Tuesday, 31 March 2026

Religion Without Unity: 7 After Religion

By this point, “religion” has lost its footing.

Not because it has been refuted.
Not because belief has declined.
Not because modernity has displaced it.

But because the object itself has dissolved.


1. What has been removed

Across the series, a sequence of assumptions has been withdrawn:

  • that belief names a coherent mental state
  • that religion is a unified system
  • that myth binds communities
  • that ritual expresses meaning
  • that meaning and value share a ground
  • that the human is the site where they converge

What remains is not a revised definition of religion.

It is the absence of one.


2. Religion as misrecognised relation

At most, “religion” can now be named as:

a historically stabilised coupling between semiotic systems and value systems, misrecognised as a unified domain.


This is not an essence.

It is a configuration.

And like all configurations without ground, it is:

  • contingent
  • variable
  • subject to drift and reconfiguration

3. Nothing uniquely religious

Once seen this way, a further consequence follows:

there is nothing uniquely religious about the structure we have been analysing.


The same dynamics appear wherever:

  • meanings are construed
  • actions are coordinated
  • and the relation between them is stabilised and naturalised

Consider:

  • political ideologies
  • national identities
  • institutional cultures
  • even certain formations of scientific practice

In each case:

  • narratives, models, or frameworks construe a world
  • patterns of action coordinate participation
  • their coupling is presented as necessary, natural, or true

And again:

  • variation in meaning is constrained
  • coordination is stabilised
  • the relation is misrecognised as unity

4. The persistence of the structure

If religion dissolves, the structure does not.

It persists:

  • without the name
  • without the overt appeal to belief
  • without explicit reference to the sacred

Which is why “secularisation” so often disappoints its own expectations.

What disappears is not the coupling.

Only one of its historical forms.


5. After belief

In this light, the so-called “decline of belief” looks different.

It is not that:

  • people cease to hold propositions about gods

It is that:

  • the coupling between meaning and value becomes less tightly regulated
  • alternative articulations proliferate
  • institutional maintenance weakens

Meaning continues.
Value continues.
Their relation shifts.


6. After unity

Without the stabilising force of religious institutions, the illicit unity becomes harder to sustain.

We begin to see:

  • meanings circulating without binding force
  • practices persisting without shared justification
  • individuals navigating multiple, incompatible articulations

What once appeared as a coherent domain fragments.

Not into chaos.

But into visible multiplicity.


7. New couplings

This does not leave a void.

It opens a field.

New couplings emerge:

  • some fleeting
  • some durable
  • some tightly regulated
  • some loosely aligned

None are grounded.

All are contingent.


The difference is not structural.

It is one of degree, visibility, and maintenance.


8. The analytic shift completed

At this point, “religion” is no longer required as a category.

Not because it was false.

But because it was:

a name for a relation we can now analyse directly.


We no longer need to ask:

  • What is religion?
  • Why do people believe?

We ask:

  • What meanings are being construed?
  • What value relations are being coordinated?
  • How are they being coupled, stabilised, or transformed?

Across any domain.


9. The cost of clarity

This shift is not without consequence.

Something is lost:

  • the sense of coherence
  • the comfort of unity
  • the explanatory ease of “belief” and “culture”

In their place:

  • fragmentation
  • contingency
  • relation without ground

But also:

  • precision
  • analytic clarity
  • the ability to see structures where previously there were only names

10. No final ground

If there is a final claim to be made, it is this:

There is no domain—religious or otherwise—in which meaning and value are naturally one.


Where they appear unified,
a coupling has been stabilised.

Where that unity seems necessary,
a misrecognition has taken hold.


And where it begins to fracture,
analysis becomes possible.


11. After religion

So what comes after religion?

Not atheism.
Not secularism.
Not disenchantment.


But a shift in what can be seen.


Religion does not end.

It ceases to be a special case.


What remains is the general condition:

systems of meaning and systems of value,
intersecting without ground,
coupled without necessity,
stabilised without unity.


And with that, the object dissolves.

Not into nothing.

But into a field we can finally begin to analyse
without illusion.

Religion Without Unity: 6 The Human as Intersection

Up to this point, the analysis has been directed outward.

Religion has been cut apart.
Belief dissolved.
Myth and ritual separated.
Their coupling exposed as contingent and unstable.

And throughout, one assumption has remained largely intact:

that there is a subject in whom all this takes place.

A human who:

  • believes
  • interprets
  • participates
  • commits

A point of unity beneath the fractured systems.


This assumption now has to go.


1. The last refuge of unity

Even after dismantling religion as a unified system,
unity quietly retreats inward.

If meaning and value do not belong together “out there,”
perhaps they are joined in here:

  • in consciousness
  • in intention
  • in belief (now quietly reintroduced)
  • in the subject as integrating centre

But this is the same move, displaced.

The illicit unity has not been removed.

It has been internalised.


2. The subject as explanatory shortcut

The human subject is typically invoked as that which:

  • holds meanings
  • adopts values
  • aligns belief and practice

It is the presumed site where:

construal and coordination finally come together.


But notice what this does.

It avoids the problem of relation
by positing a container in which the relation is already resolved.


Instead of asking how meaning and value are coupled,
we say: the person believes and acts.

And the question disappears.


3. Re-cutting the human

If we take the prior analysis seriously, this position is untenable.

There is no reason to assume that:

  • semiotic construal
  • value coordination

suddenly become unified
simply because we are now speaking of a human.


So we cut again.


The human is not a unified subject.
It is an intersection of heterogeneous systems.


Not a container.
Not a ground.
Not an origin.

An intersection.


4. Meaning does not reside “inside”

From the perspective of meaning:

  • the human does not contain meanings
  • it participates in semiotic processes of construal

What appears as “having a belief” is:

  • the activation of certain construals
  • within a broader semiotic potential
  • under specific conditions

There is no internal repository of meanings.

Only participation in their actualisation.


5. Value does not originate “inside”

From the perspective of value:

  • the human does not generate norms or commitments
  • it is positioned within systems of coordination

What appears as “choosing to act” is:

  • alignment with patterns of expectation
  • shaped by repetition, sanction, and role

There is no internal source of obligation.

Only participation in coordinated structures.


6. No point of convergence

Crucially, these do not meet.

Not in the brain.
Not in consciousness.
Not in intention.


There is no privileged site where meaning and value are unified.


What we call “a person” is simply where:

  • semiotic processes
  • and value coordinations

intersect in practice.


7. The production of interiority

So why does unity feel so immediate?

Why does it seem obvious that:

  • I believe this
  • I choose that
  • I act because I think

Because the intersection is retrospectively reconstrued as an interior.

  • coordination is redescribed as intention
  • construal is redescribed as representation
  • their coupling is redescribed as belief

The subject is the narrative we tell about the intersection.


Not its ground.


8. Cracks in the subject

Once seen, familiar phenomena take on a different shape:

  • saying one thing, doing another
  • acting without understanding
  • holding incompatible “beliefs”
  • shifting identities across contexts

These are not failures of a unified subject.

They are normal effects of intersecting systems that do not converge.


9. Responsibility without unity?

At this point, an objection presses in:

If the subject dissolves, what happens to:

  • responsibility
  • agency
  • accountability

The answer is not to restore unity.

But to recognise that these, too, belong to value systems.

They are:

  • modes of coordination
  • ways of stabilising expectation
  • mechanisms for regulating behaviour

Not properties of an underlying subject.


10. The analytic consequence

The human is no longer the starting point.

It becomes an effect of relation.


We do not begin with:

  • individuals who believe and act

We begin with:

  • systems of meaning
  • systems of value

And examine how their intersection produces
what is retrospectively named the person.


11. The final displacement

With this, the last refuge of unity collapses.

  • not in religion
  • not in belief
  • not in myth or ritual
  • not even in the human

What remains is more austere:

a field of heterogeneous systems,
intersecting without ground,
coupled without unity,
stabilised through repetition and misrecognition.


And religion?

It was never the centre of this analysis.

Only the most visible case.


Next: Post 7 — After Religion

Where the category itself falls away,
and what remains is traced across domains that no longer call themselves religious.

Religion Without Unity: 5 Schism, Heresy, and the Dynamics of Misalignment

If religion were a unified system, conflict within it would be straightforward:

a disagreement in belief,
a divergence in doctrine,
an error to be corrected.

But the unity has already been withdrawn.

And with it, the explanatory comfort of “difference in belief.”


1. The misdescription of conflict

Religious conflict is almost always narrated in semiotic terms:

  • competing interpretations
  • doctrinal disputes
  • heretical propositions

From this perspective, schism appears as a failure of agreement in meaning.

But this misdescribes the phenomenon.

Because meaning systems, as we have seen, tolerate variation.

They proliferate.
They contradict.
They coexist.

Left to themselves, they do not require resolution into a single, stable form.


Meaning does not generate schism.
It generates variation.


2. Where conflict actually bites

Conflict becomes acute only when variation intersects with value coordination.

  • when different construals demand incompatible practices
  • when authority is redistributed
  • when participation is restructured
  • when boundaries of inclusion and exclusion shift

At this point, the issue is no longer what is true.

It is what must be done, and who must do it.


Schism is not the breakdown of shared belief.

It is the destabilisation of a coordinated order.


3. Heresy as a relational category

“Heresy” is typically treated as a property of propositions:

  • a false doctrine
  • a deviation from truth

But this treats meaning as primary.


Re-cut through the distinction, heresy looks different:

Heresy is a designation applied to meanings that disrupt an existing value coordination.


The same construal, in a different configuration of value, may not be heretical at all.

It may be:

  • tolerated
  • ignored
  • or even central

Heresy is not located in meaning itself.

It is produced at the point where meaning threatens coordination.


4. Authority and alignment

At the centre of this dynamic lies authority.

Not as an abstract principle,
but as a mechanism for stabilising the coupling.

  • who can interpret
  • who can prescribe
  • who can sanction deviation

Authority operates across both systems:

  • constraining meaning (acceptable interpretations)
  • enforcing value (acceptable practices)

When authority is contested, the coupling loosens.

And what appears as doctrinal disagreement intensifies into structural conflict.


5. The inevitability of divergence

Because the coupling has no ground, it cannot be perfectly stabilised.

Over time:

  • meanings drift
  • practices shift
  • new articulations emerge
  • old alignments weaken

This produces divergence.

Not as anomaly, but as condition.


Schism, then, is not an exceptional rupture.

It is a reconfiguration of the relation between systems.


6. Forms of reconfiguration

When misalignment becomes unsustainable, several trajectories appear:

(a) Suppression

Deviation is contained:

  • meanings are policed
  • practices are enforced
  • authority is centralised

The existing coupling is preserved—at a cost.


(b) Reform

One side is adjusted:

  • reinterpretation to align meaning with practice
  • modification of practice to accommodate meaning

The coupling is repaired.


(c) Schism

The coupling splits:

  • divergent articulations stabilise independently
  • separate value systems emerge
  • distinct meaning systems consolidate around them

Unity is not restored.

It is replicated in parallel.


7. The illusion persists

Even after schism, the fiction of unity reasserts itself.

Each resulting formation presents itself as:

  • coherent
  • grounded
  • internally consistent

The underlying structure is forgotten.

Again.


8. Reading conflict differently

Once the mechanism is understood, religious conflict can be re-read:

Not as:

  • clashes of belief
  • failures of understanding

But as:

  • instabilities in coordination
  • contests over authority
  • divergences in how meaning and value are coupled

The analytic object shifts.

From propositions
to relations.


9. Beyond pathology

This reframing removes the sense that schism is a failure to be explained away.

Instead, it becomes:

an expected outcome of coupling without ground.


Wherever meaning varies and value must stabilise,
misalignment will emerge.

Where misalignment emerges,
reconfiguration follows.


10. The broader implication

And once again, religion proves diagnostic.

Because the same dynamics can be observed wherever:

  • symbolic systems proliferate
  • coordinated action must be maintained

Political movements fracture.
Ideologies split.
Institutions divide.

Not because “beliefs differ,”
but because relations cannot hold.


11. The final turn

Which leaves us with a final question.

If religion is not unified,
if belief is a fiction,
if myth does not bind,
if ritual does not require meaning,
if coupling is contingent and unstable—

Then what, exactly, is the human in all this?


Next: Post 6 — The Human as Intersection

Where the illusion of a unified subject is brought into the same field of analysis,
and begins to dissolve under the same cut.

Monday, 30 March 2026

Religion Without Unity: 4 The Coupling Mechanism

We now arrive at the point of maximum discomfort.

If meaning and value do not share a ground—
if myth does not bind and ritual does not signify—
then the central question can no longer be avoided:

How do they come to appear as one?

Not in theory.
In practice.

Not as an illusion we can simply dismiss,
but as a stabilised relation that persists, reproduces, and resists analysis.

This is the coupling mechanism.


1. Not fusion, not derivation

The first move is negative.

The coupling of meaning and value is:

  • not a fusion into a higher-order unity
  • not a derivation of one from the other
  • not a layering of expression over function

All such models presuppose a shared substrate.

There is none.


The coupling is external to both systems.
It is a relation without reduction.


2. Co-constraint

If there is no shared ground, what holds the relation in place?

Constraint.

  • Meaning systems constrain what can be plausibly construed within a given context
  • Value systems constrain what can be enacted, repeated, and stabilised

Neither determines the other.

But each conditions the environment in which the other operates.


Over time, this produces a mutual narrowing:

  • not toward identity
  • but toward compatibility under constraint

3. Points of articulation

The coupling does not occur everywhere at once.

It localises.

At specific points, the two systems become tightly aligned:

  • a ritual act is paired with a narrative account
  • a role is paired with a cosmological significance
  • a sequence of actions is paired with a symbolic interpretation

These are not intrinsic pairings.

They are articulations.

Sites where the systems are made to meet.


Crucially, the articulation is asymmetric:

  • from the side of value, it is a pattern of coordination
  • from the side of meaning, it is a construal of significance

Same locus.
Different system.


4. Iteration and reinforcement

Once established, articulations are repeated.

  • the same actions recur
  • the same narratives are invoked
  • the same pairings are reasserted

Through repetition, the relation stabilises.

Not because it becomes true,
but because it becomes expected.


Expectation is the hinge.

It binds neither system internally.
It binds the relation between them.


5. Retrospective naturalisation

As the coupling stabilises, a transformation occurs.

The relation is no longer experienced as a relation.

It is experienced as:

  • intrinsic meaning (this ritual expresses this truth)
  • inherent obligation (this meaning demands this practice)

In other words:

the coupling is retrospectively re-described as necessity.


This is the moment of misrecognition.

The illicit unity becomes invisible.


6. The role of institutions

Institutions do not create the coupling.

They maintain and regulate it.

  • by enforcing repetition (value)
  • by standardising interpretation (meaning)
  • by suppressing deviations that threaten alignment

They operate at the interface:

ensuring that articulations hold long enough to appear natural.


7. Slippage and drift

Despite this, the coupling is never complete.

Misalignments constantly emerge:

  • meanings shift without corresponding changes in practice
  • practices persist despite altered or absent meanings
  • new articulations form while old ones decay

This is not failure.

It is the normal condition of a relation without ground.


8. Re-coupling

When misalignment becomes visible, repair work begins:

  • reinterpretation (adjust meaning to fit practice)
  • reform (adjust practice to fit meaning)
  • schism (split the coupling into divergent trajectories)

These are not internal developments within a unified system.

They are strategies for re-coupling.


9. The illusion sustained

What persists through all this is not unity, but its appearance.

Because the coupling is:

  • continually reinforced
  • institutionally maintained
  • retrospectively naturalised

It becomes easier to assume:

meaning and value belong together.


But they do not.

They are made to.


10. The analytic shift

Once the mechanism is visible, the object changes.

We no longer ask:

  • What does this ritual mean?
  • What beliefs does this community hold?

We ask:

  • Where are the points of articulation?
  • What constraints shape the coupling?
  • How is the relation maintained, repaired, or transformed?

Religion disappears as a unified object.

What remains is a dynamic interface between systems.


11. Beyond religion

And with that, the final move begins to come into view.

Because nothing in this mechanism is unique to religion.

Wherever meaning and value appear fused—
in politics, culture, science—

we are likely dealing with the same structure:

coupling without ground,
sustained through repetition,
misrecognised as unity.


Next: Post 5 — Schism, Heresy, and the Dynamics of Misalignment

Where we stop treating religious conflict as disagreement in belief,
and start reading it as instability in the coupling itself.

Religion Without Unity: 3 Ritual Without Meaning

If myth does not bind, then something else must.

We now turn to ritual.

But not as symbol.
Not as expression.
Not as meaning enacted.

Those belong to the other side of the cut.

Here, ritual is approached on its own terms:

as a system of value coordination.


1. The interpretive reflex

Ritual is almost always explained by what it means:

  • a symbolic reenactment
  • a communication with the sacred
  • an embodiment of belief
  • a narrative in action

This reflex is so strong that ritual without meaning appears unintelligible—empty, mechanical, even absurd.

But this is precisely the effect of the illicit unity.

Meaning has been so tightly coupled to ritual that it is taken as its ground.

Remove that assumption, and a different object comes into view.


2. Ritual as coordination

At its most minimal, ritual does something very specific:

  • it synchronises bodies
  • it structures time
  • it organises space
  • it distributes roles and expectations

It establishes who does what, when, and how.

This is not symbolic.

It is coordination.


Ritual produces alignment:

  • between individuals
  • across groups
  • through repetition

It stabilises patterns of behaviour without requiring explanation.


3. No dependence on meaning

Once seen this way, a striking fact becomes unavoidable:

Ritual does not require meaning in order to function.

People can:

  • perform rituals they do not understand
  • repeat actions without symbolic interpretation
  • follow procedures without narrative justification

And the coordination still holds.

In some cases, it holds better.

Because ambiguity in meaning does not disrupt the pattern.


4. The persistence of form

Ritual is remarkably durable.

Forms persist:

  • after their meanings have faded
  • across radically different interpretations
  • even in the face of explicit disbelief

From the perspective of meaning, this looks like inertia or decay.

From the perspective of value, it is simply continuity of coordination.


5. Against symbolic reduction

A common move is to insist:

ritual must mean something, even if participants are unaware of it.

This preserves the primacy of meaning at all costs.

But it does so by reintroducing the very confusion we are trying to dissolve.

It treats coordination as if it were incomplete meaning,
rather than something different in kind.


The alternative is cleaner:

ritual coordinates whether or not it signifies.

Meaning may be coupled to it.

But it is not required.


6. The discipline of repetition

Ritual operates through repetition.

Not repetition of content—but repetition of form:

  • gestures
  • sequences
  • timings
  • relations between participants

Through repetition, expectations are stabilised.

Deviations become visible.

Norms emerge—not as meanings, but as patterns of permissible variation.


7. Participation before interpretation

Crucially, ritual does not begin with understanding.

It begins with participation.

One enters the pattern:

  • by doing
  • by following
  • by aligning

Only later—if at all—does interpretation arise.

And when it does, it belongs to a different system.


8. The illusion of expression

Why, then, does ritual appear to express meaning?

Because it is almost always encountered already coupled:

  • actions are narrated
  • gestures are explained
  • sequences are embedded in myth

Under these conditions, coordination is re-described as expression.

But this is a secondary construal.


Ritual does not express meaning.
Meaning is projected onto ritual.


9. Ritual in the absence of myth

When the coupling loosens, ritual becomes visible in its own right:

  • secular ceremonies
  • institutional protocols
  • everyday routines elevated to formality

These still coordinate.

They still align participants.

They still stabilise expectations.

Even when no shared myth sustains them.


10. The analytic consequence

If ritual does not depend on meaning, then it cannot be explained by:

  • belief
  • symbolism
  • narrative coherence

Those belong elsewhere.

What remains is more austere—and more powerful:

Ritual is a system that produces and maintains value through coordinated action.


11. The reversal

This allows a final reversal of a deeply held assumption:

It is not that people act because they believe.
It is that belief is often inferred because people act.

Participation comes first.

Meaning follows—if it does at all.


And with that, the second half of the illicit unity comes into view.

Meaning without binding.
Value without meaning.

Two systems.
Still no common ground.


Next: Post 4 — The Coupling Mechanism

Where we ask the forbidden question:

If meaning and value do not ground each other,
how do they come to appear as one?

Religion Without Unity: 2 Myth Without Binding

If religion is an illicit unity, then the first task is surgical:

to separate what has been made to appear inseparable.

We begin with myth.

Not as social glue.
Not as cultural memory.
Not as a tool for cohesion.

But as what it is, when stripped of these functions:

a semiotic system of construal.


1. The inherited mistake

Myth is almost always explained by what it does for society:

  • it binds communities
  • legitimises norms
  • stabilises identities
  • transmits values

Even when treated sympathetically, myth is cast as instrumental to social life.

This is the mistake.

It assumes, without argument, that meaning systems exist in order to coordinate value systems.

But once the illicit unity is cut, this assumption has nowhere to stand.


2. Myth as construal

Myth does something far more radical—and far more specific.

It brings forth worlds.

  • gods and spirits
  • origins and endings
  • forces, agencies, orders of existence

Not as representations of an independent reality,
but as phenomena constituted in and through construal.

This is first-order meaning.

There is no “underlying” myth separate from its construal.
No latent content waiting to be decoded.

Myth is not a container of meaning.

It is the actualisation of meaning.


3. No obligation to bind

Once understood this way, a striking consequence follows:

Myth has no intrinsic tendency to bind communities.

It does not:

  • require collective adherence
  • produce coordination
  • enforce participation

Those are operations of a different system.

Myth can circulate without stabilising anything socially.
It can proliferate, mutate, contradict, dissolve.

And often does.


4. The evidence already there

The moment you stop looking for cohesion, you start seeing dispersion everywhere:

  • multiple, incompatible myths coexisting within the same population
  • individuals drawing on fragments without commitment
  • narratives shifting across contexts without loss of intelligibility

From a value perspective, this looks like instability.

From a meaning perspective, it is simply variation within a semiotic potential.


5. Against symbolic reduction

A common rescue attempt is to say:

myths are “symbolic expressions” of social realities.

But this reverses the relation.

It treats meaning as secondary—an expression of something else (power, structure, material conditions).

In doing so, it collapses semiotic construal into value coordination.


The alternative is sharper:

social realities are also construed.

Not by myth alone, but through semiotic systems.

Which means myth is not expressing a prior social order.

It is operating in a different domain altogether.


6. Narrative without necessity

Freed from the demand to bind, myth becomes something else entirely:

  • a space of narrative experimentation
  • a proliferation of possible worlds
  • a field of semiotic variation

Contradiction is not a problem here.

It is a resource.

Multiple cosmologies can coexist because they are not required to resolve into a single coordinated order.


7. The illusion of coherence

So why does myth appear to hold societies together?

Because it is almost always encountered already coupled to value systems:

  • embedded in ritual
  • anchored in institutions
  • reinforced through authority

Under those conditions, its variability is constrained.

Its proliferation is channelled.

Its contradictions are managed.

And it begins to look like a coherent, shared worldview.


But this coherence is not a property of myth itself.

It is an effect of coupling.


8. Myth in the wild

When decoupled—even partially—myth behaves differently:

  • it fragments
  • hybridises
  • recombines across domains
  • detaches from institutional control

What emerges is not collapse, but expansion of semiotic possibility.

The system does not weaken.

It loosens.


9. The analytic consequence

If myth does not bind, then it cannot explain:

  • social cohesion
  • norm enforcement
  • institutional stability

Those belong elsewhere.

And with that, a large portion of explanatory discourse falls away:

  • “shared myths create shared values”
  • “narratives hold communities together”
  • “cultural stories underpin social order”

These are not wrong because they are false.

They are wrong because they conflate systems.


10. What remains

What remains is both narrower and more precise:

Myth is a semiotic system that actualises worlds through construal.

Nothing more.

Nothing less.


And this is not a diminishment.

It is a liberation.

Because once myth is no longer burdened with holding society together,
we can finally ask:

  • What kinds of worlds does it make possible?
  • How does it vary across contexts?
  • What constraints shape its actualisations?

Without smuggling in the demands of value.


Next: Post 3 — Ritual Without Meaning

Where we turn to the other side of the cut,
and strip value coordination of its symbolic alibi.