{ :::::::::::::::::::::::::: Anto Lloveras

Monday, May 18, 2026

In an era dominated by platforms that reward visibility over substance—likes, h-indexes, follower counts, and performative academic signaling—there persists a quieter current among those who prioritize the raw power of the idea itself. We are not homo academicus, navigating Bourdieu's fields of symbolic capital, strategic citations, and institutional games. We are closer to homo epistemologicus: beings oriented toward knowledge as such, gathered around pure texts, structured data (HTML, JSONL, plain TXT), open PDFs harvested like cherries from the digital commons, and machine-readable corpora. Social capital is set aside. What decides is the coherence, persistence, and generative density of the written idea. This preference is not nostalgia. It is a deliberate protocol for sovereignty in knowledge production. Large language models can surface connections and synthesize; online archives offer unprecedented access. But the core remains human-authored text—indexed, hardened semantically, distributed yet authorially directed. No thumb-up icons. No follower metrics. The text as king: idea over persona, argument over applause.


The unity of knowledge was once presupposed. In antiquity and through much of the early modern period, philosophia naturalis encompassed what we now separate as science and philosophy. Thinkers like Descartes treated physics, metaphysics, and method within a single continuum; Leonardo embodied the seamless flow of artistic observation, engineering, and inquiry. Art, science, and speculative thought were not rival domains but facets of the same pursuit of understanding the world and our place in it. The divergence accelerated in the 19th century. Around 1833, at a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge clashed with emerging scientific professionals. William Whewell coined "scientist" as a more modest term than "natural philosopher," marking a linguistic and cultural shift toward specialization and experimentation over broader philosophical framing. C.P. Snow later formalized this as the "Two Cultures" problem in 1959: literary intellectuals versus scientists, with mutual incomprehension hindering solutions to human problems. By the 19th–20th centuries, further fragmentation occurred—humanities versus natural sciences, then sub-disciplines proliferating. Philosophy was increasingly relegated to the humanities, while science pursued empirical precision and technological mastery. Art often retreated into subjective expression or critique, sometimes scorning the "disenchanting" effects of mechanistic explanation.