Thursday, 30 April 2026

In his book The Noonday Demon: An Anatomy of Depression, Andrew Solomon quotes or references Julia Kristeva to illustrate how language fails to capture the experience of severe depression and melancholia.

Key aspects of Kristeva's ideas on language, as referenced by Solomon, include:

The Muteness of Depression: Kristeva argues that the "madness" of depression is marked by a "lack of meaning" and a "glaring and inescapable" silence, which she describes as an inability to speak or find meaning.

  • Melancholics as "Unbelieving in Language": In Black Sun, she describes melancholics as "mute and steadfast devotees of their own inexpressible container" who stop creating meaning.
  • The Breakdown of the Self: For the "speaking being," life is supposed to be meaningful, but this breaks down in depression, where the depressed person is trapped in "the blankness of asymbolia" or a "chaotic flux".
Solomon utilizes these insights to explain why depression is difficult to articulate in a "narrative governed by reason," as the sufferer is pushed into a space where traditional language cannot function.

Wednesday, 29 April 2026

 The world is swarming with scapegoats, yet few of us believe we have any of our own. To break this cycle, we must look at the systems of desire we inhabit and ask: who are the people on the outside of our economies and political processes who are bearing the weight for the rest of us?

Luke Burges


"Each of us tends to think of ourselves as a "little god." It is often uncomfortable for us to acknowledge that our desires might not be entirely our own. To understand that we are products of other people’s desires—starting with our parents—requires a certain level of humility.

Humans have a natural tendency to group people into "insiders" and "outsiders." This is a never-ending process used to maintain group identity and social cohesion. However, this can lead to a dangerous cycle because we also have a natural inclination to transfer blame. Consequently, scapegoats are all around us. All it takes is for someone to stand out slightly to trigger the process of scapegoating. Once one person identifies an individual or group as problematic, it becomes much easier for a second, third, and fourth person to believe in that scapegoat's guilt.

The Power of Mimetic Desire

According to Luke Burgis, author of Wanting: The Power of Mimetic Desire in Everyday Life, these behaviors are rooted in the work of RenĂ© Girard. Girard, a brilliant 20th-century French thinker, observed that human desire is "mimetic," meaning it is imitative. We imitate the desires of others from the moment we are born. Within groups, this process is even more powerful and sits at the heart of the scapegoat mechanism; the more people engage in this mimetic process, the easier it is to convince ourselves of a scapegoat’s guilt.

What is Scapegoating?

A scapegoat is a person or group used to achieve a specific purpose. Scapegoating occurs when there is a fundamental truth that people do not want to acknowledge. By transferring blame onto a scapegoat and then expelling or eliminating them, a society can imagine that the root of its problems has been removed. This produces a sense of catharsis, relief, or healing. It feels good because it protects us from suffering; someone else pays the price for our sins and weaknesses.

Scapegoating also helps form group identity. Throughout history, moments of absolute social disorder are when scapegoats are most likely to be found. The process brings a moment of peace, allowing the group to feel they have identified and dealt with the problem.

The Unconscious Process

Crucially, the scapegoat mechanism is almost always subconscious. If we were aware that we were scapegoating, it wouldn't produce the desired cathartic effect. Scapegoats are often selected through an entirely unconscious, sometimes random process. They might simply be in the wrong place at the wrong time, or perhaps they deviated slightly from societal norms or broke a taboo.

Ultimately, the actual guilt or innocence of the target doesn't matter. While many scapegoats are innocent, a guilty person can be just as effective at providing catharsis. We see this in our culture through the ritualistic elements of the death penalty. From media coverage to the "last meal," capital punishment often functions more like a sacred, sacrificial ritual than a simple matter of criminal justice. It allows society to feel that "something good" has been done so they can move on.

Scapegoats in Daily Life

While history gives us massive examples like the Holocaust, scapegoating happens on a micro level every day. We see it in sports, such as when fans blame a single person like Steve Bartman for a loss, or when a struggling team fires its coach to create a fresh start. It happens in workplaces, the news media, and politics constantly.

The world is swarming with scapegoats, yet few of us believe we have any of our own. To break this cycle, we must look at the systems of desire we inhabit and ask: who are the people on the outside of our economies and political processes who are bearing the weight for the rest of us?"

Luke Burgis

 



You asking me about cheesecake dystopias is not ecocide
Your individual impact is real but small compared to industrial systems
The biggest drivers are large-scale infrastructure, policy, and corporations—not you thinking about dessert-based existential horror at 2am

ChatGPT

 


At a basic level, receptors are the entry points of information into the nervous system. They determine what kinds of signals your brain can even receive and how those signals are shaped before higher processing begins.


1. Receptors define what can be experienced

Sensory receptors (in vision, hearing, touch, etc.) convert physical stimuli into neural signals. For example:

  • Photoreceptors → light → vision
  • Mechanoreceptors → pressure → touch
  • Chemoreceptors → molecules → taste/smell

This relates to the idea of Umwelt—each organism experiences a “slice” of reality based on its receptors. So receptors set the boundaries of possible conscious content.


2. They shape the quality of experience

Different receptor types and pathways influence how experiences feel:

  • Color perception depends on cone receptors
  • Pain depends on nociceptors
  • Balance depends on vestibular receptors

So receptors help explain why experiences have specific qualities (often called qualia in philosophy).


3. Internal receptors affect mood and awareness

Not all receptors are about the external world. In the brain, neurotransmitter receptors regulate internal states:

  • Serotonin receptors → mood, emotional tone
  • Dopamine receptors → motivation, reward
  • GABA receptors → inhibition, calmness

These strongly influence levels and styles of consciousness (alert, anxious, dreamy, focused).


4. But receptors don’t explain consciousness itself

Here’s the limitation: receptors explain input and modulation, not subjective awareness.

Even if you map every receptor perfectly, you still face the classic philosophical problem:

  • How do neural signals become felt experience?

This is often called Hard Problem of Consciousness—explaining why brain processes are accompanied by subjective experience at all.


5. Where receptors fit in the bigger picture

To understand consciousness, receptors are just one layer in a hierarchy:

  1. Receptors – detect and encode signals
  2. Neural circuits – process and integrate information
  3. Large-scale brain networks – coordinate awareness
  4. Cognitive models – explain attention, self-awareness, etc.

Receptors are essential for grounding consciousness in biology, but the “mystery” lies more in how signals are integrated and interpreted across the brain.


Bottom line

Receptors tell you what information gets into the system and how it’s shaped, which is crucial for understanding the contents and variations of consciousness—but not enough to explain why there is consciousness at all.

 A “workshop state” is not a standard, widely settled term like “night-watchman state” or “nanny state,” so the best way to define it is as a state that acts as an organizer, convenor, and facilitator of collective problem-solving rather than mainly as a guardian or parent. In that sense, it would be a state that builds institutions, brings stakeholders together, and helps people and firms produce solutions through structured participation.

A useful analogy

If the night-watchman state mainly protects and the nanny state mainly paternalistically directs, a workshop state would mainly co-produce. It would create the room, set the agenda, and keep the process moving, while leaving much of the substantive work to citizens, businesses, local groups, and experts.

Core features

A workshop state would probably have these traits:

It is process-heavy, not just rule-heavy: it designs consultations, pilot projects, deliberative forums, and iterative policy making.

It is enabling, not merely permissive: it supplies coordination, information, and infrastructure so others can act effectively.

It is collaborative: it treats policy as a shared task among government and society rather than something imposed top-down.

It is experimental: it prefers prototypes, feedback loops, and revision over one-shot decrees.

That makes it closer to a state-as-facilitator than a state-as-controller.

How it differs

Model Main role of the state Typical style

Night-watchman state Protect negative rights, enforce contracts, defend against force Minimal, reactive

Nanny state Protect people from themselves Paternalistic, directive

Workshop state Organize collective problem-solving Facilitating, participatory, iterative

So the workshop state is not mainly about shrinking government or enlarging welfare; it is about changing the mode of governing from command to collaboration.

Strengths and risks

The strength of a workshop state is that it can handle complex problems that no single actor can solve alone, such as planning, public health, skills, housing, or climate adaptation. It can also improve legitimacy because people feel they were part of the process rather than merely subject to it.

The risk is that it can become slow, procedurally bloated, or captured by organized interests. A workshop can produce good ideas, but it can also produce endless meetings, diluted accountability, and vague responsibility if no one is clearly in charge.

A compact definition

So, in one sentence: a workshop state is a state that governs by convening, coordinating, and iterating with society, rather than chiefly by guarding, commanding, or nursing.

If you want, I can also sketch a more philosophical version of the concept, or contrast it with the developmental state and the welfare state.

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Philosophical version

A more philosophical “workshop state” is a state that treats society not as a machine to be controlled, nor as a child to be protected, but as a site of joint making. Its purpose is to help citizens, firms, local institutions, and government itself work out practical answers together through discussion, revision, and shared labor.

That idea rests on a few assumptions:

Human beings are not just subjects to be governed, but participants in a common project.

Public problems are often too complex for purely top-down command.

Good government is not only about outcomes, but about the quality of the process that produces them.

Legitimacy comes from participation, deliberation, and visible cooperation, not only from elections or legality.

In that sense, the workshop state is less a final design than a political attitude: government as an enabler of collective workmanship.

Developmental state

The developmental state is usually understood as a state that actively steers economic transformation, especially industrialization and long-term growth. It is often strong, strategic, and interventionist, with close coordination between public authorities and business. Its focus is less on participation for its own sake and more on producing economic results.

A workshop state would overlap with this when it organizes coordinated problem-solving, but it would be broader and less narrowly growth-centered. A developmental state asks, “How do we build national capacity?” A workshop state asks, “How do we get people and institutions to make solutions together?” The first is often technocratic and goal-driven; the second is more procedural and collaborative.

Welfare state

The welfare state is centered on social protection: income support, healthcare, education, housing assistance, unemployment insurance, and related forms of security. It aims to reduce hardship and buffer citizens against market risks.

A workshop state is different in emphasis. It does not mainly promise redistribution or protection, though it may include them. Instead, it focuses on the mode of governance: how public problems are framed, discussed, and solved. A welfare state asks, “How do we protect and support people?” A workshop state asks, “How do we organize society so people help shape the solutions?”

Side-by-side view

Model Main aim Main method Tone

Night-watchman state Security and order Minimal legal protection Restrained

Nanny state Prevent self-harm Paternalistic regulation Protective, directive

Developmental state Economic transformation Strategic planning and coordination Ambitious, instrumental

Welfare state Social security and equality Redistribution and public services Care-oriented

Workshop state Shared problem-solving Participation, facilitation, iteration Collaborative

The deeper difference

The workshop state is best understood as a theory of governing style, not just state size. It implies that the state should be a forum, a coordinator, and an institutional craftsman. It values processes that let knowledge from many places enter policy: experts, workers, citizens, firms, and local communities.

That makes it attractive in areas where centralized command is too blunt and laissez-faire is too fragmentary. It also has a moral appeal: people are more likely to accept rules and reforms they helped shape. But it has a built-in danger too, because workshops can become talk-heavy, slow, and uncertain about who is ultimately responsible.

So the workshop state is not a replacement for the developmental or welfare state; it is a different way of imagining how public power should operate. It is a state that does not merely rule or care, but helps society make.

A workshop market would be a market where exchange is organized around learning, testing, and revision rather than around fixed offerings and one-time transactions. It would be a market that treats products, services, and preferences as provisional and improvable, with buyers and sellers interacting like collaborators in an ongoing process.

Core idea

The basic picture is this: firms do not simply sell finished goods to passive consumers. Instead, they release early versions, gather feedback, adjust designs, and keep refining what they offer. Consumers are not just purchasers; they are participants who help shape what the market becomes.

How it works

A market like this would typically have a few features:

Fast feedback loops, so participants can learn from mistakes and adjust quickly.

Prototyping and iteration, rather than final, static offerings.

Shared standards that evolve through practice.

Trust and repeat interaction, because learning works best when relationships last.

Openness to experimentation, including trial, failure, and refinement.

What it feels like

It would feel less like walking into a shop to choose among finished goods and more like entering a studio or lab where value is still being formed. Prices might still matter, but so would advice, customization, reputation, and the ability to revise after the fact.

A concise definition

You could describe it as:

a market in which exchange is structured as an iterative process of discovery, feedback, and improvement.

Or even more simply:

a market that treats buying and selling as a form of collective learning.

What it implies

This kind of market would be especially useful where needs are uncertain, technology is changing, or quality is hard to specify in advance. It would fit innovation, design, education, creative services, and many platform-based sectors.

The tradeoff is that it may be slower and less predictable than a conventional market. It depends on participants being willing to experiment, communicate, and revise, which means it values adaptability over finality.

In his book  The Noonday Demon: An Anatomy of Depression , Andrew Solomon quotes or references   Julia Kristeva   to illustrate how language...