Memes and the Philosophy of Digital Phenomena
Viral Culture as Epistemic Infrastructure?
This monograph examines internet memes not as ephemeral cultural debris but as constitutive infrastructure for collective knowledge formation in networked societies. Drawing on memetics, digital media studies, semiotics, and the philosophy of technology, it argues that viral cultural units — from the proto-digital artefacts of the mid-1990s to the algorithmically amplified image macros of the present decade — perform significant epistemic labour: encoding ideological positions, stabilising collective memory, and providing compressed argumentative frameworks that resist easy dismissal as mere humour. The case of the Chuck Norris Facts (2005–present) is examined as an archetype of this dynamic. A critical genealogy is supplemented by an annotated appendix of canonical viral artefacts across three decades of networked culture.
Preface
The following monograph operates in two registers simultaneously and makes no apology for it. The first register is that of conventional academic discourse: peer-reviewed sources, careful citation, reasoned argument. The second is one of productive irony — a willingness to take seriously the intellectual content camouflaged inside phenomena that mainstream scholarship has dismissed as trivial. These two registers are, as this text argues, not in tension; they are complementary instruments in any toolbox adequate to the study of digital culture.
Wherever the second register takes temporary precedence — where the analysis deliberately adopts a humorous or satirical angle to expose something true about a cultural phenomenon — this is explicitly marked with the amber-bordered Epistemic Irony panel. Readers are invited to treat these interventions not as comic relief but as illustrations of the central argument: that sophisticated critique sometimes arrives wearing a roundhouse kick.
A note on primary materials: three source texts inform this monograph. The first is a journalistic retrospective on the Chuck Norris meme phenomenon published by Bastarrica (2026) in Digital Trends upon the actor’s death in March 2026. The second is Didyme-Dôme (2026), a Rolling Stone en Español obituary that recontextualises Norris’s cultural afterlife by situating the meme economy within a broader narrative of celebrity durability and late‑career mythopoesis. The third is an anonymous satirical Tratado sobre el “Big Bang” de la Memética Moderna — a parody academic paper that, beneath its pantomime rigour, encodes several genuine insights into the structural mechanics of viral diffusion. All three are cited where analytically relevant.
1 Memetics: Genealogy of a Contested Discipline
1.1 From the Selfish Gene to the Digital Commons
The term meme entered the scholarly lexicon in the closing chapter of Richard Dawkins’s The Selfish Gene (1976). Dawkins proposed the meme — derived from the Greek mimeme, meaning ‘that which is imitated’ — as a cultural analogue to the gene: a discrete unit of information capable of replication, variation, and selection within the cognitive environment of human minds. Tunes, ideas, catch-phrases, fashions, and technologies were all offered as candidate memes, subject to a Darwinian logic of differential survival. The conceptual elegance of this proposal proved enormously generative; its empirical tractability proved rather less so (Aunger, 2002).
The first sustained attempt to build a proper meme science was Susan Blackmore’s The Meme Machine (1999), which argued that the human brain itself had been sculpted by memetic selection pressures: our large neocortex, language, and the capacity for imitation were, on her account, evolutionary consequences of inhabiting a memetic environment. Blackmore’s framework was ambitious to the point of unfalsifiability — a weakness flagged by Robert Aunger (2002), who identified the meme’s ontological vagueness (where, precisely, does a meme reside? in the brain? in the artefact? in the pattern of behaviour?) as the fundamental barrier to any scientific programme.
Tim Tyler’s (2011) systematic survey of the field arrives at a similar diagnosis from an engineering perspective, arguing that memetics has failed to produce predictive models precisely because the unit of analysis — the meme — resists operationalisation in ways that the gene, with its material substrate in DNA, does not. Kate Distin (2005) proposed a partial rescue operation, arguing that memes are best understood as representational content carried by memetic vehicles (books, songs, images), a move that opened the concept to semiotic elaboration without resolving its deeper theoretical puzzles.
The concept of the memeplex — a portmanteau of ‘meme’ and ‘complex’, introduced by Dawkins (1976) as the ‘co-adapted meme-complex’ and subsequently developed by Blackmore (1999, pp. 19–21) and systematically catalogued by Tyler (2011, pp. 63, 86, 90, 103) — designates a cluster of mutually reinforcing memes that replicate as a coordinated unit rather than in isolation. The logic is directly analogous to the gene complex in evolutionary biology: just as certain alleles confer selective advantage only in the presence of compatible genetic backgrounds, certain memes achieve higher replication rates in the presence of specific co-memes, a relationship Tyler (2011, p. 103) terms ‘memetic mutualism’. Religious worldviews, political ideologies, and aesthetic movements are plausibly understood as memeplexes in this sense: internally coherent packages in which the constituent elements stabilise one another against displacement, rendering the complex as a whole considerably more resistant to revision than any individual component would be in isolation (Buskes, 2009; Wilson, 1998). The memeplex, in other words, is not a mere aggregation; it is a defensive architecture.
The epistemic implications extend considerably beyond the taxonomic. Memeplexes do not merely travel together; they percolate selectively across social boundaries, moving most efficiently between groups with adjacent cultural capital and decelerating — or transforming — at the boundaries of communities whose existing memeplex architecture is sufficiently different to generate structural resistance (Blackmore, 1999, pp. 175–180; Tyler, 2011, p. 180). This model of differential cultural percolation offers a more parsimonious account of certain intellectual fashions than any purely epistemic explanation could provide: dominant cultural groups transmit their memeplex laterally into adjacent sub-groups not primarily through argument but through the mimetic prestige of the transmitting community itself — a mechanism whose operation is most legible, for obvious reasons, when observed in groups other than one’s own. It is worth noting, with the care the observation requires, that the identification of another community’s belief system as a memeplex is an operation invariably performed from outside: participants within a functioning memeplex experience it not as a package of mutually reinforcing cultural units but as reality, as common sense, as the self-evident structure of how things are (Tyler, 2011, p. 90). The concept is, in this respect, definitionally asymmetric in its application — which does not make it analytically incorrect, but does make it an instrument that repays reflexive scrutiny before deployment.
Three Problems with Memes humorous aside
The operationalisation problem has bedevilled the discipline since its inception. Its most elegant formulation belongs to Susan Blackmore (1999, p. 53), who asks, when enumerating the standard objections to memetics: ‘Is Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony a meme, or only the first four notes?’ Blackmore surveys three such objections — the indeterminacy of the memetic unit, the impossibility of independent replication, and the conflation of meme with gene — and argues that each is either soluble or irrelevant. She notes, with evident amusement, that Beethoven furnishes the canonical illustration across the literature: Brodie (1996) reaches for the Fifth Symphony, Dawkins (1976) for the Ninth, and Dennett for both the Fifth and the Seventh simultaneously — an observation that suggests the opening bars of the Fifth may themselves constitute a remarkably successful meme, circulating independently of any knowledge of the broader symphonic corpus.
Extrapolating this epistemological crisis to our current framework: contemporary memetics continues to debate whether the indivisible quantum of cultural impact is Chuck Norris’s beard in its entirety (Wikipedia contributors, 2024), or whether the true subatomic metric resides strictly within the roundhouse kick (Norris & DuBord, 2009). The question remains open.
Is Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony a meme, or only the first four notes?
«This raises a real question for memetics and one that is worth exploring – but I do not think it is a problem. There are several such objections to memetics that are frequently raised and worth trying to resolve. I am going to consider three and will argue that all are either soluble or irrelevant. We cannot specify the unit of a meme Whether by coincidence or by memetic transmission, Beethoven is the favourite example for illustrating this problem. Brodie (1996) uses Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, Dawkins (1976) uses the Ninth, and Dennett (1995) uses both the Fifth and the Seventh. Dennett adds that the first four notes of Beethoven’s Fifth are a tremendously successful meme, replicating all by themselves in contexts in which Beethoven’s works are quite unknown. So are they the meme, or the whole symphony?» (Blackmore, 1999, p. 53)
1.2 The Digital Turn: Shifman’s Reformulation
For nearly three decades, memetics as a biological science remained a specialist preoccupation with limited uptake in the humanities. This changed when the internet rendered meme propagation empirically observable at scale. Limor Shifman’s (2014) monograph Memes in Digital Culture is the canonical text of this reconfiguration. Shifman parted from the Dawkinsian tradition in two decisive ways. First, she shifted attention from single units to families of related content: the internet meme is not an individual artefact but a group of items that share common characteristics and are spread, imitated, and transformed by many users simultaneously. Second, she insisted on the participatory dimension of digital memetics: memes do not diffuse passively but are actively remixed, appropriated, and commented upon, making their spread an act of collective authorship rather than mere copying (Shifman, 2012).
This reformulation has significant consequences for epistemology. If memes are not simply transmitted but actively reshaped at each node of diffusion, they constitute something more like a distributed argument than a broadcast message. The Dawkinsian metaphor of the passive recipient — cognitive real estate occupied by a competing parasite — gives way to a model in which users are co-producers of meaning, exercising something like editorial agency in choosing which variants to propagate (Jenkins et al., 2013). Patrick Davison’s (2012) structural analysis of internet memes identified three layers — the ideal (the concept), the form (the format), and the instance (the specific realisation) — a tripartite model that enables systematic comparison across vast corpora.
1.3 Critiques and Limits
The intellectual case against memetics has been mounted from several directions. Cognitive scientists have objected that there is no neurological entity corresponding to a ‘meme’; what we observe are patterns of behaviour and artefact, not discrete replicators (Aunger, 2002). Cultural scholars have resisted the biological metaphor on political grounds: evolutionary analogies for cultural change tend to naturalise what is in fact historically contingent and ideologically structured (Haraway, 1991). Scholars in the STS tradition have noted that the focus on the unit of transmission deflects attention from the infrastructure of transmission — the platforms, algorithms, and economic incentives that determine which variants survive (Bijker et al., 1987; Latour, 2005).
These are genuine limitations. The response offered in subsequent sections is not to abandon memetics but to situate it within a richer philosophical framework — one that can account for the political, epistemological, and technological dimensions that a narrowly biological model cannot.
1.3.0.1 On the Problem of Operationalisation
One of the perennial difficulties in any young science is establishing standard units of measurement. Classical physics has the Newton, the Joule, the Kelvin. The Tratado sobre el Big Bang de la Memética Moderna — a document that presents itself as a peer-reviewed contribution to the field — proposes a solution: impact should be measured in “Kilotoneladas de Barba” (Kilotonnes of Beard), calibrated to the only known invariant in digital cultural physics.
The joke, of course, is the operationalisation problem itself. What is the unit of cultural impact? Shares? Views? Years of residency in collective memory? The satirical treatise — with its pseudo-equation Ψmeme = lim(t → ∞)(Roundhouse · Kick) — lampoons precisely the same definitional slippage that serious critics like Aunger (2002) identified as the central flaw of the Dawkinsian programme. The absurdist formalisation is, in its own crooked way, a sharper diagnosis than many earnest academic papers on the subject.
Chuck Norris doesn’t have a unit of cultural impact. Cultural impact has a unit of Chuck Norris.
Beneath the pantomime, the parody makes a real methodological point.
3 Memes as Cultural Infrastructure: From Joke to Knowledge Artefact
3.1 New Literacies and Participatory Culture
One of the most significant reframings of internet memes in the scholarly literature is their treatment not as cultural output but as cultural competence. Knobel and Lankshear (2007) argued that the production and circulation of online memes constituted a form of ‘new literacy’ — a sophisticated set of practices for reading, writing, and participating in culture that depends on the recognition and creative exploitation of shared templates. On this account, knowing how to write a Chuck Norris fact — understanding the grammatical schema, the register of hyperbolic assertion, the expectation of absurdist escalation — is a form of cultural literacy no less complex than knowing how to write a sonnet or compose a legal brief. The competence is simply differently distributed and differently presupposed.
Jenkins et al.’s (2013) theory of spreadable media develops the participatory dimension further. Spreading a piece of content is not passive consumption but an act of meaning-making: the user who shares a meme implicitly endorses its framing, its humour, or its argument, and the cumulative effect of millions of such endorsements constitutes a distributed editorial process through which certain cultural positions are amplified and others marginalised. The meme, on this view, is not simply entertainment: it is a mechanism for the public negotiation of cultural values, precisely because it encodes those values in a form that is shareable, remixable, and emotionally engaging.
3.1.0.1 Meme Literacy and the DigComp Framework: A Modest Proposal for Curriculum Revision
The European Digital Competence Framework for Citizens — DigComp 2.1, the version that introduced eight proficiency levels and is currently the reference standard for digital skills assessment across EU member states — identifies five competence areas: information and data literacy; communication and collaboration; digital content creation; safety; and problem-solving (Vuorikari et al., 2022). Competence Area 3, digital content creation, includes the ability to ‘create and edit digital content in different formats’, to ‘express oneself through digital means’, and to integrate and re-elaborate ‘prior knowledge and content’ into new digital artefacts (Carretero et al., 2017, p. 14).
It is difficult, on a careful reading of these descriptors, to identify what distinguishes them from the competences required to produce a well-formed Chuck Norris fact. The activity requires: selection and evaluation of source material (the cultural image of the referent); reformulation of prior content into a standardised template (format literacy); calibration of register for a specific participatory community (communication and collaboration); and the creation of a novel digital artefact that is simultaneously derivative and original (digital content creation, proficiency level 5 — ‘can guide others’). The Chuck Norris fact generator could, on this analysis, be formally accredited as a DigComp training environment. One notes that its server costs are considerably lower than those of most EU-funded digital skills initiatives.
The more substantive point beneath the irony is genuine: the DigComp framework consistently struggles to account for the social and creative dimensions of digital competence because its underlying model of the digital citizen is essentially a user — someone who operates tools, manages privacy settings, and avoids phishing — rather than a producer who participates in the generation and circulation of cultural meaning. This is not a trivial gap. It is the gap between knowing how to use a word processor and knowing how to write.
DigComp Area 3, Level 6 — Advanced: can produce viral content in multiple formats, adapting register to platform affordances. Assessment method: peer review by meme community. Pass mark: one unsolicited repost.
The EU has funded seventeen reports on digital competence. None cite Know Your Meme. The literature review is incomplete.
3.2 Memory, Identity, and the Archive
The Bastarrica (2026) analysis makes a striking observation about the relationship between the Chuck Norris meme and the actor’s biographical archive: for a substantial proportion of the millennial and Gen Z cohorts, knowledge of Norris arrived first through the joke and only subsequently, if at all, through his films. The meme functioned as a retroactive introduction — a cultural shorthand that preceded and structured the encounter with its referent. This inversion of the normal relationship between person and representation has profound implications for how collective memory operates in networked environments.
The meme as memory artefact was theorised in terms that anticipate this finding by Roland Barthes (1972), whose analysis of mythology as the naturalisation of contingent cultural constructs maps closely onto the logic of the Chuck Norris Facts. The ‘facts’ present as encyclopaedic data — they adopt the grammatical form of assertion, the register of facticity — whilst delivering ideological content about masculinity, invulnerability, and transcendence. Barthes called this operation ‘depoliticisation’: the transformation of a historical construct into a natural given. The meme does something similar, presenting a particular configuration of gender, power, and cultural memory as simply the way Chuck Norris is.
This intersection of memory, identity, and template has been especially visible in the political applications of memes over the past decade. Image macros, exploitable templates, and copypastas have been instrumental in both progressive and reactionary political mobilisation (Bennett & Segerberg, 2013; Milner, 2016). The Distracted Boyfriend meme (2017) was used across the political spectrum to frame competing policy positions; Bernie Sanders’s mittens at the 2021 presidential inauguration generated a meme cycle within minutes that placed him in every imaginable cultural scenario, functioning as a form of distributed political commentary that no single editorial cartoonist could have matched in speed or geographic reach (Know Your Meme, 2017).
3.3 The Ambiguity of Masculine Hyperbole
The Chuck Norris Facts occupy an interestingly ambiguous position in the cultural politics of online masculinity. Bastarrica (2026) notes that some analysts have read the phenomenon as a parodic deflation of the Cold War hypermasculine hero — the ‘macho alfa patriótico’ — through the very mechanism of extreme exaggeration. On this reading, the facts perform a subtle work of ideological critique: by elevating Norris to the absurd status of a natural force, they simultaneously expose the absurdity of the cultural archetype he represents. Others, however, have read the phenomenon as proto-incubatory: the same fora that generated Chuck Norris Facts also generated the cultures of aggressive online masculinity that would later manifest in more explicitly harmful forms. Both readings are defensible, which suggests that the meme — like all genuinely complex cultural forms — is ideologically polyvalent: capable of encoding and transmitting contradictory meanings to different audiences simultaneously.
This polyvalency is, as Stuart Hall (1980) argued in his encoding/decoding model, a feature of all mass media texts, but it is particularly pronounced in the internet meme because the gap between production and reception is filled not by a stable channel but by an active community of remixers, each of whom can inflect the text towards their preferred reading. The meme is, in Hall’s terminology, a text that is permanently available for oppositional decoding — and permanently vulnerable to being reappropriated for purposes its originators did not intend.
3.3.0.1 On the Geopolitics of Cats
Section 3 of the Tratado identifies a genuine epistemological threat: in a world without the Chuck Norris Facts, the internet would by 2012 have been absorbed into a ‘hegemonía felina absoluta’ — the unchecked dominance of cat content, leaving humans as mere ‘proveedores de caricias digitales’. This is, of course, a joke. But it encodes a real observation about the ecology of attention online: prior to the emergence of participatory meme culture, the predominant viral content was genuinely passive and non-participatory (videos of cats doing things, dancing baby GIFs, early ASMR). The Chuck Norris Facts were among the first instances of generative viral content — templates that invited users to produce rather than merely consume.
The cat-content baseline is, in other words, a proxy for the pre-participatory internet. The satirical treatise identifies a real phase transition in online culture, - dresses it up in the language of geopolitical crisis, and makes it memorable. This is exactly what a good meme does: it captures a complex truth in a maximally shareable form.
Internet cats are the control condition. Everything else is an experimental variable.
The hegemonía felina is a methodological counterfactual in disguise.
4 Epistemological Stakes: What Memes Know
4.1 Irony, Detachment, and Compressed Argument
There is a philosophical tradition — running through Kierkegaard, through Rorty, through Eco — that treats irony not as a rhetorical ornament but as a cognitive mode: a form of knowing that holds two incompatible positions simultaneously without resolving the tension. The internet meme, at its most sophisticated, operates precisely in this mode. The Chuck Norris Facts are simultaneously a celebration and a parody of the hyper-masculine hero. The ‘This Is Fine’ dog occupying a burning room simultaneously expresses learned helplessness and its recognition. The Distracted Boyfriend template simultaneously mocks and exemplifies the logic of constant desire. These memes do not assert a single propositional content; they stage a contradiction in a form that the viewer must resolve — and the resolution is the cognitive work the meme performs (Eco, 1984).
Umberto Eco’s concept of the ‘open work’ — a text that deliberately leaves interpretive gaps for the reader to fill — is a useful precursor here, though it was developed for literary and artistic contexts. What internet memes add to the Eco model is participatory productivity: the gaps are filled not privately in the reader’s imagination but publicly through remixing, with each new instance becoming itself an open work for subsequent participants (Davison, 2012). The result is a form of distributed argumentation that resembles — in its logic if not its form — the collaborative construction of knowledge in scientific communities: each contribution builds on and responds to previous ones, variant interpretations compete for uptake, and the eventual consensus (if any) emerges from a process of distributed selection rather than central editorial judgement.
4.2 Distributed Cognition and the Meme as Argument
The relevance of distributed cognition theory (Castells, 2009; Manovich, 2001) to memetics has been underexplored. If cognitive processes can be distributed across individuals and artefacts — if a navigator uses the ship’s instruments as extensions of their problem-solving capacity — then a memetically circulating image that crystallises a cultural position and makes it recognisable and manipulable constitutes a form of externalised reasoning. The meme is a cognitive scaffold: it allows its users to reason about complex social situations (political polarisation, gender norms, technological disruption) using a shared representational resource that reduces the cognitive overhead of framing an argument from scratch.
This is what distinguishes the sophisticated meme from mere entertainment, and it is why the political deployment of memes has been so consequential. The 2016 and 2020 American election cycles, the Brexit referendum, and multiple European political crises were accompanied by meme campaigns that did not merely entertain but actively framed political issues in ways that carried argumentative freight whilst bypassing the cognitive defences normally activated by explicitly political messaging (Bennett & Segerberg, 2013; Phillips, 2015; Zannettou et al., 2018). The meme’s apparent triviality is not a bug in its design as political communication; it is a feature.
4.3 Baudrillard and the Simulated Hero
Jean Baudrillard’s (1994) theory of simulacra — images that no longer refer to an original reality but constitute a hyperreality of their own — offers a particularly apt framework for the Chuck Norris phenomenon. Baudrillard identified four phases in the life of an image: faithful copy, distortion, mask of absence, and, finally, pure simulacrum with no relation to any reality whatsoever. The Chuck Norris Facts have progressed through all four phases. They began as exaggerations of a real person’s cultural image; they then distorted that image beyond recognition; they subsequently masked the absence of the real Norris (whom most young users had never encountered as a film actor); and they have now achieved the status of a pure simulacrum — a cultural force that generates its own momentum independently of any biographical original (Bastarrica, 2026).
The death of the biological Norris in 2026 changes nothing about the meme’s functioning, as Bastarrica (2026) observes with ethnographic precision: within hours of the announcement, users were producing new facts that incorporated the death itself — ‘Chuck Norris no muere, sólo negocia con la Muerte’ — seamlessly integrating biological fact into the simulacral logic of indestructibility. The meme had become, in Baudrillard’s terms, more real than the real: more culturally generative in its mythological form than the actual person could ever have been.
A parallel observation emerges from the journalistic record. André Didyme-Dôme’s obituary of Norris in Rolling Stone (2026) captures the simulacral dynamic with inadvertent precision: Norris, he notes, was not an actor who learned to fight for the camera but a fighter who learned to act — a distinction whose epistemological weight the author does not fully pursue but which Baudrillard’s framework renders legible. The authenticity of the physical substrate — the genuine martial arts champion, the documented combat record — provided the referential anchor without which the hyperreal construction could not have been launched. Didyme-Dôme’s further observation that ‘for the joke to work, Chuck Norris had to remain Chuck Norris’ identifies, without naming it, the precise mechanism by which the simulacrum maintains its generative capacity: not by severing its relation to the real entirely, but by preserving just enough referential stability to make the exaggeration legible as exaggeration. A meme built on a wholly fictional substrate cannot perform the same ideological work, because the gap between the real and the hyperbolic version of it — which is where the humour and the cultural argument simultaneously reside — requires a real to measure the hyperbole against. This is, it might be noted, a more sophisticated account of cultural durability than several contemporaneous works of academic memetics have managed to produce (Shifman, 2014; Wiggins, 2019) .
4.3.0.1 On the Philosophical Unsustainability of Chuck Norris
Two of the most discussed figures in contemporary European philosophy would have found the Chuck Norris phenomenon — for entirely different reasons — philosophically untenable, and their respective objections illuminate the problem from usefully opposed directions.
Byung-Chul Han (2017) has argued, with characteristic exhaustion, that digital culture produces what he terms the swarm: a frictionless mass of positivity in which genuine negativity — the resistant, the Other, the irreducibly foreign — is dissolved into the homogeneous transparency of circulating data. On Han’s account, the Chuck Norris Facts are a clinical specimen of swarm behaviour: identical in structure, endlessly reproducible, socially frictionless, and constitutively incapable of the kind of encounter with genuine otherness that Han considers a precondition of meaningful experience. The roundhouse kick, in this reading, is a figure of pure immanence — violence without consequences, conflict without stakes, power without the possibility of defeat. Han recently proposed, with the unassailable logic of the genuinely exhausted, that remaining at home constitutes an act of political resistance. One notes that the Chuck Norris Facts were invented by someone who stayed in and used the internet.
Markus Gabriel (2015, 2017), approaching from the direction of new realism, would have encountered a different difficulty. Gabriel’s central claim — that the world, understood as the totality of all things, does not exist, but that infinitely many fields of sense do — generates an immediate problem when applied to the Chuck Norris corpus: in which field of sense does the fact that ‘Chuck Norris can divide by zero’ reside? Not in mathematics, evidently. Not in biography. Perhaps in what Gabriel calls the field of sense constituted by collective intentionality — which would make it, on his account, genuinely real, ontologically on a par with the number seven and the government of France. Gabriel has also argued, with admirable firmness, that artificial intelligence cannot be conscious and that the reduction of mind to brain constitutes a category error of the first order. The present monograph — drafted in substantial part by a language model, as the title page declares — is, on Gabriel’s account, either an impossibility or a field of sense. Possibly both.
The productive convergence between Han’s swarm theory and Gabriel’s fields of sense is that both, by different routes, arrive at the same impasse when confronted with phenomena like the Chuck Norris Facts: the existing conceptual vocabulary is either too refined or too comprehensive to accommodate an object that is simultaneously trivial and culturally constitutive, locally meaningless and globally consequential, authored by no one and received by everyone. This is not a failure of Han or Gabriel. It is a reliable indicator that the object is doing something philosophically interesting.
Markus Gabriel says the world does not exist. Chuck Norris has counted to infinity twice. The entire range of quantitative possibility is covered.
Han recommends staying home. Norris is already everywhere. The dialectic resolves itself.
5 Towards a Critical Memetics: Beyond Conventional STS Frameworks
5.1 The Limits of Standard STS Approaches
Science and Technology Studies has developed a set of powerful tools for analysing the relationship between technical artefacts and their social contexts: the Social Construction of Technology (Bijker et al., 1987), actor-network theory (Latour, 2005), the politics of artefacts (Winner, 1999), and feminist critiques of technical systems (Haraway, 1991). These frameworks have been productively applied to platforms, algorithms, and digital infrastructure. They have been considerably less productive when applied to memes specifically, for a structural reason: STS tends to focus on the conditions of production and stabilisation of technical artefacts, whereas memes derive their significance primarily from conditions of reception and creative transformation. The sociological imagination of ANT, with its emphasis on the agentic properties of non-humans in networks of inscription, is well suited to analysing why a particular platform design persists; it is less well suited to explaining why a particular image macro becomes funny to a specific demographic at a specific historical moment (Akrich et al., 2006; Latour, 2006).
This limitation is not merely a matter of focus but of epistemological orientation. STS frameworks were developed to demystify the authority of science and technology — to show that what presents as natural, inevitable, or purely functional is in fact the product of contingent social choices. Memes, by contrast, already announce their own constructedness: they wear their artificiality and culturally embedded character on their face. Applying the standard STS move of ‘revealing the hidden social’ to a meme is somewhat like pointing out that a comedy routine is scripted — technically correct, but not especially illuminating. The analytical challenge for meme scholarship is not to reveal construction but to account for what is being constructed, and to what end (Sayes, 2014; Venturini, 2010).
5.2 Towards a Ludic Epistemology
The philosophical tradition that comes closest to an adequate framework for this task is what might be called ludic epistemology — a term used here to describe the cluster of approaches that treat play, humour, and irony as legitimate modes of knowledge production rather than as epistemically inert diversions (Baudrillard, 1994; Eco, 1984). Wittgenstein’s concept of language games — forms of life in which meaning is constituted by shared practice rather than correspondence to extra-linguistic reality — is a productive starting point: memes are language games with their own internal grammars, recognisable only to participants in the relevant form of life (Shifman, 2014). Barthes’s (1972) analysis of mythology as ideology operating through the naturalisation of contingent cultural forms provides the critical edge: the meme’s apparent innocuousness is the primary mechanism of its ideological work.
Paul Virilio’s (1986) theory of dromology — the study of the politics of speed — adds a further dimension. Virilio argued that the acceleration of information transmission does not merely convey meaning faster but transforms the nature of meaning itself: at sufficient velocity, the distinction between event and representation collapses. The meme, which compresses complex cultural positions into an image and text combination that can be processed in under a second, is a dromological phenomenon: it operates at speeds that structurally preclude the deliberative processing normally associated with rational argumentation. This is not an argument against memes — deliberative processing is not the only legitimate form of cognition — but it is an argument for understanding their epistemic character more precisely than either their celebrants or their critics normally manage.
5.3 Critical Memetics as a Philosophical Programme
A properly critical memetics would, on the basis of the preceding analysis, have at least four components. First, a structural component: the formal analysis of meme templates as genres with identifiable affordances and constraints, following Wiggins and Bowers (2015) and Davison (2012). Second, a political economy component: the analysis of platform architectures and algorithmic selection mechanisms that determine the differential survival of memetic variants, following the tradition of political economy of the media (Bennett & Segerberg, 2013; Castells, 2009). Third, an ideological component: the semiotic and cultural analysis of the positions encoded in meme content, following Hall (1980) and Barthes (1972). Fourth, an epistemological component: the analysis of the cognitive operations that memes perform, the kinds of knowledge they produce and suppress, and the conditions under which humour and irony constitute legitimate epistemic tools — the dimension most neglected in the existing literature.
The Chuck Norris case, examined through this four-component lens, ceases to be a curiosity of early internet culture and becomes a paradigm case study in the sociology of knowledge: an instance in which a particular configuration of gender ideology, platform affordance, participatory culture, and distributed cognition produced a cultural artefact of extraordinary durability and ideological polyvalence — and in which the humorous register was precisely the mechanism that enabled all of this to happen below the threshold of critical attention.
5.3.0.1 On Ontological Voids and the Academic Responsibility to Fill Them
The Tratado opens with what it calls the ‘Vacío Ontológico’ — the ontological void that would confront contemporary memetics in the absence of Chuck Norris Facts. Without the intervention of Norris’s boot, the internet would have ‘collapsed under the weight of low-resolution cat videos’.
Strip away the hyperbole and this is, once again, a genuine observation: the Chuck Norris Facts represented a qualitative phase transition in viral culture — from passive consumption of content to active participation in generative templates. This is not nothing. The void, in other words, is real — though perhaps not ontological.
More pointedly: the Tratado’s mock-academic framing performs a genuine service to philosophy of technology. It demonstrates that the conventional apparatus of academic legitimation — footnotes, equations, section headings, executive summaries — can be applied to any subject matter, and that the apparatus itself confers an appearance of authority independent of the content it frames. This is Baudrillard’s simulacrum applied to scholarship: the form of argumentation without the substance, indistinguishable from the substance at speed.
Any epistemology of digital culture that cannot account for this — that cannot explain why we attend to the Tratado as a source of insight whilst recognising it as a joke — is an epistemology inadequate to its subject matter.
Chuck Norris doesn’t need a methodology section. His data submits voluntarily.
The ontological void is peer-reviewed. The footnotes are load-bearing.
5.4 The Normative Temptation: On Proposals to Regulate the Roundhouse Kick
The preceding programme for a critical memetics is constructed around a commitment to understanding what memes do — structurally, politically, epistemologically — without collapsing the analysis into either celebration or condemnation. It is therefore useful, at this juncture, to examine what happens when a philosophical analysis that gets the descriptive work largely right reaches a normative conclusion that would, if implemented, constitute one of the most efficient mechanisms for epistemic censorship available to institutional actors.
Anderau and Barbarrusa (2024) offer a functionalist account of memes in political discourse, proposing a taxonomy of eight characteristics: humour, in-group identity formation, caricature, replicability, context collapse, hermeneutical resource provision, low reputational cost, and signalling. The taxonomy is competent and, in several respects, convergent with the structural analysis offered by Shifman (2014), Wiggins and Bowers (2015), and the present monograph. The authors correctly identify the capacity of memes to function as hermeneutical tools — resources through which marginalised communities articulate experiences that dominant discursive frameworks fail to name. They acknowledge the participatory dimension that Jenkins et al. (2013) placed at the centre of spreadable media theory. They note the risks of in-group/out-group exploitation. So far, so analytically sound.
The difficulty emerges in the paper’s final movement, which performs a manoeuvre of considerable structural interest: having documented that memes serve as hermeneutical resources for precisely those communities least well served by existing institutional discourse, the authors conclude with a call to adopt stricter norms for the act of posting a meme. The reader is invited to pause on this. The same analysis that identifies memes as epistemic tools for the marginalised proposes, as its policy recommendation, the imposition of normative constraints on their use — constraints whose enforcement would, by structural necessity, be exercised by exactly the institutional actors whose discursive monopoly the meme exists to circumvent. The proposal is, in Frankfurt’s (2005) terms, not wrong so much as indifferent to the conditions of its own coherence.
The proposal to regulate meme posting belongs to a recognisable genre of well-intentioned normative interventions that mistake the identification of a risk for the justification of a remedy. The risks the authors identify — exploitation by bad-faith political actors, the weaponisation of in-group dynamics, the circulation of content whose plausible deniability shields its producers from accountability — are real. But the inference from ‘memes can be instrumentalised’ to ‘meme posting should be governed by stricter norms’ involves a logical step that the paper neither justifies nor, more troublingly, appears to recognise as requiring justification. One might, with equal analytical warrant, observe that metaphors can mislead and conclude that figurative language requires a licensing regime — a proposal whose administrative implications would provide employment for a generation of bureaucrats but whose epistemic consequences would be catastrophic.
The deeper problem is structural. Memes propagate precisely because they operate below the threshold of institutional gatekeeping. Their speed, their compression, their capacity to encode positions that formal discourse cannot or will not articulate — these are not incidental features to be preserved whilst the risks are regulated away. They are the mechanism. Regulating the act of posting a meme is structurally equivalent to regulating the act of having an opinion quickly — a project whose historical precedents are not, on the whole, encouraging.
5.4.0.1 On the Regulation of Epistemic Roundhouse Kicks
The Anderau & Barbarrusa (2024) proposal — that stricter norms should govern the speech act of posting a meme — invites a thought experiment whose results are instructive.
Scenario A: The Compliance Infrastructure. Suppose the norms are adopted. Who enforces them? A committee of meme-competent philosophers trained in political discourse analysis? A platform moderation algorithm calibrated to distinguish between hermeneutical resource provision and in-group exploitation? A peer-reviewed rubric, available for a modest article processing charge, specifying which instances of context collapse are normatively permissible? The administrative overhead alone would consume more institutional resources than the entire annual budget of Know Your Meme — which, as noted elsewhere in this monograph, has done more for the empirical documentation of digital culture than most publicly funded research initiatives.
Scenario B: The Selective Application. Suppose the norms exist but are enforced selectively, as norms inevitably are. Which memes are subjected to scrutiny? The ones circulated by marginalised communities to articulate experiences the dominant discourse cannot name — precisely the ones the paper identifies as epistemically valuable? Or the ones circulated by institutional actors to consolidate existing power arrangements — precisely the ones most likely to have legal departments capable of arguing that their content falls within the normative framework?
Scenario C: The Chilling Effect. Suppose the norms are merely proposed, never formally adopted, but widely known to have been advocated in a peer-reviewed philosophy journal. The effect on the production of political memes by individuals without institutional protection — the very individuals whose hermeneutical needs the paper claims to champion — is left as an exercise for the reader.
Stricter norms for the act of posting a meme: the only policy proposal in the philosophical literature whose enforcement would require Chuck Norris.
It is perhaps worth observing that the institutional infrastructure required to propose norms for public discourse — a research position, a publication venue, a peer review process, an article processing charge — is available exclusively to actors already embedded in the academic field. The communities whose hermeneutical needs the paper identifies as worthy of protection are, by definition, not the communities invited to the table at which the norms are drafted. The proposal thus reproduces, at the level of normative procedure, the very asymmetry it diagnoses at the level of political discourse. Those who have read the paper and declined to build upon it may have been performing, collectively and without coordination, the most efficient peer review the argument will receive.
The normative temptation: when you’ve catalogued the functions of a phenomenon so thoroughly that you forget you’ve just explained why regulating it is incoherent.
7 The Epistemic Tabloid: When Serious Media Provides the Punchline
The epistemic pathologies examined thus far are internal to the scholarly field. The following section turns outward, to the institutions that mediate between specialist knowledge and public understanding.
7.1 The Headline as Involuntary Meme
There is a category of cultural artefact that becomes satirical without authorial intent: the headline produced by a nominally serious institution that, in the course of performing journalistic sobriety, inadvertently generates something indistinguishable from parody. These involuntary memes — a form that might be called the epistemic tabloid — occupy a peculiar position in the ecology of viral culture. Unlike the deliberate absurdism of the Chuck Norris Facts or the calculated political irony of a Wojak variant, the epistemic tabloid is funny because it is not trying to be. Its comedy is the comedy of overconfidence meeting complexity, of institutional authority confronting events it lacks the conceptual vocabulary to describe without unintentional self-exposure.
The phenomenon is not new. Newspapers have always occasionally produced headlines of surpassing self-satirising quality — ‘Dewey Defeats Truman’ (Chicago Tribune, 1948) being the ur-example, a monument to the comedy of institutional certainty (Vosoughi et al., 2018 on confidence as a driver of information spread). What is new is the speed and scale of memetic recycling in the social media era: a poorly judged headline from a broadsheet of record can reach global satirical circulation within minutes of publication, stripped of its original context and presented as evidence for a narrative about institutional incompetence or ideological bias (Bennett & Segerberg, 2013).
7.1.0.1 A Specimen Collection: The Involuntary Meme in Its Natural Habitat
The following examples are drawn from the output of nominally serious news organisations during the period 2022–2025. They are presented without editorial commentary, on the grounds that editorial commentary would constitute a redundancy.
On the delimitation of military operations: ‘Russia Launches Special Military Operation as Ukraine Comes Under Attack.’ The headline, reproduced across several wire services in the early hours of 24 February 2022, achieves a feat of syntactic prestidigitation that merits close reading: the two clauses describe the same event from perspectives so geometrically opposed that their conjunction in a single sentence constitutes, inadvertently, a masterclass in the epistemology of point of view. The passive voice in the second clause (‘comes under attack’) distributes causal agency so equitably that the reader is left to infer, from context, which party launched what and upon whom. This is, in the technical vocabulary of linguistics, a suppression of the agent. In the technical vocabulary of the events of 24 February 2022, it is something else.
On the clarification of terminology: ‘Experts Warn That Calling the Bombing of Civilian Infrastructure “Bombing of Civilian Infrastructure” May Inflame Tensions.’ The headline — a compression, but a faithful one, of a genre of diplomatic-affairs reporting that flourished between 2023 and 2025 — encodes the epistemological position that the accurate description of events is itself a belligerent act requiring proportionality assessment. The implied corrective, presumably, is ‘precision engagement with structural assets serving dual civilian-military functions’ — a formulation whose relationship to the buildings in question is roughly analogous to the relationship between a Chuck Norris Fact and the laws of physics: structurally coherent, empirically optional.
On the balance of perspectives in aerial bombardment: The BBC headline of 17 October 2023 — ‘Israel Strikes Gaza Hospital’, subsequently corrected within hours following the emergence of contested evidence regarding the projectile’s origin — is instructive not for the error itself, which is a routine feature of fast-moving conflict reporting, but for the correction architecture that surrounded it. The headline was altered; the framing of the correction emphasised uncertainty; subsequent coverage employed constructions of the form ‘what is known and not known about the explosion’. The epistemological position embedded in this sequence — that established facts about physical causation require the same hedging apparatus as contested interpretations of political motivation — is a specimen of what might be called symmetrical agnosticism: the application of identical epistemic caution to questions that do not, on examination, present equal degrees of uncertainty.
On the economics of international trade: Within a seventy-two-hour period in April 2025, the same administration announced, in sequence: the imposition of reciprocal tariffs on all trading partners; a ninety-day pause on the same tariffs for all trading partners except one; the exemption of consumer electronics from said tariffs; the clarification that the exemption was not an exemption but a reclassification; and the suggestion that the entire sequence constituted a deliberate negotiating strategy. The Wall Street Journal headline sequence across these announcements — read consecutively, as the archive permits — functions as an avant-garde prose poem on the theme of institutional certainty: each instalment contradicts the previous one with the untroubled confidence of a publication that has not yet had occasion to retrieve the prior edition from its servers. The meme community achieved the same analytical result in approximately four hours, using the Drake Hotline Bling template.
On the scope of territorial ambitions: ‘Greenland Confirms It Does Not Wish to Be Purchased; White House Says Conversations Are Ongoing.’ The headline — from a January 2025 news cycle whose details have been faithfully preserved by the archival instincts of a global press that recognised, correctly, that it was covering primary source material of unusual quality — exemplifies what this monograph has termed the epistemic tabloid at its purest: an institutional communication whose content is so structurally indistinguishable from satire that its satirical recycling requires no editorial transformation whatsoever. The meme, in such cases, writes itself. The journalist, strictly speaking, merely provides the caption.
Breaking: Sources confirm that events are continuing to occur. Analysis to follow once it becomes clear what the analysis should conclude.
The common thread across these specimens is not inaccuracy — most are, in their component parts, factually defensible — but framing indeterminacy: the application of a journalistic register calibrated for manageable complexity to events whose complexity exceeds the register’s design tolerance. The result is not falsehood but something epistemologically more interesting: the production of statements that are simultaneously true and misleading, accurate and absurd, professionally competent and functionally comic. Memes do not create this condition. They merely distribute it.
The archive is permanent. The headline, unfortunately, is also permanent.
7.2 The Structural Comedy of Expert Failure
The news media’s relationship with emerging scientific, technological, and political complexity has produced a rich vein of involuntary satire. The genre includes headlines that confidently describe the technical implications of developments their authors demonstrably do not understand; obituaries of technologies that continue to function perfectly for another two decades; geopolitical analyses composed hours before events render them obsolete; and — most productively for the satirist — declarations of certainty about normative matters (who is a terrorist, what constitutes a war crime, when civilian casualties become acceptable) that reveal, in their very confidence, the ideological infrastructure of their production.
Several categories deserve particular attention. First, the premature epitaph: headlines declaring the death, irrelevance, or terminal decline of phenomena that subsequently refuse to comply — ‘The End of the PC’, ‘Why Twitter Is Already Dead’, ‘The Last Generation to Use Cash’. These headlines generate a specific form of memetic comedy because their falsification is empirically verifiable and often rapid, producing a documentary record of institutional overconfidence that the internet preserves indefinitely. Second, the unintentional confession: the headline that, in the course of reporting a story, discloses more about the ideological assumptions of the publication than about the event being described. Third, the false balance headline, which in attempting to represent ‘both sides’ of an empirical question generates absurdist formulations — ‘Scientists Disagree on Whether Sun Will Rise Tomorrow’ — that, as image macros, have become standard satirical weaponry in debates about climate, public health, and electoral integrity.
It is, we suggest, no coincidence that the most virulent meme cultures of the past decade have centred not on clearly fictional figures but on real institutions — news organisations, governments, international bodies — caught in the act of performing a competence or objectivity that the memetic record systematically contradicts. The meme, in this mode, functions as distributed institutional accountability: a form of record- keeping and critique that operates outside the legal and professional constraints that formal journalism nominally observes (Castells, 2009; Papacharissi, 2015).
7.3 International Law, Military Communication, and the Comedy of Official Justification
A particularly revealing instance of the epistemic tabloid dynamic is the genre of official communication produced by states in the context of military operations that place them in tension with international humanitarian law. The requirement to communicate military action to domestic and international audiences whilst simultaneously managing the political and legal implications of that action produces a distinctive rhetorical register: one that must be simultaneously assertive (to satisfy domestic constituencies), technically precise enough to resist immediate legal challenge, and vague enough to maintain maximum operational flexibility. The results are, on occasion, remarkable.
The visual rhetoric of states deploying cartoonish props at international forums to justify military action — bomb diagrams, maps with suspiciously clear markings, PowerPoint slides presented at the United Nations Security Council as if the authority of the slideshow would resolve the legitimacy of the action — has generated some of the most internationally circulated political memes of recent decades. These artefacts occupy a category all their own: they are not parodies of official communication but actual official communication that operates so close to the boundary of self-parody that it spontaneously colonises the memetic register. The satirical work has already been done by the original; the meme merely distributes it.
7.3.0.1 On the Epistemology of Illustrated Threats
There is a long and distinguished history of visual rhetoric in international diplomacy. Adlai Stevenson’s presentation of U-2 reconnaissance photographs to the UN Security Council in 1962 is perhaps the paradigm: here was evidence, visible evidence, concrete enough to shift the burden of proof in a confrontation between superpowers.
The subsequent decades have produced less distinguished iterations of this tradition. When a senior statesman presents a hand-drawn cartoon of a spherical bomb with a fuse to the United Nations General Assembly as a contribution to the discourse on nuclear non-proliferation, one is confronted with a choice. Either this is a profound statement about the power of visual simplicity to communicate complex technical arguments, in the tradition of Tufte and Bertin. Or it is an image so meme-ready that international journalists circulated it globally before the speech was complete.
The epistemological question that this raises is genuinely interesting: at what point does an official visual argument become so formally crude that its argumentative force migrates entirely into the register of cultural spectacle? And is that migration a failure of communication, or a form of success — a way of ensuring global reach for a message that would otherwise have been buried in Security Council communiqués?
The cartoon bomb diagram: the only visual argument that was simultaneously peer-reviewed by the UN General Assembly and by Know Your Meme within the same 24-hour period.
The Tratado’s identification of ‘Anemia Retórica’ as a risk of a Norris-less internet takes on a different valence here. The actual risk, the historical record suggests, is not a shortage of rhetorical resources for describing invulnerability, but an excess of rhetorical resources for justifying violence — combined with a deficit of institutional mechanisms capable of subjecting those resources to critical scrutiny before they reach their intended audience. In this context, the meme that circulates the cartoon bomb alongside a caption noting the gap between the visual register and the gravity of the claim it supports is performing a form of epistemological service — however frivolous its form — that few formal institutions are positioned to provide with equivalent speed.
All visual arguments are peer-reviewed eventually. The peer review just takes different forms.
7.4 The Four-Thousand-Dollar Paper: Academic Publishing as an Extractive Industry
There is a financial arrangement so peculiar that it would, if proposed in any other sector of the economy, be immediately recognised as a confidence operation: an arrangement in which the producers of content pay to have it distributed, the distributors charge the consumers of that content for access, and the quality control — peer review — is provided, without compensation, by the producers themselves. This is the business model of commercial academic publishing, and it has operated with remarkable stability for several decades, largely because the individuals best placed to resist it — researchers — have been structurally incentivised to participate in it.
The Article Processing Charge (APC) — the fee levied on authors, or their institutions, for open-access publication — has in recent years reached levels that would be satirical if they were not invoiced. A single article in a Nature-branded journal costs approximately $11,000 to publish under open access (Larivière et al., 2015). More modestly priced venues in the middle tier of commercial publishing charge between $2,500 and $4,500 for six to ten pages of text that was written, reviewed, and revised entirely without payment by the publisher. The journal’s contribution — typesetting, a DOI, and a logo associated with prestige — is valued, in the market that academic incentive structures have constructed, at approximately the cost of equipping a university seminar room with functional audiovisual infrastructure.
This comparison is not rhetorical hypercorrection. A standard university seminar room can be meaningfully upgraded — new projection system, refreshed sound equipment, functional computing infrastructure, replacement of furniture that has survived three successive government austerity cycles — for a sum in the range of €3,000 to €6,000. The political economy of the situation is therefore as follows: a researcher at a publicly funded university, working in facilities that have deteriorated through sustained underfunding of higher education infrastructure, transfers a sum equivalent to a classroom renovation to a private corporation based in a low-tax jurisdiction, in exchange for a publication that advances their career metrics, thereby satisfying the evaluation criteria of a funding system that measures research output in units that only that corporation can supply.
The political responsibility for this arrangement is not symmetrically distributed. The systematic underfunding of public universities, the instrumentalisation of higher education as a vehicle for workforce training rather than a public good in its own right, and the deliberate erosion of institutional autonomy in research funding — these are political choices, made with particular enthusiasm by conservative and far-right governments across Europe and North America, who have correctly identified the university as a space that tends to produce citizens resistant to their preferred epistemological arrangements (Finley & Tiede, 2025; Udesky, 2025). A university system that cannot afford to maintain its classrooms is a university system whose authority to challenge the premises of economic and political arrangements is substantially weakened — which is, one suspects, not an unintended consequence.
The open access movement — Plan S, DORA, institutional repositories, the gradual normalisation of preprint culture — represents a genuine and partially successful attempt to disrupt this extractive model (Larivière et al., 2015). Its progress has been impeded at every stage by the alignment of commercial publisher interests with the incentive structures of academic career evaluation, which remain, in most European systems, substantially tethered to metrics that commercial publishers control. The researcher who publishes on arXiv and refuses to pay APCs is performing an act of structural defiance against a system that will not reward them for it.
7.4.0.1 On the Semiotics of the Impact Factor
The Impact Factor — the average number of citations received by articles in a given journal, calculated and licensed by Clarivate Analytics, a private company — has achieved a remarkable status in academic life: it is simultaneously universally acknowledged to be a poor measure of research quality and universally used as the primary metric for hiring, promotion, and funding decisions.
This situation is roughly equivalent to using average house prices in a specific postcode as the primary indicator of personal virtue — an arrangement that would be clearly absurd, but that would become structurally entrenched if mortgage approval, employment contracts, and social invitations were all formally conditional on it.
The commercial publisher’s genius was to make the metric and the publication venue coterminous: you cannot have a high-Impact Factor publication without publishing in a high-Impact Factor journal, whose high Impact Factor is maintained by the prestige that makes people want to publish there, which generates the citation traffic that sustains the Impact Factor. The circularity is hermetically sealed and commercially lucrative.
Impact Factor: the only metric that measures how often people cite papers they haven’t read in journals they can’t afford.
The appropriate satirical response — posting a meme of a €4,000 APC invoice next to a photograph of the collapsed ceiling of a university lecture hall — has, in fact, been circulating on academic social media for several years. It has not yet been formally peer-reviewed. One suspects the APC would be prohibitive.
The seminar room carpet has not been replaced since 2007. The publisher’s dividend was €2.3 billion.
8 The Assault on Independent Thought: Campus Memes and the Politics of Epistemic Destruction
8.1 When the State Becomes the Troll
The internet meme, as this monograph has argued throughout, is a mechanism for distributed knowledge production, tribal signalling, and — at its most sophisticated — compressed critical argumentation. It is, in other words, a form of speech: porous, participatory, and constitutively resistant to central control. The political movements that have most systematically identified the university as an adversary have, with reasonable consistency, also been the movements most adept at weaponising meme culture as a substitute for public reasoning — and most hostile to the conditions of intellectual independence that make genuine argumentation possible.
The campaign waged by the Trump administration from 2025 onwards against major American research universities represents, in this context, something more than a political dispute about institutional values. The withdrawal or threat of withdrawal of federal research funding from institutions judged insufficiently compliant with the administration’s political preferences — a mechanism applied with particular force to Harvard, Columbia, and institutions perceived as centres of progressive intellectual life — constitutes an attack on the material infrastructure of independent thought (Douek & Karlan, 2025; Finley & Tiede, 2025; Sarat, 2026). Research programmes are not abstract propositions; they require funding, staffing, equipment, and the institutional security that makes long-term inquiry possible. A university whose federal funding is contingent on the political acceptability of its faculty’s conclusions is not, in any meaningful sense, a university: it is a credentialing institution with a research programme determined by the preferences of whoever controls the federal budget.
The epistemological stakes are considerable and under-appreciated in mainstream commentary, which has tended to frame the conflict in terms of political culture rather than knowledge production. What is at risk when independent universities are systematically defunded or intimidated is not merely the sensibilities of progressive academics — a constituency whose political homogeneity has provided useful cover for critics of institutional independence. What is at risk is the existence of social spaces in which the premises of powerful institutions can be examined without the prior approval of those institutions. The university’s function as a critical epistemic infrastructure depends on precisely the independence that political pressure seeks to eliminate: the ability to produce findings, publish arguments, and teach perspectives whose implications may be inconvenient to incumbent power.
The European echoes of this dynamic have been slower to develop but are structurally recognisable. The Hungarian government’s expulsion of the Central European University in 2019 — a private institution of demonstrable academic quality, forced out of Budapest by legislation specifically designed to disable it — established a template that subsequent governments in Italy, Spain, Poland, and elsewhere have studied with evident interest. The mechanism varies: direct legislative action, funding conditionality, the appointment of politically reliable administrators to nominally independent institutions, the gradual replacement of academic evaluation criteria with political ones. The outcome in each case is the same: the subordination of the epistemic function of the university to the political function of the state.
This development intersects with the meme culture analysed throughout this monograph in ways that are not merely metaphorical. The rhetorical apparatus deployed by these political movements — the accusation of ‘woke’ ideology, the framing of critical scholarship as indoctrination, the positing of a silent majority of students oppressed by their professors — is itself a memetic operation: the compression of a complex political argument about power and knowledge into a shareable, emotionally resonant, factually indeterminate package (Castells, 2009; Wiggins, 2019). The meme does not need to be true to be effective. It needs to be affectively charged, formally replicable, and deployable at scale — all conditions that contemporary political communication infrastructures are optimised to provide.
The consequence for the majority of the population — the individuals who, regardless of economic position or family background, might access sophisticated knowledge and critical culture through public higher education — is the one that is least discussed in the commentary. University education at its best is not merely vocational training or the certification of skills for labour market deployment; it is the provision of interpretive frameworks, historical knowledge, and analytical tools that enable citizens to understand and contest the conditions of their own existence. When these institutions are defunded, instrumentalised, or politically colonised, what is withdrawn is not merely an amenity available to the already-privileged. What is withdrawn is the possibility of the kind of understanding that might produce resistance to exactly the political movements doing the withdrawing.
8.1.0.1 On the Structural Advantages of Scripted Reality
The Truman Show (Weir, 1998) — in which a man lives his entire life as the unwitting subject of a continuous broadcast, surrounded by actors performing the roles of family, friends, and fellow citizens in a set designed to resemble a community — was received on its release as a satire of reality television. It has since acquired the status of what literary critics call a prophetic text: a work whose satirical target turns out to have been somewhat more literal than the satirist intended.
The film’s central epistemological problem is not that Truman is deceived — deception is a relatively tractable condition, admitting of correction upon the presentation of evidence. The problem is that the architecture of his world has been designed to make evidence of its own artificiality systematically unavailable to him. The set’s producers do not need to suppress the truth; they have constructed an environment in which the truth cannot be encountered in its raw form. Christof, the show’s director, does not think of himself as a deceiver. He thinks of himself as a provider of ‘a place of warmth and security’, free from ‘the randomness of life’. The epistemological distance between this position and the editorial philosophy of a media organisation that has learned to anticipate the preferences of its ownership structure is, on careful measurement, less than comfortable.
The media landscape of the mid-2020s has produced several developments that the film’s production designers might have considered too on-the-nose for inclusion. A news organisation whose proprietor simultaneously controls the cloud computing infrastructure of a significant proportion of the digital economy, the logistics network through which a significant proportion of consumer goods are distributed, and a streaming platform whose content includes dramatisations of historical events, acquires a structural relationship to the information environment that Truman Burbank would have found, on reflection, familiar. One notes, with appropriate academic circumspection, that Truman eventually notices. The mechanism of his noticing — a stage light falls from the sky labelled ‘Sirius 9 Canis Major’ — is, admittedly, more visually dramatic than the mechanisms available in the current media environment, where the equivalent events tend to arrive as leaked internal memoranda and Substack posts by former senior editors.
The dystopian literature of the twentieth century addressed this condition with varying degrees of prescience. Huxley’s Brave New World (1932) proposed that the most effective form of epistemic control was not suppression but saturation: not the removal of information but its dilution in an undifferentiated mass of entertainment, sensation, and controlled controversy. Postman (1985) updated this analysis for the television age, arguing that the medium’s formal properties — its preference for compression, affect, and novelty — structurally precluded the kind of sustained argumentation that democratic self-governance requires. Neither author had occasion to address the condition in which the medium, the distribution infrastructure, the archival cloud, and the retail platform through which the citizen purchases the device on which they consume the medium are owned by the same entity. This is not because they lacked imagination. It is because some scenarios are structurally resistant to satirical anticipation.
The editor approved the story. The algorithm demoted it. The proprietor expressed no view. The story did not run. No instruction was issued at any stage of this process.
‘We accept the reality of the world with which we are presented.’ — Christof, The Truman Show (1998). Also: several editorial strategy documents, 2024.
8.2 The Meme as Last Epistemic Resort
There is, finally, a dark irony in the situation this monograph exists to illuminate. If the institutions that produce and transmit critical knowledge are systematically dismantled — if the university is reduced to a credentialing factory, the quality press to an entertainment platform, and the public intellectual to an influencer with a Substack — then the meme may indeed become the primary vehicle through which compressed critical thought reaches audiences beyond the professional intellectual class. The Chuck Norris Facts were always, as we have argued, more than they appeared. In an epistemic environment where the apparatus of formal knowledge production is under sustained political attack, the meme’s capacity to encode critical positions in a form that survives algorithmic filtering and political pressure becomes not merely interesting but necessary.
This is not an argument for abandoning the project of rigorous institutional scholarship. It is an argument for understanding why that project is under attack, and for refusing to concede — as its attackers would prefer — that the choice is binary between authoritarian simplicity and elitist obscurity. The tradition of accessible, rigorous, politically engaged thought — from Orwell to Sontag to Bourdieu — demonstrates that these are not the only options available. So, in its own eccentric register, does the best of internet meme culture.
The trajectory of public discourse in established democracies over the past decade has, however, introduced a complication that the tradition from Orwell to Bourdieu did not fully anticipate: the possibility that the degradation of epistemic infrastructure is not merely a consequence of political attack but a condition that political attack both accelerates and exploits. Mike Judge’s Idiocracy (2006) — a film whose satirical premise, on release, seemed safely hyperbolic — depicts a near future in which sustained institutional neglect of education, combined with the structural rewards available to the cognitively undemanding, has produced a citizenry incapable of maintaining the agricultural and administrative systems upon which its survival depends. The President of the United States is a professional wrestler. The most popular television programme is called Ow, My Balls! The film was rated R for language. It has since been reclassified, in informal critical discourse, as documentary (Judge, 2006). The dismantling of the United States Department of Education in 2025 — an agency whose mandate included the enforcement of civil rights protections in educational institutions and the distribution of federal funding to schools serving low-income communities — represents a data point whose relationship to Judge’s fictional trajectory the viewer is invited to assess independently.
The instrumentalisation of philosophical scepticism as a tool of epistemic erosion adds a further layer of complexity that purely political accounts of the current situation tend to understate. Edmund Gettier’s (1963) three-page paper of 1963, which demonstrated that justified true belief is insufficient for knowledge by constructing cases in which a belief is true and justified but true only by accident, inaugurated one of the most productive research programmes in twentieth-century analytic epistemology. It did not, as a careful reading makes clear, establish that justified true belief is generally unreliable, that evidence is systematically untrustworthy, or that no factual claim can be established with sufficient confidence to ground institutional accountability. The distance between what Gettier’s argument actually shows and what a rhetorically motivated deployment of it can be made to suggest is, however, considerable — and has proved exploitable by those for whom the dismantling of epistemic confidence is a political objective rather than a philosophical problem. The conclusion that ‘even philosophers admit you can never really know anything’ is not a valid inference from Gettier’s paper; it is, rather, a meme — structurally simple, emotionally resonant, epistemically devastating, and entirely detached from the argument that nominally generated it. It shares, in this respect, the Chuck Norris format’s defining property: the capacity to operate independently of its source. The academic literature on this misappropriation is beginning to accumulate (Williamson, 2000).
The counter-model offered by Rod Lurie’s Nothing But the Truth (2008) operates in a register that Idiocracy deliberately abandons: that of institutional seriousness under pressure. The film dramatises the case of a journalist who possesses information that is true, whose justification for holding it is sound, and whose ability to publish it is constrained by legal mechanisms designed, in principle, to protect national security but deployed, in practice, to protect institutional embarrassment — a scenario whose Gettier-adjacent epistemological structure the preceding paragraph renders legible (Lurie, 2008). The film’s central character does not doubt the truth of what she knows; she doubts the capacity of the institutional apparatus surrounding her to protect the conditions under which that truth can be publicly verified and acted upon. This is a finer and more troubling epistemological predicament than simple scepticism: it is the predicament of someone who knows, in the full philosophically robust sense, and who cannot make that knowledge epistemically productive because the infrastructure that would allow it to function has been compromised. The meme, in such conditions, is not a substitute for this infrastructure. It is, at best, a signal flare.
8.2.0.1 On the Epistemological Consequences of Defunding Harvard
The United States federal government’s decision to freeze several billion dollars of research funding to Harvard University in 2025 was presented as a response to the institution’s failure to adequately address campus antisemitism. The stated justification was, as legal scholars noted with some consistency, constitutionally problematic. The actual mechanism — the use of federal funding as a lever to compel political compliance from an institution whose independence from government is a founding principle of its structure — was historically legible to anyone with a passing acquaintance with the methods by which authoritarian governments have historically neutralised inconvenient intellectual institutions.
Consider what is lost in practice for the majority of the population:
What is lost when a research university is defunded: medical research programmes investigating diseases that affect people regardless of their political views; training programmes for the engineers, teachers, doctors, and public servants who will manage the infrastructure of the society; the institutional capacity to produce the kind of inconvenient empirical findings that inform policy in areas from climate to public health to criminal justice; the library, the archive, the lecture, the seminar, the conversation with a person who has thought about something seriously for longer than a news cycle.
What is offered in exchange: the satisfaction of knowing that the professors at the institution have been brought into line with the political preferences of an administration whose members were, in several cases, educated at the institutions they are defunding.
The European versions of this dynamic are being developed with somewhat more bureaucratic restraint but equivalent structural intent. The university that cannot examine power without the permission of power is an excellent metaphor for the problem. It is also just the problem.
The government defunded the university that trained the scientists who proved the government wrong. The irony has not yet been peer-reviewed, but early citations are promising.
The epistemological consequence is not abstract: it is the progressive removal of the social infrastructure through which citizens without inherited wealth, social capital, or family networks of professional knowledge can access the conceptual tools required to understand — and potentially contest — the conditions of their lives. The roundhouse kick, in this instance, lands on the library budget. Unlike Chuck Norris’s, it is not fictitious.
Some memes are funny because they are exaggerated. This one is not exaggerated.