Synthetic Judgment

The atoms cohere here to formulate the condition of development as at once an epistemic, institutional, and civic condition: no social sciences without structure, and no civic awareness without an expansion of the space of negotiation.

What Appears from the Conjunction of the Atoms

The atoms place the social sciences in the position of necessity for development, then give them institutional support through major universities, then reveal the fragility of global civic awareness, and then connect this to the expansion of democratic negotiation. From this conjunction there emerges not a single idea but a series of interwoven conditions: knowledge needs an institution, the institution needs a civic sphere, and the civic sphere needs a broader negotiatory practice. Development, therefore, is not understood here as merely technical or economic improvement, but as a composition between the production of knowledge and the social availability of its circulation. It becomes clear that the fragility of awareness is not a secondary obstacle, but a defect in the environment that allows knowledge to become a public effect.

Logic of Composition

AtomIts Role in the CompositionWhat It Adds
The Social Sciences Are Necessary for DevelopmentFoundationEstablishes development’s need for social knowledge
Major Universities for the Social SciencesInstitutional stabilizationTurns necessity into a structure capable of production
Global Civic Awareness Is FragileIdentifying an obstacleLocates the point of weakness in the public sphere
Expanding Democratic NegotiationSynthetic outletGives knowledge its social and political pathway

Argumentative Function

Expansion

Included Atoms

Limits of the Inference

This structure does not make institutions sufficient on their own, nor does it make civic awareness an automatic result; it only links the conditions together and prevents development from being reduced to a single dimension.