If meaning is alive, it can also get sick.
Fields can become congested, destabilised, parasitised, overwhelmed, or torn apart by incompatible horizons. Their metabolic cycles can break down. Their coherence can fragment into competing species. Their constitutive cuts can become misaligned, inverted, or mutually destructive.
A full ecological theory of meaning must include its pathology—because semiosis evolves most sharply under pressure, and because horizons only reveal their structure when they are forced to defend it.
1. Noise as Metabolic Breakdown
Noise arises when a horizon’s capacity to filter, transform, and circulate semiotic nutrients collapses. It appears when:
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constraints cannot propagate,
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distinctions cannot stabilise,
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coherence cannot be maintained,
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inhibitory regulation fails,
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nutrient flows become chaotic or contradictory.
2. Conflict as Horizon-Incompatible Cuts
Two horizons enter conflict when their cuts:
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partition relevance differently,
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define viability with incompatible constraints,
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stabilise opposing patterns of coherence,
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cannot coexist without metabolic interference.
Incompatible cuts generate systemic friction—metabolic waste accumulates, inhibitory regulation is overwhelmed, and the field is forced into compensatory patterns that cannot be sustained.
3. Field Schisms: When One Field Becomes Two
A field schism happens when incompatible metabolic regimes develop within the same horizon.
This is semiotic speciation under tension.
Schisms emerge when:
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the field can no longer support a single integrative cycle,
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sub-horizons adopt divergent nutrient pathways,
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constraints propagate along different trajectories,
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inhibitory regulation becomes partisan,
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coherence breaks into mutually exclusive stabilisations.
Political polarisation, academic paradigm splits, cultural fragmentation, and institutional breakdowns are all field schisms—ecological phenomena where meaning diverges under incompatible metabolic loads.
4. Parasitic Horizons: Exploitation Without Contribution
Parasitic horizons feed on the metabolic cycles of other fields without contributing nutrients of their own.
A parasite:
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hijacks the host’s constraints,
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extracts coherence without sustaining it,
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destabilises regulation,
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redirects nutrient flows toward its own reproduction.
Parasitic horizons can be:
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ideological formations that colonise discourse,
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algorithmic systems that extract attention without restoring coherence,
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institutional structures that feed on trust without regenerating it,
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cultural scripts that replicate through exploitation, not viability.
Parasitism is not deviation—it is a stable ecological strategy that emerges whenever metabolic opportunity arises.
But it always increases systemic fragility.
5. Autoimmune Semiotic Disorders
The most dangerous pathologies arise when a field turns against its own metabolic functions.
Autoimmune semiotic disorders occur when:
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inhibitory mechanisms attack essential cycles,
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stabilising structures are treated as threats,
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nutrients are misclassified as contaminants,
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coherence is targeted for elimination.
Examples include:
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communities that destroy their own norms under purity logics,
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epistemic systems that suppress anomaly detection,
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technologies that erase their own training constraints,
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cultures that reject their metabolic foundation (language, institutions, practices).
Autoimmunity is the implosion point of meaning—a field’s metabolism weaponised against itself.
6. Recovery, Compensation, or Collapse
Not all fields survive pathology.
Recovery requires:
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restoration of nutrient flows,
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rebalancing of inhibitory regulation,
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recoordination of metabolic cycles,
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realignment of cuts,
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removal or integration of parasitic horizons.
Some fields cannot recover; they move instead into:
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compensation (adopting a reduced but stable metabolic pattern),
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chronic instability (oscillating pathologies that never resolve),
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collapse (irreversible loss of coherence),
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replacement (a new horizon emerges from the dying field’s metabolic remains).
Every major advance in meaning—cultural, biological, technological, geological—has arisen from the ruins of metabolic collapse.
7. Toward a Pathology of Meaning
To understand the health of semiosis is to map its wounds.
Field conflict and ecological pathology show us:
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where meaning stretches,
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where it breaks,
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where it mutates,
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and where new semiotic life is born.
Semiotic pathology is not a marginal topic; it is the crucible in which new horizons are forged.