The sixth discussion began with no paper on the table.
Mr Blottisham looked mildly unsettled by this.
"Have I forgotten something?"
Professor Quillibrace shook his head.
"No. We are past the stage of remembering things."
Miss Elowen Stray smiled faintly.
"That sounds ominous."
"It is structural," said Quillibrace.
Blottisham sat down carefully.
"So this is the conclusion."
"No," said Quillibrace immediately.
"It is the threshold."
Blottisham frowned.
"A threshold to what?"
"To adequacy," said Miss Stray.
Quillibrace nodded once.
A pause.
Blottisham tried again.
"So what would a genuinely systemic-functional account of visual semiosis require?"
Quillibrace leaned back slightly.
"Conditions," he said.
"Not extensions."
"Not adaptations."
"Conditions."
Blottisham exhaled.
"I suspect this will involve rules."
"It involves constraints," said Quillibrace.
"A more dignified form of rules," Blottisham muttered.
"More precise," Quillibrace corrected.
Miss Stray opened her notebook, but did not write.
"I think we should take them one at a time."
"Agreed," said Quillibrace.
Blottisham nodded.
"I am ready."
"That is your first mistake," said Quillibrace.
1. Explicit Stratification
Quillibrace spoke first.
"If stratification is claimed, it must be maintained."
Blottisham nodded cautiously.
"So we cannot treat colour as meaning itself."
"No," said Quillibrace.
"It is expression."
"Which realises meaning."
"Correct."
Blottisham hesitated.
"But in many analyses—"
"I know," said Quillibrace.
"They collapse it."
"Yes."
"And call the result ‘visual meaning’."
"Yes."
Quillibrace shook his head slightly.
"That is not stratification. That is dissolution."
Miss Stray added quietly:
"So either maintain the distinction, or abandon it."
"Exactly," said Quillibrace.
"No selective collapse."
2. System and Structure
Blottisham spoke more carefully now.
"So systems are not descriptions of patterns."
"No," said Quillibrace.
"They are organised differences."
"Meaning potentials structured by opposition," added Miss Stray.
Quillibrace nodded.
"Structures realise them."
Blottisham frowned.
"And catalogues?"
"A temptation," said Quillibrace.
3. Orientation from Above
Blottisham looked up.
"This is the one I am still unsure about."
Quillibrace did not hesitate.
"Then you have not yet understood the series."
Blottisham winced.
"I suspected as much."
Quillibrace continued.
"Explanation does not begin with the image."
"Where does it begin?"
"With the organisation the image is taken to realise."
Miss Stray added:
"And proceeds downward."
"From system to structure," said Blottisham slowly.
"From function to form," said Quillibrace.
"From meaning potential to instance," said Miss Stray.
Blottisham sighed.
"So we are reversing ordinary intuition."
"We are correcting it," said Quillibrace.
"A dangerous phrase," Blottisham murmured.
"An accurate one," Quillibrace replied.
4. Content and Expression
Blottisham looked at the empty table.
"This is the hardest one."
"It is the most frequently violated," said Quillibrace.
Blottisham continued carefully.
"So expressive features are not meaning."
"They realise meaning," said Quillibrace.
"And must not be treated as directly semantic."
"Correct."
"Unless explicitly justified."
"Or you abandon stratification entirely," said Miss Stray.
Blottisham leaned back.
"So the instability we saw earlier..."
"is caused by switching between these positions," said Miss Stray.
"Without acknowledging it," said Quillibrace.
A silence settled.
Blottisham spoke quietly.
"So what we have been calling ‘visual grammar’..."
Quillibrace interrupted gently.
"May or may not be systemic-functional."
Blottisham nodded.
"Depending on these conditions."
"Yes," said Quillibrace.
"Not depending on vocabulary."
"Not depending on sophistication," said Miss Stray.
"Only on architecture."
Blottisham looked up.
"And if those conditions are not met?"
Quillibrace answered simply.
"Then it is not what it claims to be."
A pause.
"It is something else."
Miss Stray closed her notebook.
"And what is that something else?"
Quillibrace considered this.
"A descriptive practice."
"Sometimes excellent."
"Often insightful."
"But not systemic-functional in its explanatory architecture."
Blottisham exhaled slowly.
"So the distinction is not about correctness."
"No," said Quillibrace.
"It is about what kind of explanation is being performed."
A long silence followed.
Then Blottisham spoke.
"So the final claim is simple."
Quillibrace raised an eyebrow.
"Careful."
Blottisham continued anyway.
"System over structure."
"Function over form."
"And explanation from above."
Quillibrace nodded once.
"Yes."
Miss Stray added quietly:
"But only if you can sustain what those phrases require."
The room did not respond immediately.
Outside, the rain continued in the same patient register it had adopted at the beginning of the series.
Blottisham looked at the empty table.
"So that is the threshold."
Quillibrace stood.
"Yes."
"And we are either on one side of it," Blottisham said, "or we are not."
Quillibrace picked up his coat.
"And analysis reveals which."
Miss Stray closed her notebook.
"Not what it says it is."
"What it is doing."
No one spoke for a moment.
Then Blottisham said, very quietly:
"I think I will need to rewrite everything I have ever written."
Quillibrace paused at the door.
"Probably."
Miss Stray smiled.
"Or at least reorient it."
And the door closed, as if on a methodological decision rather than a room.