Task and World develops a structural theory of transcendence as the condition of civilizational stability. The essay argues that transcendence is not a theological residue but a pre-discursive formation produced when individual existence is inscribed within a task that exceeds it. The central diagnosis concerns the Ranking Substitution Theorem: under the postulate of ontological equality (P₁), every ineliminable functional difference — care, reproduction, domestic maintenance, generational transmission — is systematically recoded as a difference of rank, rendering function invisible and structurally penalizing those who perform it. The essay deploys the P < T formula (expressive pressure must remain below formal tolerance threshold), drawing on Lessing's Laocoön, Schiller's aesthetic state, and McLuhan's mediological analysis, to explain the formal collapse of liberal coordination. A final section addresses the conditions of restitution: not moral persuasion, but aesthetic and architectural reconstruction of the legibility of differential contribution.
Alberto J. L., Carrillo Canán, (Tue,) studied this question.