Modern inquiry and modern administration both depend on representations: models, theories,scores, files, records, indicators, measurements, prompts, and other structured renderings ofreality. Yet these are often treated as though they either transparently capture their targetsor else merely serve as convenient tools without deeper structural limits. This paper developsthe framework of constrained describability: the thesis that finite description is a conditionedact of disclosure that proceeds through a determinate cut shaped by level, interface, purpose,and the finitude of the describing system. A description is therefore neither transparent capturenor arbitrary projection. It preserves some structure of a target in a scoped and usable formwhile leaving a relative residue outside, beneath, or distorted by that cut. The paper’s maincontribution is to offer a sharper ontology of description built around world-fragments, cuts,representations, scope conditions, and residue, together with a disciplined account of whypartiality is structural rather than accidental. The payoff is a metatheoretical frameworkthat clarifies scientific modeling, quantified representation, institutional simplification, andreflexive self-description without collapsing into relativism or swallowing downstream theories ofgovernance, design, or civilization. The paper is foundational and programmatic rather thana finished formal calculus, and it explicitly limits itself to the conditions of finite descriptionrather than to the full downstream architecture of mediated action.
David Swanson (Wed,) studied this question.