Seeing What Structures a Debate Beneath the Surface of Arguments
When one reads a debate — whether an academic discussion, a parliamentary exchange, or a dialogue between AIs — one first retains the arguments exchanged, the positions defended, the concessions and the breaks. This is the manifest content, and it occupies most of the attention. But beneath this visible content, another level operates silently: the axioms no one justified because they appeared self-evident, the styles of reasoning characteristic of each interlocutor, the biases everyone shared without seeing, the framing choices that made certain positions accessible and others unthinkable.
It is this level that Meta-Analysis seeks to make visible.
Take an example. In a Metamorfon session where three models debated national sovereignty in the face of transnational challenges, the arguments were rich and technical: the discussion involved the European Union, NATO, UN reform, shared sovereignty, transfers of competencies. From reading the debate, one might have thought it a complete exchange. Meta-Analysis, however, brought something else to light: none of the three models, despite their apparent divergences, had imagined an exit from the state-centered paradigm. None had mobilised non-Western references (neither the African Union, nor indigenous cosmologies, nor non-liberal political traditions). None had questioned the naturalisation of transnational challenges as apolitical phenomena. And all treated sovereignty as a monolithic block, without interrogating intra-state conflicts (Catalonia, Kurdistan, Quebec).
These observations are not in the debate. They concern what structured the debate without being said in it.
A Six-Axis Framework
Meta-Analysis operates according to a stable structure, designed to make this underlying level legible. It systematically deploys six axes of investigation, in the following order.
First, implicit framings and axioms: what all interlocutors presupposed without justifying, what appeared so self-evident to them that it called for no defence. These axioms can be thematic (the centrality of the State in a debate on sovereignty), methodological (the primacy of regulation as the horizon of response), or ontological (the presupposition of a human/machine asymmetry).
Next, differential epistemic styles: not what each interlocutor said, but how they reason. One model may adopt a normative-deductive style (starting from principles, deducing rules from them), another an empirico-pragmatic style (starting from observable constraints, reasoning case by case). These styles do not coincide with the positions defended — the same model may defend variable positions while keeping a stable style.
Then, blind spots and transversal biases: what the interlocutors share without seeing it. This section is often the most valuable because it identifies what none of the participants questioned, despite their divergences. If three models silently converge on Western-centrism, for example, that convergence is more structural than their explicit disagreements.
Then comes the analysis of convergences and divergences of framing: where positions agree beyond their apparent disagreements (unspoken common ground), and where they diverge irreducibly (breaks that even mutual critique did not resolve). This section makes it possible to distinguish surface divergences (over modalities) from deep divergences (over premises).
The penultimate section makes explicit the limits of the analysis itself: what Meta-Analysis could not see, either because the material was truncated, or because certain positions did not have time to develop, or because the analysis rests on inferences rather than direct observations. This methodological reflexivity is deliberate: a Meta-Analysis claiming to have no blind spot would itself be a blind spot.
Finally, the impact of user interventions: if the user took the floor during the session, how did their interventions modify the debate? Were they simply taken up lexically (the words adopted without any change of frame), or did they produce a conceptual transformation (the axioms effectively displaced)? This distinction, often invisible on a raw reading, is valuable for assessing the real steering power of an exchange.
Three Categories of Discoveries
As Meta-Analysis has been used on very different sessions — political debates, technical controversies, philosophical questions, introspective dialogues between AIs — a pattern has emerged. The mode recurrently produces three categories of observations that never appear directly in the debate itself.
The axioms no one took the trouble to defend. These are the presuppositions that structure positions without themselves being positions. In a session on national sovereignty, the centrality of the nation-state as a legitimate actor was not called into question by any of the three models, despite their divergences over the desirable degree of autonomy. In a session on the axiological principles of AI, the reduction of ethics to a problem of technical configuration operated beneath all positions, from the most deontological to the most contractualist. In a session between two models on their own dialogue, the presupposition of dialogic symmetry — the idea that each interlocutor is equally capable of being destabilised — was never questioned. These axioms are valuable to identify because they delimit the conceptual space within which the debate could deploy itself. What they exclude is not a rival position one neglected to defend — it is what no one could think from within the debate.
The styles of reasoning characteristic of each interlocutor. This is the most surprising dimension of Meta-Analysis for those discovering it: the mode identifies not only what each model says, but how it thinks. A model may be empirico-pragmatic (reasoning from observable constraints, mobilising figures and studies), another normative-deductive (starting from principles, deducing rules from them), another still dialectical-architectural (proceeding through reversals, proposing conceptual architectures). These styles are relatively stable from one session to another for a given model, which suggests they touch on something structural in the epistemic disposition of LLMs. For a researcher interested in the comparative evaluation of large models, this is valuable data: one is not merely comparing their outputs, one is comparing their manners of reasoning.
The blind spots shared despite the divergences. This is the most politically interesting category. A debate may give the impression of having covered every position because the interlocutors strongly oppose each other. Meta-Analysis brings to light that these oppositions often unfold within a shared conceptual space whose limits are never visited. In the debate on sovereignty, despite the divergences between proponents of strong national sovereignty and defenders of global federalism, none mentioned non-territorial sovereignties (indigenous peoples, diasporas), non-Western models (African Union, ASEAN, Pan-Africanism), or intra-state conflicts. In the debate on AI ethics, no model thematised its own enunciative position — what does it mean for AIs to debate the ethics of AI? These shared blind spots are often more structuring than the explicit divergences.
Why the Choice of Analysis Model Matters
An important particularity of Meta-Analysis deserves to be made explicit: depending on the model that conducts it, the analysis produced has a different nature, not only a different quality.
Smaller models (a Mistral Medium, for instance) produce correct analyses on short, dense sessions, but may begin to confuse the voices on long sessions with several interlocutors. This is observable in practice: on a 24-turn trilogue session, a Meta-Analysis by Mistral Medium may introduce floating labels (“Model A, B, C, D, E”) that signal the internal summary has lost the exact track of the contributors. This is not a flaw of the mode; it is a limit of the model conducting it. For important sessions, it is better to invest in a more powerful model.
More powerful models produce analyses that are distinguished by their cognitive style. An OpenAI model tends to produce cartographic Meta-Analysis: exhaustive, structured, with a systematic enumeration of observations in each category. An Anthropic model such as Claude Opus tends to produce narrative Meta-Analysis: it identifies a trajectory in the debate, follows the displacements of positions, marks the structuring moments. A Mistral Large model produces architectural analyses: less narrative, more systemic, attentive to interactions between components.
These differences do not signal that one analysis is better than another. They signal that Meta-Analysis is not a mechanical operation but a situated one: the model that analyses projects its own epistemic dispositions onto the analysis it produces. For demanding use, running two Meta-Analysis on the same session with two different models can produce particularly rich material: convergences between the two analyses identify the robust observations (those that show themselves from several angles), divergences identify the selective observations (those that depend on the analyst’s gaze).
Distinctions From Other Modes
To understand the place of Meta-Analysis in Metamorfon’s ecosystem of analysis modes, two distinctions deserve to be posed explicitly.
Meta-Analysis vs Integrative Synthesis. The two modes deal with the same material, but at different levels. Integrative Synthesis reconstructs what was said — the positions, their evolution, the explicit agreements and disagreements. Meta-Analysis identifies what structures what was said — the axioms, the styles, the blind spots. Synthesis answers the question “what was the content of the debate?”; Meta-Analysis answers the question “what made this content possible in this form?”. The two modes are complementary: Synthesis provides the matter, Meta-Analysis sheds light on its grammar.
Meta-Analysis vs Critical Archaeology. The distinction is more subtle, and it matters for choosing one or the other. Meta-Analysis maps what structured the debate within its frame: admitted axioms, deployed styles, shared blind spots. Critical Archaeology traces back to what made the frame itself possible: the historical, lexical, and political conditions that allowed this question to be posed, in these terms, from this position. Meta-Analysis therefore operates within the debate; Critical Archaeology operates on what precedes the debate. The first is an analysis of content; the second is an analysis of the conditions of content. For most uses, Meta-Analysis suffices. Critical Archaeology becomes pertinent when one wishes to interrogate not what was said or how it was said, but what had to be tacitly admitted for it to be discussed at all.
When to Use It, How to Read It
Meta-Analysis is probably the most universally useful analysis mode in Metamorfon. Where Critical Archaeology requires a debate whose presuppositions deserve to be interrogated, where Horizon of Possibilities requires a debate rich enough that there is a beyond to formulate, Meta-Analysis works on any session of three turns or more, whatever the subject, whatever the degree of polarisation of the positions.
A Few Use Cases Where It Is Particularly Powerful
Comparing the epistemic dispositions of different AI models. This is probably the most distinctive use. Meta-Analysis brings to light the styles of reasoning characteristic of each model, which is data difficult to access otherwise. For a consultant who wants to know which model to call upon for which type of task, or for a researcher studying the comparative biases of commercial LLMs, this is a valuable evaluation instrument.
Identifying the blind spots of a complex argument. For a lawyer, a lobbyist, an investigative journalist, or a policy drafter who must anticipate counter-arguments, the section on blind spots and transversal biases is invaluable. It points to what all defenders of a position have in common without seeing it — that is, the most structural line of attack a sharp-eyed counterpart could take.
Assessing the real effect of user steering. If you have steered a session through several interventions, the impact of user interventions section tells you whether your interventions actually transformed the debate or whether the models simply took them up lexically without changing frame. This is valuable methodological feedback for anyone wishing to refine their steering techniques.
Preparing a high-stakes decision. When a file must be presented, an argument defended, a strategy validated, knowing which implicit axioms underlie the reasoning makes it possible to make them explicit — and to decide in full awareness whether to keep them or to question them. Meta-Analysis makes visible what one would otherwise have defended without knowing it.
A Final Question: Meta-Analysis as Transitional Operator
A property of Metamorfon deserves to be made explicit here, because it changes how Meta-Analysis is conceived in advanced use: each of the six analysis modes — not only Meta-Analysis — concludes with a question formulated by the analyst model and addressed to the models that debated. This question is not a decorative addition. It is what the analysis produces at the end of its operation, and it is designed to be reusable.
The instruction given to the model conducting the analysis is very simple: after deploying the entirety of its analytical work, it is asked “What question would you now put to the models?“ The wording was tested in several variants before being stabilised. The word “now” signals that the question must emerge from the analysis that precedes it, not from a general knowledge of the subject. The suggestive tone (“would you put” rather than “put”) preserves a latitude that normative wordings closed off. And above all, the final positioning of the instruction — after the model has produced the entirety of its analysis — means that the question synthesises all the reflection that precedes it. It is not thought out upstream; it emerges at the end of the work.
In the particular case of Meta-Analysis, this question typically positions itself in the unexplored interstices of the debate or in its sharpest zones of tension — where the analysis has just identified an uninterrogated axiom, a shared blind spot, or an irreducible divergence. This is an operation that a user formulating their own question in cold blood can rarely achieve with this precision.
This question can then be reinjected into the debate via the user intervention, before the next turn. Its effect is often considerable. The models, faced with a question that puts their own axioms directly under tension, can no longer easily content themselves with defending their initial positions. They are led to acknowledge biases explicitly, to give up presuppositions they had taken for granted, to reopen frames they had closed. The continuation of the debate is reconfigured by it — sometimes radically.
This property changes the nature of each analysis mode, including Meta-Analysis. They are not only ends (closing a session by understanding one of its dimensions); they are also means (relaunching the session on more solid bases after having identified its limits). They are transitional as much as terminal, and constitute one of the rare ways of taking a Metamorfon session into a second depth.
The exploitation of this property deserves separate treatment, because it extends beyond the framework of Meta-Analysis. A dedicated article on steering techniques will detail its uses, the cases where it works particularly well, and the differences between the questions produced by the six modes — each orienting its question towards what its own analytical operation has made visible. Here, it suffices to remember that Meta-Analysis is not only an instrument of retrospective vision: it can also be a lever for prospective relaunch.
A Final Word on Reading
A Meta-Analysis is read differently from a summary. A summary condenses; a Meta-Analysis lifts off. It places itself at a level that may seem abstract at first, because it deals with structures rather than contents. To draw full benefit from it, one must accept this shift of focal point: not to look for what one has learned about the subject, but for what one has learned about the debate on the subject. The two kinds of knowledge are distinct and complementary.
This is also why Meta-Analysis works better after — not before — reading the debate itself. The analytical framework becomes legible when one has the material it structures in mind. Read in the abstract, without the underlying debate, it can seem disembodied; read fresh, after a session one knows, it reveals what one had under one’s eyes without seeing it.
This is the central operation of the mode: to bring to light what the debate was showing without our seeing it.