Sunday, 5 April 2026

Vision and the Non-Semiotic Ground of Experience — 9 Vision Captured by Meaning: When Construal Reorganises the Field of Seeing

The previous post identified an illusion: the projection of linguistic construal back into perception.

Here we move one step further.

Not merely the projection of meaning onto vision—but the systematic capture of vision by meaning once construal becomes the dominant mode of engagement.


1. From Overlay to Capture

At first, language appears as an overlay:

  • perception continues as before

  • construal accompanies it

  • meaning is added to what is seen

But over time, something more consequential occurs:

construal begins to reorganise what can be seen at all.

Meaning does not remain external to vision.

It reshapes the conditions under which vision operates.


2. The Reframing of Salience

In earlier stages, salience was grounded in:

  • biological responsiveness

  • attentional dynamics

  • social alignment

With the consolidation of language, salience becomes reframed:

  • what is noticed is influenced by what can be named

  • what stands out is shaped by available categories

  • what is relevant is filtered through interpretive schemas

Thus:

meaning begins to govern salience, rather than merely describe it.


3. Category-Led Perception

Once categories are entrenched, perception is no longer experienced as neutral differentiation.

Instead:

  • incoming stimuli are rapidly sorted into predefined classes

  • recognition is guided by linguistic and conceptual expectations

  • ambiguity is resolved in favour of available interpretations

What is seen is not just what is there, but:

what fits the available construals.


4. Stabilisation Through Naming

Naming plays a central role in this capture.

A named category:

  • stabilises a way of grouping experience

  • constrains variation within perceptual input

  • reinforces expectations about what will appear

Over time, naming feeds back into perception itself:

the world begins to appear as already partitioned according to linguistic categories.


5. The Compression of Differentiation

Vision, in its unmediated form, differentiates continuously.

Meaning introduces compression:

  • multiple differentiations are treated as equivalent under a single category

  • fine-grained variation is subordinated to higher-level labels

  • distinctions that are not semantically relevant are ignored

This compression is not an error.

It is a functional adaptation of a coupled system.

But it has a consequence:

the richness of raw differentiation becomes subordinate to the economy of meaning.


6. Expectation as a Structuring Force

Meaning introduces expectation.

Once categories and relations are established:

  • perception is guided by what is expected to appear

  • anomalies are noticed against interpretive background

  • recognition becomes faster but also more constrained

Expectation shapes attention, and attention shapes salience.

Thus:

meaning indirectly structures what vision selects.


7. The Recursion of Interpretation

Interpretation does not remain a one-off operation.

It becomes recursive:

  • interpretations inform future perceptions

  • perceptions are immediately interpreted

  • interpretations reinforce the categories that generated them

This recursion stabilises a closed loop:

meaning → expectation → perception → interpretation → reinforced meaning

Within this loop, vision is no longer operating in isolation.

It is embedded within a semiotic feedback system.


8. The Reduction of Visual Autonomy

As this coupling intensifies, vision loses a degree of autonomy.

Not in the sense that biological processes cease, but in the sense that:

  • what is noticed is increasingly guided by meaning

  • what counts as relevant is linguistically and socially mediated

  • what is recognised is pre-shaped by interpretive frameworks

Vision continues to function biologically, but:

its outputs are immediately recruited into semiotic organisation.


9. Seeing Through Meaning

At this stage, what is often described as “seeing” is already “seeing through meaning.”

That is:

  • perception is inseparable from interpretation

  • the visual field is organised within conceptual structures

  • experience is immediately legible within a semiotic system

The world appears not simply as a field of value, but as:

a field already articulated by meaning.


10. The Tension Remains

Despite this capture, the underlying strata do not disappear.

Biological value continues to operate:

  • attention still selects

  • recognition still stabilises

  • salience still emerges from perceptual differentiation

Meaning does not replace these processes.

It reorganises their outputs within a higher-order system.

Thus the system remains layered:

  • biological value

  • social coordination

  • semiotic construal

But in lived experience, these layers are no longer easily separable.


11. A Ninth Position

The claim can now be stated succinctly:

once language and construal are established, meaning does not merely describe vision—it actively reorganises the conditions of salience, recognition, and expectation, capturing the visual field within a semiotic regime that shapes what can be seen, how it is seen, and what it is taken to be.


This sets the stage for the final movement in the series.

If vision is captured by meaning in lived experience, what does it mean to step outside that capture—even momentarily?

And how should we characterise experience prior to meaning, not as a regression, but as a structural condition that persists beneath interpretation?

The afterword addresses this directly:

experience before meaning.

Vision and the Non-Semiotic Ground of Experience — 8 The Illusion of Visual Thought: When Construal Is Projected Back Into Perception

With language in place, construal becomes available as a general operation.

Experience can now be:

  • categorised

  • described

  • related

  • interpreted within symbolic systems

This creates a subtle but powerful tendency:

to treat perception itself as already organised like language.

That is the illusion.


1. The Seduction of Retrospective Construal

Once language is acquired, it becomes difficult to remember what experience is like without it.

We begin to retrospectively impose construal onto perception:

  • we say we “recognise” objects as if they were already categorised

  • we describe perception as if it were structured by concepts

  • we treat seeing as if it were already a form of understanding

But this is a projection.

What language enables at the semiotic level is mistakenly attributed to the perceptual level.


2. Vision Operates Without Propositions

Vision, as examined in earlier posts, operates through:

  • differentiation of the visual field

  • stabilisation of patterns

  • recognition via value-based responsiveness

  • attention and salience

None of these require:

  • propositions

  • categories as linguistic constructs

  • symbolic predication

  • explicit relations of the kind found in grammar

Vision does not say:

“this is a chair.”

It simply:

differentiates a pattern that supports action, orientation, and response.


3. Recognition Is Not Interpretation

Recognition can feel like interpretation.

But structurally, it is not.

Recognition:

  • matches current input with stabilised biological sensitivities

  • enables rapid coordination with the environment

  • operates without symbolic mediation

Interpretation, by contrast, involves:

  • construal through a semiotic system

  • assignment of meaning relations

  • articulation within a network of categories

Conflating the two is the root of the illusion.


4. The Grammar of Experience Is Not in the Eye

Language introduces grammar:

  • relations between participants, processes, and circumstances

  • structured representations of events

  • hierarchies of clauses and constituents

It is tempting to believe that perception already contains something analogous.

But grammar is not in the visual system.

It is:

a property of semiotic organisation, not of perception itself.


5. Visual Experience Without Linguistic Framing

Prior to linguistic framing, visual experience is:

  • continuous rather than segmented into named objects

  • gradient rather than discretely categorised

  • responsive rather than propositional

  • value-sensitive rather than conceptually structured

It supports action and coordination without requiring description.


6. The Post-Linguistic Overlay

Once language is learned, perception becomes overlaid with linguistic structure:

  • objects are named

  • categories are invoked automatically

  • relations are inferred through learned schemas

  • interpretations arise alongside perception

This overlay is so habitual that it becomes transparent.

We no longer notice:

the distinction between seeing and saying.


7. Visual Thought as a Category Error

The notion of “visual thinking” often arises from this conflation.

It assumes that:

  • images are already structured like propositions

  • perception already contains conceptual content

  • visual experience is a form of internal language

But this mislocates semiotic structure within biological processes.

What is actually happening is:

perception provides a structured field of value,
which language can then construe.

To reverse this relation is to confuse the strata.


8. What Images Actually Do

Images, whether mental or external, do not inherently think.

They:

  • present patterns of differentiation

  • afford recognition and attention

  • evoke responses shaped by biological and social value

When images appear to “carry meaning,” it is because:

they are being construed within a semiotic system.

The meaning is not in the image itself.

It is in the construal applied to it.


9. The Persistence of the Illusion

The illusion persists because:

  • language is deeply integrated with perception

  • construal happens rapidly and automatically

  • social environments reinforce interpretive framing

  • communication relies on treating perception as already meaningful

As a result:

we habitually treat the outputs of construal as if they were properties of perception.


10. Clarifying the Distinction

The distinction can now be stated cleanly:

  • Vision: operates through biological value, differentiation, recognition, attention, and shared salience

  • Language: operates through semiotic construal, categorisation, relation, and symbolic organisation

The illusion of visual thought arises when:

the operations of language are projected back onto the operations of vision.


11. An Eighth Position

The claim is not that vision is impoverished.

It is that vision is structurally different from language.

Vision does not think in images;
rather, language construes images as meaningful.

Recognising this prevents a category error that obscures the stratification of systems.

It also clears the way for the final step in this series:

understanding how vision becomes captured by meaning once construal is fully operative.

That is the subject of the next post.

Vision and the Non-Semiotic Ground of Experience — 7 The Entry of Language: Construal Over Shared Value

Up to this point, the analysis has remained within the domain of value.

  • vision differentiates

  • photographs stabilise

  • recognition aligns responsiveness

  • attention coordinates selection

  • shared salience emerges across individuals

At no stage has meaning been required.

This changes with the entry of language.

Language does not arise from vision.

It enters alongside it, coupling to an already structured field of:

biologically grounded, socially aligned value.


1. Language as Semiotic System

Language belongs to a different stratum:

  • it is not biological value

  • it is not social coordination alone

  • it is a semiotic system organised through construal

Its defining operation is:

to treat elements of experience as signs.

This introduces:

  • classification

  • relation

  • abstraction

  • symbolic representation

None of these are present in vision, recognition, or shared salience.


2. Coupling, Not Emergence

Language does not emerge from perception as a continuation of it.

Rather, it couples to a field that already exists:

  • a field of differentiated experience

  • stabilised through recognition

  • aligned through shared attention

Language operates on this field by:

reorganising it through symbolic resources.


3. Construal: The Key Operation

The central operation of language is construal.

Construal involves:

  • taking something as something

  • assigning categories

  • specifying relations between elements

  • organising experience into structured meanings

This is fundamentally different from recognition or attention.

Where those operate through:

  • value-based selection

Language operates through:

semiotic transformation.


4. Naming as Reconfiguration

Naming is often treated as a simple act of labeling.

But naming is not merely attaching a word to a thing.

It:

  • stabilises a category

  • abstracts from variation

  • groups differentiated instances under a single symbolic form

Through naming:

the visual field is reorganised into categories that did not previously exist as such.


5. From Salience to Significance

Shared salience identifies what stands out across participants.

Language transforms this into something else:

  • what is salient becomes describable

  • what is attended becomes discussable

  • what is coordinated becomes referable

Salience becomes the substrate for:

semiotic significance.

But significance is not salience.

It is:

  • produced through construal

  • sustained by linguistic systems

  • shared through symbolic exchange


6. The Introduction of Reference

Language introduces reference:

  • expressions can point beyond the immediate field

  • entities can be invoked in absence

  • events can be described independently of perception

This allows:

  • displacement in time and space

  • abstraction from immediate experience

  • construction of hypothetical scenarios

None of this is possible within perception alone.


7. Reorganising the Visual Field

Once language enters, the visual field is no longer encountered in isolation.

It becomes:

  • describable

  • categorisable

  • interpretable within linguistic frameworks

What is seen is now:

simultaneously organised by biological value and reconfigured through semiotic construal.


8. Coupling Without Replacement

Importantly, language does not replace perception.

  • vision continues to differentiate

  • recognition continues to align responses

  • attention continues to select

  • shared salience continues to coordinate

Language overlays these processes, operating on them without eliminating them.

The result is:

a coupled system in which semiotic organisation operates over a pre-existing field of value.


9. The Threshold of Meaning

Meaning does not arise until language is present.

Only when:

  • experience is construed

  • distinctions are symbolically organised

  • relations are specified in semiotic form

does meaning emerge.

Before this point:

there is structured experience, but no meaning.

Language marks the threshold at which:

  • value becomes available for construal

  • differentiation becomes interpretable

  • salience becomes communicable


10. A Seventh Position

The argument can now be stated directly:

language enters as a semiotic system that couples to a pre-semiotic field of biologically and socially organised value, introducing construal and enabling meaning without replacing the underlying perceptual and attentional structures.


With language in place, a new possibility arises—and a new illusion becomes possible.

Because once construal is available, it can be projected backward onto perception itself.

What follows is the tendency to believe:

that vision itself is already a form of thinking.

The next post addresses this directly.

Not by denying the richness of visual experience,
but by exposing the category error that converts recognition into cognition:

the illusion of visual thought.

Vision and the Non-Semiotic Ground of Experience — 6 Attention and Shared Salience: From Individual Value to Social Alignment

Recognition stabilises responsiveness within an individual system.

But perception does not remain confined to the individual.

In social contexts, something additional occurs:

patterns of salience begin to align across multiple participants.

This is not yet meaning.

It is something more basic—and more revealing:

the coordination of attention through shared value.


1. Attention as Selection in Action

Attention is not a mental spotlight in the abstract.

It is:

  • selective engagement with aspects of the visual field

  • prioritisation of certain differentiations over others

  • allocation of processing resources within a system

In biological terms, attention is:

value in active selection.

What is attended to is what matters for the system at that moment.


2. From Individual Attention to Coordinated Attention

In isolation, attention is internally regulated.

But in social environments, attention becomes externally influenced:

  • others orient toward certain features

  • gestures direct gaze

  • movement cues draw focus

  • shared tasks stabilise what is relevant

Through these interactions:

attention becomes coordinated across individuals.


3. The Emergence of Shared Salience

When multiple individuals attend to the same features of an environment, a phenomenon emerges:

shared salience.

This is not meaning.

It is:

  • convergence of attentional focus

  • alignment of what stands out across participants

  • coordination of value-based selection

Shared salience means:

different systems are selectively responding to the same differentiations.


4. Salience Without Semantics

What makes something salient is not that it means something.

It is that it:

  • stands out perceptually

  • disrupts expectation

  • demands response

In shared contexts, salience becomes:

  • socially reinforced

  • mutually stabilised

  • collectively sustained

But it remains:

value-based, not meaning-based.


5. Mechanisms of Alignment

Shared salience is achieved through multiple mechanisms:

  • gaze following

  • pointing and gesture

  • bodily orientation

  • rhythmic coordination in activity

  • environmental structuring (e.g. arranged objects, tasks)

These mechanisms do not require language.

They operate through:

perceptual and behavioural coupling.


6. Coupling Without Semiosis

At this stage, individuals are not yet exchanging meanings.

Instead, they are:

  • aligning attention

  • synchronising responses

  • coordinating behaviour

This is coupling at the level of:

biological and social value, prior to semiotic organisation.

Meaning may later build upon this alignment, but it is not required for it.


7. The Social Amplification of Salience

In social settings, salience is amplified.

  • what one individual notices can become noticeable to others

  • what draws collective attention becomes more stable

  • repeated co-attention reinforces patterns

Through this amplification:

certain features of the visual field become socially foregrounded.

But foregrounding is not meaning.

It is:

  • prioritisation within shared value

  • not interpretation within a semiotic system


8. Pre-Semiotic Coordination

Shared salience represents a form of coordination that precedes language.

Participants can:

  • attend together

  • respond together

  • act together

without:

  • assigning meanings

  • exchanging symbols

  • constructing propositions

This coordination is:

organised, but not yet semiotic.


9. The Conditions for Language

Shared salience establishes a crucial precondition for language:

  • participants are already aligned in what they attend to

  • their perceptual fields overlap in relevant ways

  • their responses are coordinated within a shared environment

Language does not create this alignment.

It:

operates on top of it.


10. A Sixth Position

The argument can now be stated clearly:

attention, when socially coordinated, gives rise to shared salience—an alignment of value-based selection across individuals that precedes and enables, but does not itself constitute, meaning.


This marks a transition in the series.

Up to this point, we have remained within:

  • biological value

  • stabilised perception

  • individual recognition

  • social coordination without semantics

Now, with shared salience in place, the system is prepared for a new development.

Not yet meaning—but the conditions under which meaning can enter.

That entry point is language.

the next post examines how language couples to this already-aligned field and introduces construal.

Vision and the Non-Semiotic Ground of Experience — 5 Recognition Without Construal: Value That Aligns, but Does Not Mean

If vision is organised as value, and the visual field stabilised through photographs enables repeated encounter, then recognition appears as the next step in the sequence.

But recognition is often misunderstood.

It is treated as if it already involves interpretation—
as if to recognise something is to understand what it is.

This is not the case.

recognition operates without construal.


1. Recognition Is Not Interpretation

Interpretation requires that something is taken as something.

  • a configuration is classified

  • a relation is specified

  • a sign is assigned a meaning

Recognition does not perform these operations.

It does not:

  • assign categories

  • establish symbolic relations

  • produce semantic descriptions

Recognition responds to patterns without construing them.

it is pattern alignment, not meaning attribution.


2. Stabilised Differentiation

Recognition depends on the stabilisation of differentiation.

Across repeated encounters:

  • certain configurations recur

  • contrasts become reliable

  • variations become predictable

The system learns to track these regularities.

What emerges is:

  • consistency of response

  • sensitivity to recurrence

  • alignment across time

But this alignment remains:

within the domain of value, not meaning.


3. Value as Selective Responsiveness

Recognition is grounded in selective responsiveness.

  • some patterns are attended to

  • others are ignored

  • some trigger action

  • others remain backgrounded

These distinctions are not semantic.

They are:

  • prioritised

  • weighted

  • operationally relevant

Recognition expresses:

what matters for the system, not what something means.


4. Familiarity Without Semantics

Recognition produces familiarity.

  • a face is “known”

  • a place is “recognised”

  • a configuration feels “the same”

Familiarity can be powerful.

It can:

  • guide behaviour

  • reduce uncertainty

  • stabilise interaction

But familiarity is not meaning.

It is:

the repetition of value-based alignment.


5. No “As” Structure

Meaning requires an “as” structure:

  • something is taken as a member of a category

  • a form is interpreted as a sign

  • a configuration is understood as representing something else

Recognition lacks this structure.

It does not:

  • treat one thing as another

  • substitute symbols for patterns

  • operate through representation

It engages directly with patterns as patterns.

recognition is immediate responsiveness, not mediated interpretation.


6. Biological Grounding

Recognition belongs to biological organisation.

It arises through:

  • adaptation

  • learning

  • reinforcement

It is shaped by:

  • history of interaction

  • environmental regularities

  • system-specific constraints

What is recognised is what the system has come to differentiate as relevant.

This relevance is not semantic.

It is:

biological value in operation.


7. Objects as Secondary Stabilisations

In everyday perception, recognition contributes to the impression of objects.

  • faces are recognised as faces

  • chairs as chairs

  • trees as trees

But these “objects” are not given in recognition itself.

They are:

  • stabilised across repeated recognition

  • supported by further coupling with language

  • reinforced through social interaction

Recognition provides:

recurring patterns of value, not objects with meaning.


8. Misreading Recognition as Meaning

Because recognition is stable and reliable, it is often misread as meaning.

  • familiarity is mistaken for understanding

  • consistency is mistaken for interpretation

  • alignment is mistaken for semantics

This misreading arises from conflating:

  • biological responsiveness
    with

  • semiotic construal

But the two are distinct.

Recognition does not cross the threshold into meaning.


9. What Recognition Actually Does

Recognition:

  • tracks recurrent configurations

  • stabilises responses across time

  • aligns perception with environmental regularities

  • operates through value-based differentiation

It enables:

  • coordination of behaviour

  • anticipation of recurrence

  • continuity of interaction

But it does all this:

without assigning meaning.


10. A Fifth Position

The argument can now be stated clearly:

recognition is the stabilisation of patterned responsiveness within biological value, without the application of construal or semantic organisation.


This positions recognition precisely within the stratified framework:

  • vision differentiates

  • the visual field presents value

  • photographs stabilise that field

  • recognition aligns responsiveness to it

At no point, so far, does meaning arise.

Meaning requires something else entirely.

Not more stability,
not more repetition,
not more differentiation—

but a shift in system:

from biological value to social coordination and semiotic construal.

That shift is the subject of the next post:

how multiple recognitions begin to align across individuals as shared salience.

Vision and the Non-Semiotic Ground of Experience — 4 Photographs Revisited: Stabilised Vision Is Still Not Meaning

If the mirror reveals vision without stabilisation, the photograph appears to offer the opposite:

a visual field captured, fixed, and made to persist.

Where the mirror dissolves, the photograph holds.

This difference is decisive—but not in the way it is usually assumed.

Stability does not produce meaning.


1. From Reflection to Capture

A photograph differs from a mirror in one crucial respect:

  • it retains what the mirror releases

Light is:

  • recorded

  • fixed

  • made repeatable

What was momentary becomes:

  • persistent

  • transportable

  • revisitable

The visual field is no longer:

  • fleeting
    but:

stabilised across time.


2. Stabilisation and Its Effects

This stabilisation enables:

  • repeated viewing

  • comparison across moments

  • accumulation of attention

Patterns can now:

  • be revisited

  • be reinforced

  • be examined

This creates the conditions for:

  • recognition

  • expectation

  • familiarity

But not yet for meaning.


3. The Emergence of Apparent Objects

With persistence, something new appears:

objects seem to be present in the image.

  • a person

  • a building

  • a landscape

These appear:

  • stable

  • bounded

  • identifiable

But this appearance is an effect of:

  • repeated differentiation

  • reinforced patterns

  • viewer interaction over time

The photograph does not contain objects.

It contains:

stabilised configurations of value.


4. Recognition Enabled, Not Guaranteed

Because the photograph persists:

  • recognition becomes easier

  • patterns can be learned

  • distinctions can stabilise

But recognition is still:

  • dependent on the organism

  • shaped by prior experience

  • variable across observers

The photograph does not ensure recognition.

It merely:

supports the conditions under which it may occur.


5. Meaning Still Absent

Despite its stability, the photograph does not generate meaning.

It does not:

  • classify what is seen

  • specify relations

  • organise interpretation

It presents:

  • differentiated light

  • spatial configuration

  • stabilised pattern

Meaning requires:

  • construal

  • symbolic resources

  • linguistic specification

Without these:

the photograph remains non-semiotic.


6. The Illusion of Self-Evidence

Photographs are often treated as:

  • self-explanatory

  • transparent

  • “showing what is there”

This produces a powerful illusion:

that meaning resides in the image itself.

But what is actually present is:

  • high stability

  • rich differentiation

  • strong potential for recognition

These make interpretation:

  • easier

  • more consistent

  • more widely shared

But they do not produce it.


7. Coupling with Language

In practice, photographs are rarely encountered alone.

They are accompanied by:

  • captions

  • descriptions

  • narratives

  • discourse

Through this coupling:

  • elements are identified

  • relations are specified

  • meanings are stabilised

The photograph provides:

  • configuration

Language provides:

  • construal

Meaning arises through:

their coupling.


8. Repetition and Convention

Over time, repeated exposure to similar images produces:

  • shared expectations

  • conventional interpretations

  • culturally stabilised readings

Certain configurations come to be:

  • widely recognised

  • consistently interpreted

This reinforces the illusion that:

meaning is inherent in the image.

In fact, it is:

  • socially stabilised

  • linguistically mediated

  • historically produced


9. From Value to Resource

The photograph transforms the visual field into a resource.

  • for recognition

  • for comparison

  • for interpretation

But it does not transform it into meaning.

It remains:

a structured field of value, now stabilised and reusable.


10. A Fourth Position

The argument can now be stated directly:

photographs stabilise the visual field across time, enabling recognition and supporting interpretation, but they do not constitute systems of meaning in themselves.


The contrast is now clear:

  • mirror: value without stabilisation

  • photograph: value with stabilisation

In both cases:

  • differentiation operates

  • salience is structured

  • selection is active

In neither case:

does meaning arise.


This prepares the ground for a crucial distinction.

If stabilisation enables recognition, but not meaning, then we must ask:

what, exactly, is the difference between recognising and meaning?

It is to that distinction that we now turn.

Vision and the Non-Semiotic Ground of Experience — 3 Light, Surfaces, and Mirrors: Seeing Without Stabilisation

If the visual field is structured as value—through differentiation, salience, and selection—then a further question arises:

what happens when vision is not stabilised?

Not:

  • stored

  • recognised

  • objectified

but encountered in its most immediate form.

A simple case provides a precise answer:

the mirror.


1. The Mirror as Pure Visual Event

A mirror does not produce images in the way a photograph does.

It does not:

  • capture

  • store

  • stabilise

It reflects.

What appears in a mirror:

  • exists only in the moment

  • changes with every movement

  • disappears instantly when conditions shift

This is vision:

without retention, without persistence, without objectification.


2. Light and Surface

At the level of the mirror, what is present is:

  • light

  • reflection

  • surface interaction

There are:

  • no objects in the mirror itself

  • no stored forms

  • no independent entities

What appears is:

a relational event of light and surface.

Vision here is:

  • immediate

  • contingent

  • entirely dependent on ongoing conditions


3. No Stability, No Object

In everyday perception, objects appear stable.

  • a chair remains a chair

  • a face remains a face

But the mirror exposes something else.

  • move slightly → the image shifts

  • change the angle → the configuration alters

  • step away → it disappears

Nothing persists.

Without persistence:

  • no stable pattern can form

  • no object can be constituted

  • no recognition can be sustained

The “object” dissolves into:

continuous variation.


4. Differentiation Without Retention

The mirror still presents:

  • contrast

  • movement

  • figure and ground

Differentiation is intact.

But it is:

  • fleeting

  • unstable

  • unaccumulated

There is no:

  • memory within the mirror

  • build-up of pattern

  • reinforcement of selection

Vision operates, but:

without the conditions for stabilisation.


5. Recognition Disrupted

Recognition depends on:

  • repeated patterns

  • stabilised differentiation

  • continuity over time

The mirror undermines these.

  • patterns do not persist

  • configurations shift constantly

  • alignment is fragile

Recognition becomes:

  • effortful

  • partial

  • easily disrupted

This shows:

recognition is not inherent in vision; it depends on stabilisation across time.


6. No Meaning, Even More Clearly

If meaning does not arise in ordinary vision, it is even less plausible here.

The mirror provides:

  • no categories

  • no relations as meaning

  • no interpretive structure

Only:

  • shifting configurations of light

  • momentary differentiation

  • immediate salience

Meaning cannot attach because:

nothing holds long enough to be construed.


7. The Illusion of Presence

Despite this, mirror images often feel immediate and “real.”

  • we see ourselves

  • we orient to others

  • we respond as if objects were present

But this is not because the mirror provides meaning.

It is because:

  • the visual system operates normally

  • biological value continues to differentiate

  • social coupling may still occur

The sense of presence is:

an effect of the system, not a property of the image.


8. Vision Exposed

The mirror strips vision to its essentials.

It reveals:

  • differentiation without retention

  • salience without stability

  • selection without accumulation

What remains is:

value in motion.

Not:

  • objects

  • meanings

  • representations

But:

  • dynamic organisation

  • continuous variation

  • immediate responsiveness


9. From Mirror to World

The difference between mirror vision and everyday perception is not the presence of meaning.

It is:

  • the degree of stabilisation

  • the persistence of patterns

  • the accumulation of differentiation

Where stability increases:

  • recognition becomes possible

  • objects appear to emerge

But even there:

meaning still does not arise without further systems.


10. A Third Position

The argument can now be stated directly:

mirror vision reveals the visual field as a transient configuration of value, structured by differentiation but lacking the stability required for recognition, objectification, or meaning.


The mirror is not a special case. It is a diagnostic one.

It shows:

  • what vision is when stripped of persistence

  • what remains before objects appear

  • what operates prior to meaning

The next step is to examine a different kind of stabilisation.

Not the fleeting reflection of light,
but its capture and retention:

the photograph.

Saturday, 4 April 2026

Vision and the Non-Semiotic Ground of Experience — 2 The Visual Field as Value: Perception Reframed

If vision is not meaning, then what is it?

The answer cannot be a retreat into vagueness:

  • “raw sensation”

  • “uninterpreted input”

  • “data before processing”

These formulations fail because they define vision negatively—by what it is not—while leaving its organisation unspecified.

But vision is not formless. It is not passive. It is not neutral.

the visual field is structured by value.


1. Against the Myth of Raw Input

The idea that perception begins with “raw data” is a fiction.

There is no stage at which:

  • the world is simply given

  • stimuli are received without organisation

  • vision is unstructured

From the outset, the visual field is:

  • differentiated

  • selective

  • dynamically organised

What is seen is never:

an undifferentiated field awaiting interpretation.


2. Differentiation as Selection

Vision operates through differentiation.

  • edges emerge

  • contrasts stabilise

  • movement stands out

  • figures separate from background

But differentiation is not neutral.

Some differences matter more than others:

  • some are amplified

  • some are suppressed

  • some are ignored entirely

This is selection.

And selection is:

value in operation.


3. Salience and Priority

Within the visual field, certain features become salient.

  • a sudden movement

  • a sharp contrast

  • a familiar configuration

Salience is not meaning.

It does not tell us:

  • what something is

  • how it relates

  • what it signifies

It determines:

what stands out, what draws attention, what matters for the organism.

This is the language of value:

  • priority

  • relevance

  • significance (without signification)


4. The Field Is Structured, Not Interpreted

The visual field is often treated as something that must be “interpreted” in order to become meaningful.

But this misstates the problem.

The field is already:

  • structured

  • organised

  • stabilised

What it is not, is:

  • interpreted

  • classified

  • construed

Structure does not imply meaning.

organisation is not semiosis.


5. No Objects, Only Differentiations

It appears as though the visual field contains objects.

But what is actually present is:

  • gradients of light

  • spatial relations

  • dynamic changes

“Objects” emerge only when:

  • patterns stabilise

  • recognition operates

  • construal intervenes

At the level of vision itself, there are:

no objects—only differentiated fields of value.


6. Value Without Representation

To say that vision is structured by value is not to introduce representation.

There are:

  • no internal images standing for the world

  • no symbolic encodings

  • no meanings assigned to stimuli

Instead, there is:

  • differential responsiveness

  • selective stabilisation

  • ongoing modulation

Value here is:

operative, not representational.


7. Continuity and Flux

The visual field is not static.

It is:

  • continuously updated

  • dynamically reconfigured

  • responsive to change

What persists is not a set of objects, but:

  • patterns of differentiation

  • stabilised through ongoing activity

This gives the impression of:

  • a stable world

But stability is:

an achievement of the system, not a property of the input.


8. The Organism at the Centre

Value is always relative to the organism.

  • what is salient for one organism may be irrelevant for another

  • what is prioritised depends on organisation and history

  • what matters is system-specific

The visual field is therefore:

not a neutral display, but an organism-centred field of value.


9. Reframing Perception

With this, perception can be restated:

  • not as input

  • not as representation

  • not as interpretation

but as:

the organisation of experience through value-based differentiation.

What is seen is:

  • what is selected

  • what is stabilised

  • what matters within the system


10. A Second Position

The argument can now be stated directly:

the visual field is not a field of meanings or objects, but a field of value, structured through differentiation, salience, and selection.


This reframing is decisive.

  • it removes meaning from perception

  • it specifies what replaces it

  • it grounds vision in biological organisation

What follows is a further clarification.

If the visual field is structured as value, how does it behave when it is not stabilised?

What happens when seeing is immediate, unretained, and unobjectified?

To answer this, we turn to a simple but revealing case:

the mirror.

Vision and the Non-Semiotic Ground of Experience — 1 Vision Is Not Meaning: The Opening Break

It is commonly assumed that to see is already, in some sense, to understand.

We speak as if:

  • the world presents itself to perception

  • objects are simply “there”

  • what is seen is already organised as meaning

From this, a powerful intuition follows:

vision is a form of interpretation.

This intuition is wrong.


1. The Conflation

Three processes are routinely collapsed:

  • seeing

  • recognising

  • meaning

They are treated as if they were continuous—as if one flowed naturally into the next.

But they are not the same operation.

  • seeing is not recognising

  • recognising is not meaning

To treat them as such is to:

project the semiotic onto the perceptual.


2. What Vision Provides

Vision is not empty. It is highly organised.

It provides:

  • differentiation

  • contrast

  • movement

  • figure and ground

  • salience

The visual field is:

  • structured

  • dynamic

  • selective

But none of this is meaning.

There are:

  • no categories

  • no relations as meaning

  • no interpretations

What is given is:

organised experience without semiosis.


3. The Absence of Construal

Meaning requires construal.

  • something must be taken as something

  • relations must be specified

  • distinctions must be organised symbolically

Vision does none of this.

It does not:

  • classify

  • relate

  • interpret

It differentiates.

This is the critical distinction:

differentiation is not construal.


4. The Myth of Immediate Objects

It appears as though we see objects:

  • a tree

  • a chair

  • a face

But this appearance is deceptive.

What vision provides is:

  • variation in light

  • spatial differentiation

  • dynamic change

The stability of “objects” is not given by vision alone.

It depends on:

  • recognition

  • memory

  • learned patterns

And beyond that:

  • linguistic construal

The “object” is not seen. It is:

produced through operations beyond vision.


5. Recognition Is Not Meaning

Even recognition does not yet yield meaning.

An organism may:

  • respond differently to different stimuli

  • stabilise patterns of response

  • differentiate environments

This is recognition in a biological sense:

  • value-based

  • non-symbolic

  • non-semantic

It is not:

  • naming

  • describing

  • interpreting

Recognition is:

structured responsiveness, not meaning.


6. The Persistence of the Illusion

Why, then, does vision feel meaningful?

Because it is rarely encountered in isolation.

From early development:

  • perception is coupled with language

  • experience is shaped by interaction

  • distinctions are stabilised through use

Over time:

  • meaning becomes habitual

  • construal becomes automatic

  • language recedes from awareness

What remains is the impression:

that meaning was always there.

It was not.


7. Vision as Biological Value

Vision must be located precisely.

It belongs to the biological stratum.

It operates through:

  • selection

  • salience

  • differentiation

It answers not the question:

  • “what does this mean?”

but:

  • “what matters here?”

Vision is:

value-based organisation of experience.


8. No Semiosis Without System

Meaning requires a semiotic system.

  • resources for classification

  • resources for relation

  • resources for construal

Vision provides none of these.

It does not:

  • generate symbols

  • organise meaning

  • sustain interpretation

Without language:

there is no meaning—only structured experience.


9. The Break

The argument can now be stated without qualification:

vision is not a semiotic system, and seeing is not a form of meaning.


This is not a denial of perception.

It is a repositioning.

  • vision is preserved

  • its structure is acknowledged

  • its limits are specified

What is removed is:

  • the projection of meaning onto it


10. Consequence

Once this break is made, a new field opens.

  • perception can be analysed on its own terms

  • value can be specified without meaning

  • the emergence of semiosis can be located precisely

And a new question becomes possible:

what is the visual field, if not meaning?


The next step is to answer that question directly.

Not by returning to interpretation,
but by specifying the organisation of vision itself:

as value,
as selection,
as structured experience before semiosis begins.

Value Before Meaning: Biological and Social Systems in Coupling — 6 Afterword: The Stratification of Value: Before Meaning, After Structure

This series began by stepping back from meaning.

Not to deny it, but to ask a prior question:

what forms of organisation make meaning possible—and what exists where it does not?

The answer required a shift in scale.

From:

  • semiotic systems alone

To:

  • a stratified field of systems, each with its own mode of organisation:

    • physical

    • biological

    • social

    • semiotic

What has emerged is not a hierarchy of complexity, but a differentiation of kinds.


1. Constraint, Value, Meaning

Across the strata, three distinct forms of organisation can now be specified:

  • physical systems: constraint without value

  • biological systems: value through selection

  • social systems: value through coordination

  • semiotic systems: meaning through construal

These are not variations of a single principle.

They are:

qualitatively distinct modes of organisation.

To conflate them is to:

  • mistake coordination for meaning

  • mistake selection for interpretation

  • mistake structure for semiosis


2. The Priority of Value

One result is now unavoidable:

value precedes meaning.

  • it emerges with biological organisation

  • it is transformed in social systems

  • it provides the ground upon which meaning operates

Meaning does not generate value.

It:

  • depends on it

  • reorganises it

  • constrains it in new ways


3. The Coupling Principle

At every stage, systems do not replace one another. They:

couple across strata.

  • biological systems couple with physical processes

  • social systems couple with biological systems

  • semiotic systems couple with social systems

Each coupling involves:

  • mutual constraint

  • transformation without reduction

  • preservation of system distinction

This is the general principle:

organisation advances not by replacement, but by coupling of heterogeneous systems.


4. The Non-Default Status of Meaning

A second consequence follows:

meaning is not the default condition of organised systems.

  • most structured phenomena are not semiotic

  • most coordination does not involve meaning

  • most differentiation does not entail interpretation

Meaning is:

  • specific

  • contingent

  • dependent on particular systems

This overturns a widespread assumption:
that structure implies semiosis.


5. The Error of Expansion

Much contemporary theory expands meaning:

  • all interaction becomes communication

  • all pattern becomes sign

  • all coordination becomes meaning

This produces:

  • conceptual flattening

  • loss of distinction

  • analytical imprecision

Against this, the present framework insists:

not everything that is organised is meaningful.


6. Repositioning the Semiotic

The semiotic must therefore be repositioned.

It is not:

  • the ground of all systems

  • the default mode of organisation

  • the universal framework of analysis

It is:

  • a specific stratum

  • operating through construal

  • dependent on value systems

This restores:

  • precision

  • differentiation

  • analytical clarity


7. The Field Reconfigured

With this, the field can be reconfigured:

  • constraint without value (physical)

  • value without meaning (biological, social)

  • meaning built on value (semiotic)

Each domain:

  • operates differently

  • couples differently

  • must be analysed on its own terms

There is no single explanatory principle that subsumes all.


8. Toward Perception

This framework now opens a new line of inquiry.

If:

  • biological systems operate through value

  • perception is a biological process

then:

perception must be understood as value-based, not meaning-based.

This challenges a deeply held assumption:
that seeing is already a form of understanding.

Instead, it suggests:

  • seeing precedes meaning

  • vision operates without semiosis

  • meaning arises only when semiotic systems intervene


9. The Next Threshold

The next series will take up this challenge directly.

It will examine:

  • vision

  • visual experience

  • the apparent immediacy of perception

And it will ask:

what is seen, before it is meant?

To answer this requires:

  • holding the distinction between value and meaning

  • resisting the pull of interpretation

  • analysing perception on its own terms


10. Final Position

The argument of this series resolves into a single claim:

value is stratified across biological and social systems, and meaning emerges only when a semiotic system operates on this stratified field through construal.


This is not a conclusion in the usual sense.

It is a repositioning.

  • meaning is no longer the starting point

  • value is no longer secondary

  • systems are no longer collapsed into one another

What remains is a structured field:

  • constraint

  • value

  • meaning

each distinct, each coupled, each requiring precise analysis.


From here, the path is clear.

Not toward more meaning,
but toward its limits.

And toward what lies before it:

experience organised without semiosis.