The Retrospective Illusion of Origin – Order as Post-Nomination

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This essay examines the retrospective illusion of origin: the historical tendency of Western philosophy to conceive order as a pre-existing foundation prior to its own naming. Readings such as Aristotelian teleology, Kantian transcendentalism, Hegelian dialectics, and Heideggerian ontology are critically assessed, arguing that order is a contingent and situated effect, not a primordial given. In the Ontology of Emerging Complexity, “ontological” designates an operative inscription that provisionally stabilizes a material instability. In dialogue with Foucault, Derrida, Butler, Simondon, Deleuze, and Prigogine, it is argued that all stabilization is local and provisional, the result of functional couplings between matter and symbolic inscription. Naming is understood not as a mere act of description, but as a material operation capable of reorganizing the field of the possible, creating conditions for certain forms to persist while excluding others. This shift reframes the ontological debate on an ethical-political plane: if order is invention, not destiny, its preservation or transformation is always a matter of decision and prospective responsibility—keeping the possible open. The essay concludes not with closure, but with a defence of an ethics of attentiveness and operative openness.

Literary: Other
origin
ontology of complexity
emergence
genealogy
normative exclusion
symbolic reinscription

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David Cota
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Title The Retrospective Illusion of Origin – Order as Post-Nomination
This essay examines the retrospective illusion of origin: the historical tendency of Western philosophy to conceive order as a pre-existing foundation prior to its own naming. Readings such as Aristotelian teleology, Kantian transcendentalism, Hegelian dialectics, and Heideggerian ontology are critically assessed, arguing that order is a contingent and situated effect, not a primordial given. In the Ontology of Emerging Complexity, “ontological” designates an operative inscription that provisionally stabilizes a material instability. In dialogue with Foucault, Derrida, Butler, Simondon, Deleuze, and Prigogine, it is argued that all stabilization is local and provisional, the result of functional couplings between matter and symbolic inscription. Naming is understood not as a mere act of description, but as a material operation capable of reorganizing the field of the possible, creating conditions for certain forms to persist while excluding others. This shift reframes the ontological debate on an ethical-political plane: if order is invention, not destiny, its preservation or transformation is always a matter of decision and prospective responsibility—keeping the possible open. The essay concludes not with closure, but with a defence of an ethics of attentiveness and operative openness.
Work type Literary: Other
Tags origin, ontology of complexity, emergence, genealogy, normative exclusion, symbolic reinscription

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Identifier 2508152782440
Entry date Aug 15, 2025, 2:18 AM UTC
License Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0

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Author. Holder David Cota. Date Aug 15, 2025.


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