something more structurally intractable: the AI discourse is a collision of thought collectives, each operating within a
thought style that determines what counts as evidence, what counts as valid inference, and what counts as a question worth asking. The collision produces heat not because participants are irrational but because rationality itself is internal to thought styles, and there is no thought-style-independent standard to which all parties could appeal. The major collectives —
triumphalists,
elegists, critics, builders, and
the silent middle — each see something real, each render other features invisible with equal thoroughness, and each experience their own perception as direct apprehension of reality.