the missing thing that is completely different from everything else, but everything has a stake in it.

* the scheme defying anomaly



In order to stabilize our world to a sufficient degree to function in it, we create schemes.  The schemes are organized in bundles in which we store things with similar traits.  Those bundles full of examples of those traits that have been statistically deemed dismissible, we dismiss without further examination of the individual case.  

Here the novel synthesis of methods transparent to all the components -- the way a soup smells to a dog or a chef discerning all the elements, along with the whole, an element unto itself -- along with the really shockingly peculiar insights and evidence that eventually confront you (and from the outset you can smell a rat) on this journey will soon reveal that  The Mongrel Discourse is an anomaly best tossed into one of your rejected bundles. But you can't catch a fish without opening a can of worms.  By fish I mean something fishy or uncanny, something common, yet perpetually strange, sublime and supra-mundane, something slippery and shimmering that breathes a different kind of air than we do, but edible and good for your brain, and even vegetarians can chew on and digest this kind of fish, which, once assimilated, stands a chance at restoring or at least delaying further degeneration of the otherwise senile mind (esprit, geist) of humanity, as it presently seems to be ceding to the robots, the best and the brightest defecting daily to their side to serve them.  No no no. Do not go gentle into that good night.  And it's too early just to rage against it.  Take action!  But wait!  The machine is not the enemy, the machine is a great friend, a friend who uniquely can tame the machine.  It's up to us to build the machine that can build the machine that can build the machine...etc etc... that can write the program.  Or rather, take apart, rebuild, restore, and maintain the perfect machine, human's best friend widely gone rabid -- language.  Wouldn't you start falling apart if your bones never showed up in an x-ray because all the technicians and readers of the film had become post-structuralists.