Resumen: This paper explores the nature of deep disagreements through a reinterpretation of Wittgenstein’s concept of form of life. Rather than adopting skeptical or relativist positions, it questions the assumption that disagreement marks a failure of rational communication. The central claim is that deep disagreements are liminal in structure: they unfold at the threshold between shared and divergent backgrounds of understanding, and must be approached as such. Drawing on Wittgenstein’s Philosophical Investigations and related remarks, the paper argues that disagreement and understanding are made possible by the same background conditions. The possibility of partial understanding depends not on reaching a final consensus, but on our ability to recognize and respond to unfamiliar ways of speaking and acting. This account shifts the focus from resolution to acknowledgment, and from epistemic closure to the ongoing conditions of mutual intelligibility. Idioma: Inglés DOI: 10.34739/fci.2025.06.02 Año: 2025 Publicado en: Forum for Contemporary Issues and Literature 6 (2025), 17-30 ISSN: 2391-9426 Financiación: info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/AEI/AEI PID2022-142120NB-I00 Financiación: info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/AEI/AEI PID2022-14892NB-I00 Tipo y forma: Artículo (Versión definitiva) Área (Departamento): Área Lógica y Filosof.Ciencia (Unidad Predepartam. Filosofía)