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Featured Articles

Taking Sides Is Earned
Taking Sides Is Earned
Mar 23, 2026
30 min read
1 likes
75 views
Why Premature Certainty Is Easy, Indefinite Openness Is Weak and Discernment Demands Both This article challenges a common misconception in contemporary discourse: that not taking sides reflects neutrality, passivity, or a lack of conviction. It argues instead that the refusal to take sides prematurely is a form of disciplined engagement with reality, grounded in epistemic humility and the commitment to avoid collapsing complexity before it has been sufficiently understood. Building on the...
An Open Letter to the Disleaders of the World
Mar 23, 2026
40 min read
1 likes
141 views
On Power Without Restraint, the Quiet Return of the Barbaric and the Responsibility We Can No Longer Avoid This open letter offers a philosophical reflection on a growing condition in contemporary leadership and public discourse, one that extends beyond any single figure, nation, or event. It introduces the concept of disleadership to describe the presence of authority without the depth, restraint, and responsibility that give leadership its legitimacy, and traces how this condition becomes e...
The Return of the Golden Calf
Mar 23, 2026
25 min read
1 likes
145 views
Exposure Without Seeing in an Age of Substitution What if the problem is not that reality is hidden, but that it is constantly visible and still not recognised? Across both the Bible and the Quran, an early account describes a people who move from domination toward autonomy, only to construct a new point of orientation with their own hands. This article does not approach that account as theology, but as a pattern. A pattern that did not remain in the past and is not confined to any one tradit...
What We Call ‘Negotiation’
Mar 22, 2026
60 min read
No likes
120 views
An Ontological Inquiry into Power, Dialogue and the Limits of Agreement This article examines negotiation beyond its common understanding as a skill, tactic, or process, and instead approaches it as a structured phenomenon shaped by deeper ontological conditions. It begins by questioning the widespread use of the term itself, where what is presented as negotiation often functions as guided compliance within constrained spaces of interaction. Drawing on the Ontological Triad Schema, the art...
Averting the Gaze
Mar 21, 2026
100 min read
1 likes
214 views
How Victim Blaming, Moral Inversion and Silent Participation Drive Systemic Disintegration and Undermine Sustainability This article explores a recurring pattern in human systems where visible injustice does not lead to proportional clarity. Instead, responsibility is subtly displaced, victims are scrutinised, and power is softened through language, hesitation, and silence. Moving beyond political or religious framing, the article draws on enduring archetypes such as Socrates and the crucifix...
When Dismissal Replaces Sense-Making
Mar 20, 2026
80 min read
1 likes
176 views
When Dismissal Replaces Sense-Making This article examines a growing pattern in contemporary discourse: the tendency to dismiss what exceeds familiar frameworks before it is meaningfully engaged with. While labels such as “conspiracy theory” are one visible expression of this pattern, the article argues that the deeper issue lies in a limitation of metacontent, the underlying structures through which individuals make sense of reality. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse, the Nested Th...
When Political Ideologies Exploit Theology
Mar 19, 2026
60 min read
No likes
192 views
How the Collapse of Domains Distorts Sense-Making and Turns Meaning into an Instrument of Power Across today’s world, a recurring pattern is becoming increasingly visible. Political ideologies draw upon theology to legitimise power, mobilise populations, and shape how events are made sense of. Yet what is unfolding cannot be reduced to politics or religion alone. It points to a deeper shift in how human beings engage with reality itself. This article examines how systems of meaning becom...
If Neoliberal Markets Sold Petrol
Mar 15, 2026
45 min read
No likes
238 views
It Wouldn’t Be Cheap And It Would Some In Bottles What would happen if petrol were introduced today through the logic of modern neoliberal retail markets? This article begins with an absurd image: bottles of premium petrol sitting on supermarket shelves beside sparkling water and soft drinks. From that starting point, it follows the economic machinery that would inevitably grow around such a product, including startup culture, venture capital, patents, regulatory frameworks, academic resear...
When Societies Drift Toward War
Mar 14, 2026
50 min read
1 likes
245 views
A Practical Case Study in Observer Capacity This article presents a practical case study demonstrating how the Observer Capacity Exposure Model (OCEM) can be applied to understand large-scale societal crises. It builds on the concepts introduced in the earlier article “The Weight of Truth: Why Exposure Does Not Guarantee Recognition: Observer Capacity and the Dynamics of Seeing” and shows how those ideas can be used in practice to interpret complex real-world situations. The earlier ar...
The Weight of ‘Truth’
Mar 14, 2026
70 min read
3 likes
407 views
Why Exposure Does Not Guarantee Recognition: Observer Capacity and the Dynamics of Seeing This article explores how ‘truth’ becomes visible in human systems and why recognition of reality so often fails even when signals are present. Drawing on several conceptual models developed by the author, including the Expanded Exposure Probability Model, the Exposure Triangle, and the framework of Authentic Awareness, the article examines the dynamic relationship between exposure and recognition. I...
The Lumpen Leader
Mar 13, 2026
60 min read
2 likes
323 views
When Audacity Replaces Competence, Vulgarity Replaces Dignity, Ideology Replaces Thinking and Hubris Turns Leadership into Spectacle Why do human societies sometimes elevate the most volatile personalities to positions of leadership, while even wolf packs appear to know better? This article explores a peculiar phenomenon in modern public life: the rise of what the author calls the lumpen leader. Drawing on examples from nature, psychology and political culture, it examines how spectacle can b...
Checkmate
Mar 13, 2026
30 min read
No likes
201 views
When Inauthenticity and a Distorted Relationship with Vulnerability Corner Us Against Reality Public life often rewards confidence, certainty and the projection of strength. Yet many of the crises that emerge in leadership, organisations and political systems do not begin with external defeat. They begin when individuals and institutions drift away from an authentic relationship with reality. Exaggerated claims, carefully managed optics, strategic bluffing and the performance of competence ca...

Featured Articles

Taking Sides Is Earned
Mar 23, 2026
30 min read
1 likes
75 views
Why Premature Certainty Is Easy, Indefinite Openness Is Weak and Discernment Demands Both This article challenges a common misconception in contemporary discourse: that not taking sides reflects neutrality, passivity, or a lack of conviction. It argues instead that the refusal to take sides prematurely is a form of disciplined engagement with reality, grounded in epistemic humility and the commitment to avoid collapsing complexity before it has been sufficiently understood. Building on the...
An Open Letter to the Disleaders of the World
Mar 23, 2026
40 min read
1 likes
141 views
On Power Without Restraint, the Quiet Return of the Barbaric and the Responsibility We Can No Longer Avoid This open letter offers a philosophical reflection on a growing condition in contemporary leadership and public discourse, one that extends beyond any single figure, nation, or event. It introduces the concept of disleadership to describe the presence of authority without the depth, restraint, and responsibility that give leadership its legitimacy, and traces how this condition becomes e...
The Return of the Golden Calf
Mar 23, 2026
25 min read
1 likes
145 views
Exposure Without Seeing in an Age of Substitution What if the problem is not that reality is hidden, but that it is constantly visible and still not recognised? Across both the Bible and the Quran, an early account describes a people who move from domination toward autonomy, only to construct a new point of orientation with their own hands. This article does not approach that account as theology, but as a pattern. A pattern that did not remain in the past and is not confined to any one tradit...
What We Call ‘Negotiation’
Mar 22, 2026
60 min read
No likes
120 views
An Ontological Inquiry into Power, Dialogue and the Limits of Agreement This article examines negotiation beyond its common understanding as a skill, tactic, or process, and instead approaches it as a structured phenomenon shaped by deeper ontological conditions. It begins by questioning the widespread use of the term itself, where what is presented as negotiation often functions as guided compliance within constrained spaces of interaction. Drawing on the Ontological Triad Schema, the art...
Averting the Gaze
Mar 21, 2026
100 min read
1 likes
214 views
How Victim Blaming, Moral Inversion and Silent Participation Drive Systemic Disintegration and Undermine Sustainability This article explores a recurring pattern in human systems where visible injustice does not lead to proportional clarity. Instead, responsibility is subtly displaced, victims are scrutinised, and power is softened through language, hesitation, and silence. Moving beyond political or religious framing, the article draws on enduring archetypes such as Socrates and the crucifix...
When Dismissal Replaces Sense-Making
Mar 20, 2026
80 min read
1 likes
176 views
When Dismissal Replaces Sense-Making This article examines a growing pattern in contemporary discourse: the tendency to dismiss what exceeds familiar frameworks before it is meaningfully engaged with. While labels such as “conspiracy theory” are one visible expression of this pattern, the article argues that the deeper issue lies in a limitation of metacontent, the underlying structures through which individuals make sense of reality. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse, the Nested Th...
When Political Ideologies Exploit Theology
Mar 19, 2026
60 min read
No likes
192 views
How the Collapse of Domains Distorts Sense-Making and Turns Meaning into an Instrument of Power Across today’s world, a recurring pattern is becoming increasingly visible. Political ideologies draw upon theology to legitimise power, mobilise populations, and shape how events are made sense of. Yet what is unfolding cannot be reduced to politics or religion alone. It points to a deeper shift in how human beings engage with reality itself. This article examines how systems of meaning becom...
If Neoliberal Markets Sold Petrol
Mar 15, 2026
45 min read
No likes
238 views
It Wouldn’t Be Cheap And It Would Some In Bottles What would happen if petrol were introduced today through the logic of modern neoliberal retail markets? This article begins with an absurd image: bottles of premium petrol sitting on supermarket shelves beside sparkling water and soft drinks. From that starting point, it follows the economic machinery that would inevitably grow around such a product, including startup culture, venture capital, patents, regulatory frameworks, academic resear...
When Societies Drift Toward War
Mar 14, 2026
50 min read
1 likes
245 views
A Practical Case Study in Observer Capacity This article presents a practical case study demonstrating how the Observer Capacity Exposure Model (OCEM) can be applied to understand large-scale societal crises. It builds on the concepts introduced in the earlier article “The Weight of Truth: Why Exposure Does Not Guarantee Recognition: Observer Capacity and the Dynamics of Seeing” and shows how those ideas can be used in practice to interpret complex real-world situations. The earlier ar...
The Weight of ‘Truth’
Mar 14, 2026
70 min read
3 likes
407 views
Why Exposure Does Not Guarantee Recognition: Observer Capacity and the Dynamics of Seeing This article explores how ‘truth’ becomes visible in human systems and why recognition of reality so often fails even when signals are present. Drawing on several conceptual models developed by the author, including the Expanded Exposure Probability Model, the Exposure Triangle, and the framework of Authentic Awareness, the article examines the dynamic relationship between exposure and recognition. I...
The Lumpen Leader
Mar 13, 2026
60 min read
2 likes
323 views
When Audacity Replaces Competence, Vulgarity Replaces Dignity, Ideology Replaces Thinking and Hubris Turns Leadership into Spectacle Why do human societies sometimes elevate the most volatile personalities to positions of leadership, while even wolf packs appear to know better? This article explores a peculiar phenomenon in modern public life: the rise of what the author calls the lumpen leader. Drawing on examples from nature, psychology and political culture, it examines how spectacle can b...
Checkmate
Mar 13, 2026
30 min read
No likes
201 views
When Inauthenticity and a Distorted Relationship with Vulnerability Corner Us Against Reality Public life often rewards confidence, certainty and the projection of strength. Yet many of the crises that emerge in leadership, organisations and political systems do not begin with external defeat. They begin when individuals and institutions drift away from an authentic relationship with reality. Exaggerated claims, carefully managed optics, strategic bluffing and the performance of competence ca...

All Articles

Most RecentMost Viewed
View All
Most RecentMost Viewed
Taking Sides Is Earned
Mar 23, 2026
30 min read
1 likes
75 views
Why Premature Certainty Is Easy, Indefinite Openness Is Weak and Discernment Demands Both This article challenges a common misconception in contemporary discourse: that not taking sides reflects neutrality, passivity, or a lack of conviction. It argues instead that the refusal to take sides prematurely is a form of disciplined engagement with reality, grounded in epistemic humility and the commitment to avoid collapsing complexity before it has been sufficiently understood. Building on the...
View All
Do I Actually Belong in This Room?
Mar 23, 2026
10 min read
No likes
33 views
When Leadership Visibility Makes Legitimacy Uncertain Leadership visibility often exposes a quieter question beneath performance and capability: Do I actually belong in this room? Many women step into leadership roles carrying an internalised model of leadership that feels difficult to recognise themselves within. When leadership is associated with certainty, authority, and particular ways of speaking, those who have been socialised to be agreeable or “nice” may struggle to see their o...
An Open Letter to the Disleaders of the World
Mar 23, 2026
40 min read
1 likes
141 views
On Power Without Restraint, the Quiet Return of the Barbaric and the Responsibility We Can No Longer Avoid This open letter offers a philosophical reflection on a growing condition in contemporary leadership and public discourse, one that extends beyond any single figure, nation, or event. It introduces the concept of disleadership to describe the presence of authority without the depth, restraint, and responsibility that give leadership its legitimacy, and traces how this condition becomes e...
The Return of the Golden Calf
Mar 23, 2026
25 min read
1 likes
145 views
Exposure Without Seeing in an Age of Substitution What if the problem is not that reality is hidden, but that it is constantly visible and still not recognised? Across both the Bible and the Quran, an early account describes a people who move from domination toward autonomy, only to construct a new point of orientation with their own hands. This article does not approach that account as theology, but as a pattern. A pattern that did not remain in the past and is not confined to any one tradit...
What We Call ‘Negotiation’
Mar 22, 2026
60 min read
No likes
120 views
An Ontological Inquiry into Power, Dialogue and the Limits of Agreement This article examines negotiation beyond its common understanding as a skill, tactic, or process, and instead approaches it as a structured phenomenon shaped by deeper ontological conditions. It begins by questioning the widespread use of the term itself, where what is presented as negotiation often functions as guided compliance within constrained spaces of interaction. Drawing on the Ontological Triad Schema, the art...
Averting the Gaze
Mar 21, 2026
100 min read
1 likes
214 views
How Victim Blaming, Moral Inversion and Silent Participation Drive Systemic Disintegration and Undermine Sustainability This article explores a recurring pattern in human systems where visible injustice does not lead to proportional clarity. Instead, responsibility is subtly displaced, victims are scrutinised, and power is softened through language, hesitation, and silence. Moving beyond political or religious framing, the article draws on enduring archetypes such as Socrates and the crucifix...
When Dismissal Replaces Sense-Making
Mar 20, 2026
80 min read
1 likes
176 views
When Dismissal Replaces Sense-Making This article examines a growing pattern in contemporary discourse: the tendency to dismiss what exceeds familiar frameworks before it is meaningfully engaged with. While labels such as “conspiracy theory” are one visible expression of this pattern, the article argues that the deeper issue lies in a limitation of metacontent, the underlying structures through which individuals make sense of reality. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse, the Nested Th...
When Wealth Logic Runs The Organisation
Mar 20, 2026
10 min read
No likes
53 views
How value systems quietly shape power, performance and leadership fatigue This article explores how organisations are quietly shaped by an unspoken “wealth logic” that determines what counts as value, who holds power, and how performance is defined. While metrics like revenue and growth appear neutral, they gradually become proxies for human worth, privileging visible, measurable contributions and sidelining care, relational work, and long-term sustainability. As a result, organisation...
When Political Ideologies Exploit Theology
Mar 19, 2026
60 min read
No likes
192 views
How the Collapse of Domains Distorts Sense-Making and Turns Meaning into an Instrument of Power Across today’s world, a recurring pattern is becoming increasingly visible. Political ideologies draw upon theology to legitimise power, mobilise populations, and shape how events are made sense of. Yet what is unfolding cannot be reduced to politics or religion alone. It points to a deeper shift in how human beings engage with reality itself. This article examines how systems of meaning becom...
Leadership and the Illusion of Control
Mar 18, 2026
10 min read
1 likes
69 views
Stop Trying to Motivate Your Team. Many leaders believe their role is to control outcomes and ensure compliance, yet genuine commitment cannot be forced. This article explores the illusion of control in leadership and reframes a common question, “How do I get my team to do what I need them to do?” into a deeper inquiry about motivation, alignment, and responsibility. It shows how disengagement often stems from misalignment rather than resistance, and why understanding what truly matters t...
Will they like me?
Mar 18, 2026
10 min read
No likes
79 views
When Leadership Becomes a Likeability Test Many women enter leadership already organised around a largely invisible commitment: remaining likable. Over time, this commitment begins shaping how situations occur. Disagreement is softened before it is spoken, clear judgments are adjusted, and behaviour that crosses personal boundaries may be tolerated longer than it should be. In critical moments, the priority quietly shifts from clarity to maintaining acceptance. Because this structure is so...
Wealth, place and power
Mar 16, 2026
10 min read
No likes
76 views
How value systems shape exploitation, sustainability and geography This article explores how wealth systems shape the geography of power, extraction, and sustainability. It argues that modern economic models detached wealth from place by treating land as resource and labour as cost. This abstraction allowed value to be extracted from specific regions while profits accumulated elsewhere, leaving environmental and social consequences localised. The article contrasts this model with earlier ...

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