An interdisciplinary study of substitutive visibility, epistemic monarchism, and the pedagogy of openness in higher education.
by Peter Kahl, 19 June 2025
In this essay I introduce the concept of substitutive visibility to describe the displacement of distributed epistemic labour by the centralised image of executive authority in universities, and develop the related concept of epistemic monarchism to capture the representational regime that results when such substitution becomes systemic. I also propose a pedagogy of openness as a normative alternative to the pedagogy of authority embedded in executive-centred branding, extending fiduciary openness into the pedagogical and representational domain. I argue that these practices are not neutral features of branding but mechanisms of epistemic clientelism, whereby recognition is converted into a clientelist ‘currency’ and appropriated as symbolic capital for institutional leadership. Drawing on fiduciary theory, I show that substitutive visibility and epistemic monarchism constitute breaches of the duties of loyalty, openness, and care owed by universities as fiduciary custodians of epistemic trust. Through analogy to fiduciary case law, I demonstrate that the misallocation of epistemic credit mirrors the misappropriation of trust property. I further situate these breaches within the framework of epistemic injustice, showing how testimonial and contributory injustices are compounded by executive-centred branding. To address these distortions, I propose a programme of reform grounded in fiduciary openness: epistemic audits, fiduciary reporting, ombudspersons for representational equity, redistributive practices, and the cultivation of resistant imagination. Taken together, these measures resist the reduction of knowledge to charisma and restore the university’s legitimacy as a custodian of the epistemic commons.
substitutive visibility, epistemic monarchism, pedagogy of openness, epistemic clientelism, fiduciary duty, fiduciary openness, epistemic trust, epistemic injustice, testimonial injustice, contributory injustice, epistemic democracy, fiduciary breach, academic branding, epistemic commons, governance reform, representational equity, resistant imagination
Peter Kahl, Substitutive Visibility and Epistemic Monarchism in Academia: Fiduciary Breach and the Case for a Pedagogy of Openness (2nd edn, Lex et Ratio Ltd 2025) <https://github.com/Peter-Kahl/Substitutive-Visibility-and-Epistemic-Monarchism-in-Academia>
First published in Great Britain by Peter Kahl on 19 June 2025.
2nd edition published by Lex et Ratio Ltd on 23 August 2025.
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