Monday, 27 April 2026

Does the past still exist? — The reification of representational retention into ontological persistence

Few questions feel as emotionally charged as this one. The past is not merely something we think about—it is something we live with. Memory, regret, history, identity: all seem to depend on what has already happened. From this arises a natural question: does the past still exist?

“Does the past still exist?” appears to ask whether past events continue to exist in some domain of reality, or whether they are gone entirely.

But this framing depends on a prior move: treating representational and causal continuity across states as if it required the ongoing existence of prior states as objects.

Once that move is examined, the question no longer concerns a hidden temporal reservoir. It reveals a familiar distortion: the reification of structured retention into ontological persistence.


1. The surface form of the question

“Does the past still exist?”

In its everyday philosophical form, this asks:

  • whether past events continue to exist in some sense
  • whether time is a collection of equally real slices
  • whether the present merely accesses what still is
  • whether history is ongoing rather than gone

It presupposes:

  • that existence applies uniformly across temporal positions
  • that “pastness” is a mode of being rather than a relation
  • that absence from present access implies non-existence
  • that temporal reference tracks ontological status

2. Hidden ontological commitments

For the question to stabilise, several assumptions must already be in place:

  • that existence is independent of relational accessibility
  • that temporal indexing corresponds to modes of being
  • that what is no longer accessible is no longer real
  • that representation requires ongoing existence of its referent
  • that memory implies persistence of remembered states

These assumptions convert relational trace-structures into surviving entities.


3. Stratal misalignment

Within relational ontology, the distortion involves reification, temporal flattening, and representational projection.

(a) Reification of the past

The past is treated as a domain of entities.

  • instead of prior states within relational unfolding
  • it becomes a region of continued existence

(b) Flattening of temporal structure

Temporal differentiation is converted into ontological difference.

  • “past,” “present,” and “future” are treated as modes of being
  • rather than relational positions within unfolding processes

(c) Projection from representation to ontology

Retention is mistaken for persistence.

  • because systems carry traces of prior states
  • those states are assumed to still exist somewhere

4. Relational re-description

If we remain within relational ontology, the past does not exist as a domain of continuing entities. Rather, what is called “the past” is the structured trace of prior relational actualisations within ongoing systems of constraint and transformation.

More precisely:

  • systems instantiate structured relations under constraint
  • as these systems evolve, prior configurations leave stabilised traces in subsequent states
  • these traces are materially and structurally real within present systems
  • what we call “the past” is the configuration of these traces as they are integrated into current relational states

From this perspective:

  • the past is not elsewhere
  • it is not a continuing domain
  • it is the present configuration of retained relational structure
  • existence applies to current instantiation, not to prior positions in isolation

Thus:

  • the past does not persist as a realm
  • it persists as structured imprint within ongoing processes

5. Dissolution of the problem-space

Once representational retention is no longer reified into ontological persistence, the question “Does the past still exist?” loses its structure.

It depends on:

  • treating temporal positions as modes of existence
  • assuming memory requires ongoing existence of its referents
  • converting traces into surviving entities
  • flattening relational unfolding into temporal domains

If these assumptions are withdrawn, there is no “past” to locate as an existing domain.

What disappears is not history, but the idea that it continues to exist elsewhere.


6. Residual attraction

The persistence of the question is entirely understandable.

It is sustained by:

  • the vividness of memory and imagination
  • the emotional reality of loss, regret, and nostalgia
  • the stability of recorded history and physical traces
  • philosophical pictures of time as a landscape of coexisting moments

Most importantly, the past feels present in its effects:

  • we are shaped by what has happened
  • traces remain active in current states

This encourages the impression that what shaped us must still, in some sense, be there.


Closing remark

“Does the past still exist?” appears to ask whether earlier moments of time continue to be real.

Under relational analysis, it reveals something more precise:
a reification of representational retention combined with a flattening of temporal structure and a projection of persistence from trace to ontology.

Once these moves are undone, the problem dissolves.

What remains is not a continuing past, but ongoing relational actualisation:
within which prior configurations persist only as structured traces within present systems—real in their effects, but not existing as a separate domain of being.

Is there a boundary between subject and object? — The hypostatisation of perspectival distinction into ontological division

Few distinctions feel as immediate—and as unquestioned—as this one. There is “me,” the one who perceives, thinks, and acts—and there is “the world,” what is perceived, thought about, and acted upon. From this basic orientation arises a familiar philosophical question: is the division between subject and object real?

“Is there a boundary between subject and object?” appears to ask whether this distinction reflects a fundamental split in reality.

But this framing depends on a prior move: treating a perspectival distinction within relational systems as if it were an ontological partition between two kinds of being.

Once that move is examined, the question no longer concerns a deep metaphysical divide. It reveals a familiar distortion: the hypostatisation of a functional distinction into a structural boundary.


1. The surface form of the question

“Is there a boundary between subject and object?”

In its everyday philosophical form, this asks:

  • whether the mind is separate from the world
  • whether perception bridges a gap between inner and outer
  • whether subjectivity and objectivity are fundamentally distinct
  • whether knowledge requires crossing this divide

It presupposes:

  • that subject and object are distinct entities
  • that they occupy separate domains
  • that relations between them must be mediated
  • that the boundary between them could be more or less permeable

2. Hidden ontological commitments

For the question to stabilise, several assumptions must already be in place:

  • that the subject is a self-contained locus of experience
  • that the object is an independently existing domain
  • that perception connects two pre-existing entities
  • that distinction implies separation
  • that relationality occurs between already constituted terms

These assumptions convert relational roles into ontological substances.


3. Stratal misalignment

Within relational ontology, the distortion involves reification, separation, and perspectival collapse.

(a) Reification of subject and object

Both are treated as entities.

  • instead of roles within relational processes
  • they become independent domains

(b) Imposition of boundary

Distinction is treated as division.

  • the functional differentiation within systems
  • is converted into a structural separation

(c) Collapse of perspective into ontology

A viewpoint-dependent distinction is universalised.

  • what arises within specific modes of construal
  • is treated as a feature of reality itself

4. Relational re-description

If we remain within relational ontology, there is no fundamental boundary between subject and object. Rather, the distinction arises as a perspectival articulation within relational systems engaged in construal.

More precisely:

  • systems instantiate structured relations under constraint
  • some systems develop capacities for modelling and differentiation
  • within these systems, distinctions emerge between:
    • the locus of construal (subject-position)
    • and what is construed (object-position)
  • these are roles within a relational configuration, not separate domains

From this perspective:

  • subject and object are co-constituted within the same relational field
  • the distinction is functional and perspectival
  • it does not imply ontological separation

Thus:

  • there is no boundary to cross
  • only a distinction enacted within ongoing relational processes

5. Dissolution of the problem-space

Once the subject–object distinction is no longer hypostatised, the question “Is there a boundary between subject and object?” loses its structure.

It depends on:

  • reifying relational roles into entities
  • converting distinction into division
  • projecting perspective into ontology
  • assuming mediation between separate domains

If these assumptions are withdrawn, there is no boundary to locate or dissolve.

What disappears is not differentiation, but the idea that it must take the form of separation.


6. Residual attraction

The persistence of the question is entirely understandable.

It is sustained by:

  • the immediacy of first-person experience
  • the apparent externality of the world
  • philosophical traditions of dualism
  • language that encodes subject–object distinctions

Most importantly, the distinction feels like a gap:

  • experience seems to occur “inside”
  • the world appears “outside”

This experiential structuring encourages ontological interpretation.


Closing remark

“Is there a boundary between subject and object?” appears to ask whether reality is divided into two domains.

Under relational analysis, it reveals something more precise:
a hypostatisation of a perspectival distinction, combined with a reification of relational roles and a projection of functional differentiation into ontological separation.

Once these moves are undone, the boundary dissolves.

What remains is a relational field:
within which subject and object are not separate regions of being, but dynamically enacted positions within the ongoing process of construal.

Are there possible worlds? — The reification of modal variation into ontological multiplicity

Few ideas have been as influential—and as quietly perplexing—as this one. In philosophy and logic, we speak of “possible worlds” to analyse necessity, contingency, and counterfactuals. From this practice arises a deeper question: do these possible worlds actually exist?

“Are there possible worlds?” appears to ask whether reality consists not only of what is actual, but of many equally real alternatives.

But this framing depends on a prior move: treating modal variation within systems as if it required the existence of multiple fully realised worlds.

Once that move is examined, the question no longer concerns a hidden plurality of realities. It reveals a familiar distortion: the reification of structured possibility into parallel ontological domains.


1. The surface form of the question

“Are there possible worlds?”

In its everyday philosophical form, this asks:

  • whether alternative ways things could have been actually exist
  • whether necessity and possibility require real worlds
  • whether our world is one among many
  • whether modal statements refer to concrete domains

It presupposes:

  • that possibilities must be realised somewhere
  • that modal reasoning requires ontological commitment
  • that “worlds” are the units of possibility

2. Hidden ontological commitments

For the question to stabilise, several assumptions must already be in place:

  • that possibility is a kind of existence
  • that variation requires instantiation in parallel domains
  • that modal language refers to entities
  • that completeness (a “world”) is required for coherence
  • that abstraction implies ontology

These assumptions convert modal structure into ontological population.


3. Stratal misalignment

Within relational ontology, the distortion involves reification, duplication, and modal inflation.

(a) Reification of possibility

Possibility is treated as a thing.

  • instead of structured potential within systems
  • it becomes something that must exist

(b) Duplication of reality

Alternatives are treated as parallel worlds.

  • instead of variations within a single relational field
  • they are projected as separate domains

(c) Modal inflation

Abstract tools are ontologised.

  • the usefulness of “possible worlds” in logic
  • is taken as evidence of their existence

4. Relational re-description

If we remain within relational ontology, there are no “possible worlds” as independent entities. Rather, possibility is structured variation within relational systems under constraint.

More precisely:

  • systems define patterns of constraint that shape how instantiation can occur
  • these constraints allow for multiple possible trajectories
  • modal reasoning articulates these variations abstractly
  • “possible worlds” are formal constructs used to organise these variations

From this perspective:

  • possibility does not require separate worlds
  • it exists as structured potential within systems
  • modal language tracks relations between actual and possible configurations

Thus:

  • “possible worlds” are not places
  • they are tools for modelling relational variation

5. Dissolution of the problem-space

Once possibility is no longer reified, the question “Are there possible worlds?” loses its structure.

It depends on:

  • treating possibility as existence
  • duplicating reality into parallel domains
  • inflating formal tools into ontology
  • assuming variation requires instantiation elsewhere

If these assumptions are withdrawn, there are no additional worlds to locate.

What disappears is not modality, but the idea that it must be grounded in multiple realities.


6. Residual attraction

The persistence of the idea is entirely understandable.

It is sustained by:

  • the success of possible-world semantics in logic
  • the intuitive sense that things could have been otherwise
  • the clarity of treating alternatives as complete scenarios
  • philosophical traditions of modal realism

Most importantly, “possible worlds” are useful:

  • they organise reasoning about necessity and contingency
  • they make complex modal relations tractable

This utility encourages ontological commitment.


Closing remark

“Are there possible worlds?” appears to ask whether reality includes multiple fully realised alternatives.

Under relational analysis, it reveals something more precise:
a reification of structured possibility, combined with a duplication of reality and an inflation of formal modelling tools into ontological claims.

Once these moves are undone, the plurality dissolves.

What remains is a single relational field:
within which structured variation gives rise to possibility—and within which “possible worlds” function not as additional realities, but as ways of articulating the space of what could be actualised.

Is reality fundamentally discrete or continuous? — The projection of representational format onto relational structure

Few questions sit as quietly at the foundations of science and philosophy as this one. At the smallest scales, reality sometimes appears granular—quantised, countable. At larger scales, it appears smooth—continuous, flowing. From this tension arises a familiar metaphysical question: is reality ultimately discrete or continuous?

“Is reality fundamentally discrete or continuous?” appears to ask which of these two descriptions captures the true structure of the world.

But this framing depends on a prior move: treating discreteness and continuity as properties of reality itself, rather than as features of how relational structure is modelled and construed.

Once that move is examined, the question no longer selects between two ontological options. It reveals a familiar distortion: the projection of representational formats onto the relational organisation they describe.


1. The surface form of the question

“Is reality fundamentally discrete or continuous?”

In its everyday philosophical and scientific form, this asks:

  • whether the world is made of indivisible units or smooth continua
  • whether change occurs in jumps or flows
  • whether space, time, or matter are granular at the deepest level
  • whether one description is more fundamental than the other

It presupposes:

  • that discreteness and continuity are properties of reality
  • that they are mutually exclusive
  • that one must be more basic than the other

2. Hidden ontological commitments

For the question to stabilise, several assumptions must already be in place:

  • that representational schemes map directly onto ontology
  • that mathematical form determines metaphysical structure
  • that granularity and smoothness are intrinsic features of what exists
  • that modelling choices reveal underlying reality
  • that a single descriptive format must be fundamental

These assumptions convert modes of description into properties of being.


3. Stratal misalignment

Within relational ontology, the distortion involves projection, reification, and forced exclusivity.

(a) Projection of representation onto reality

Descriptive frameworks are treated as ontological facts.

  • discrete models and continuous models are taken as literal structures of the world
  • rather than tools for articulating relational organisation

(b) Reification of mathematical form

Formal properties are treated as features of being.

  • countability or continuity is assigned to reality itself
  • rather than to systems of formalisation

(c) Forced exclusivity

Discrete and continuous are treated as incompatible.

  • as if one must exclude the other
  • rather than recognising them as different construals of the same relational structure

4. Relational re-description

If we remain within relational ontology, reality is neither fundamentally discrete nor continuous. Rather, these are modes of construal applied to structured relational systems under constraint.

More precisely:

  • systems instantiate relations with patterns of variation and stability
  • these patterns can be construed in different ways depending on scale, purpose, and formal framework
  • discrete descriptions stabilise distinctions and countable units
  • continuous descriptions stabilise smooth variation and transformation

From this perspective:

  • discreteness and continuity are not properties of reality in itself
  • they are complementary ways of organising relational structure within different modelling systems

Thus:

  • neither is more fundamental
  • both arise from how relational patterns are articulated under constraint

5. Dissolution of the problem-space

Once representational formats are no longer projected onto ontology, the question “Is reality fundamentally discrete or continuous?” loses its structure.

It depends on:

  • treating models as mirrors of reality
  • reifying mathematical properties
  • forcing a binary between descriptive frameworks
  • assuming a single privileged representation

If these assumptions are withdrawn, there is no exclusive choice to make.

What disappears is not structure, but the demand that it conform to one representational mode.


6. Residual attraction

The persistence of the question is entirely understandable.

It is sustained by:

  • the success of discrete and continuous models in physics and mathematics
  • apparent tensions between quantum and classical descriptions
  • the intuitive contrast between countable objects and smooth change
  • philosophical traditions seeking ultimate structure

Most importantly, both frameworks work:

  • each captures real patterns effectively
  • each seems to reveal something fundamental

This encourages the belief that one must be ontologically primary.


Closing remark

“Is reality fundamentally discrete or continuous?” appears to ask which description captures the true nature of the world.

Under relational analysis, it reveals something more precise:
a projection of representational form onto relational structure, combined with a reification of mathematical properties and a forced exclusivity between descriptive frameworks.

Once these moves are undone, the opposition dissolves.

What remains is a relational field:
within which structured patterns can be construed discretely or continuously—neither as the nature of reality itself, but as ways of articulating its organisation under different constraints.

What is consciousness? — The misplacement of awareness into a substance rather than a relational field of construal

Few questions feel as intimate—and as intractable—as this one. Consciousness seems immediately given: there is something it is like to be here, now. Yet when we try to explain it, it resists reduction, classification, or localisation. From this tension arises the familiar question: what is consciousness?

“What is consciousness?” appears to ask for the underlying nature of subjective experience.

But this framing depends on a prior move: treating consciousness as a thing or substance that must be explained, located, or generated.

Once that move is examined, the question no longer seeks an underlying object. It reveals a familiar distortion: the reification of relational construal into an inner entity called “consciousness.”


1. The surface form of the question

“What is consciousness?”

In its everyday philosophical form, this asks:

  • what subjective experience consists of
  • whether consciousness is physical, computational, or non-physical
  • how awareness arises from matter
  • whether consciousness can be reduced or explained

It presupposes:

  • that consciousness is a thing that exists
  • that it must have an underlying mechanism
  • that it arises from or belongs to a particular substrate
  • that it can be located in a system

2. Hidden ontological commitments

For the question to stabilise, several assumptions must already be in place:

  • that experience is an object-like inner domain
  • that “having consciousness” is a property of systems
  • that awareness is separable from the processes that enact it
  • that explanation requires identifying a generating mechanism
  • that subjectivity must correspond to a thing in the world

These assumptions convert relational enactment into inner substance.


3. Stratal misalignment

Within relational ontology, the distortion involves reification, internalisation, and localisation error.

(a) Reification of consciousness

Consciousness is treated as an entity.

  • instead of a relational field of construal
  • it becomes a thing that must be explained

(b) Internalisation of experience

Experience is placed inside a subject.

  • rather than arising across system–environment relations
  • it becomes an inner theatre

(c) Localisation error

Consciousness is assumed to be located somewhere.

  • in brains, computations, or substrates
  • ignoring that location presupposes construal itself

4. Relational re-description

If we remain within relational ontology, consciousness is not a thing. It is a dynamic field of relational construal enacted through structured coupling between systems and their environments under constraint.

More precisely:

  • systems instantiate structured relations under constraint
  • some systems develop complex internal modelling and recursive sensitivity
  • these systems engage in continuous construal of their relational environment
  • what is called “consciousness” is the ongoing actualisation of this construal field

From this perspective:

  • consciousness is not generated like a product
  • nor located like an object
  • it is a mode of relational engagement in which construal becomes globally integrated and recursively available within the system

Thus:

  • consciousness is not inside the system
  • it is what the system is doing when it is actively constraining, modelling, and re-actualising its relational coupling with the world

5. Dissolution of the problem-space

Once consciousness is no longer treated as a substance, the question “What is consciousness?” loses its structure.

It depends on:

  • reifying experience as object
  • internalising awareness into a domain
  • localising it within a system
  • assuming it requires a generating mechanism

If these assumptions are withdrawn, there is no hidden entity to define or locate.

What disappears is not experience, but the demand that it be explained as a thing.


6. Residual attraction

The persistence of the question is entirely understandable.

It is sustained by:

  • the immediacy and vividness of experience
  • the apparent unity of subjective awareness
  • neuroscientific models that localise function in systems
  • philosophical intuitions about the “inner life”

Most importantly, consciousness feels like a place:

  • there is a sense of being “inside” experience
  • as if perception occurs within a bounded field

This experiential framing encourages reification.


Closing remark

“What is consciousness?” appears to ask for the substance of subjective experience.

Under relational analysis, it reveals something more precise:
a reification of a distributed construal process, combined with internalisation of experience and a localisation error that treats relational coupling as inner objecthood.

Once these moves are undone, consciousness is not explained as a thing.

It is re-situated:
as a dynamic, relational field of construal—emerging through structured coupling, recursively enacted within systems, and never separate from the relational processes that continuously actualise it.

What is knowledge? — The conflation of relational stability with stored possession

Few questions appear as foundational to philosophy, science, and everyday life as this one. We speak of knowing facts, knowing how to act, knowing the world. Knowledge seems like something we acquire, store, and refine over time.

“What is knowledge?” appears to ask for the nature of this possession-like relation to truth.

But this framing depends on a prior move: treating knowledge as a kind of object—something held by a subject rather than something enacted within relational systems.

Once that move is examined, the question no longer seeks a definition of mental contents. It reveals a familiar distortion: the reification of stabilised relational performance into stored possession.


1. The surface form of the question

“What is knowledge?”

In its everyday philosophical form, this asks:

  • what distinguishes knowledge from belief or opinion
  • whether knowledge is justified true belief or something more
  • whether knowledge is internal (mental) or external (worldly)
  • whether knowledge can be certain or fallible

It presupposes:

  • that knowledge is a thing a subject has
  • that it can be defined by necessary and sufficient conditions
  • that it exists independently of its use
  • that truth is a property added to belief

2. Hidden ontological commitments

For the question to stabilise, several assumptions must already be in place:

  • that cognition is a container of representational states
  • that knowledge is a stable object within that container
  • that truth is a correspondence relation between mental items and world
  • that justification is an external certification of internal content
  • that knowing is separable from doing or acting

These assumptions convert relational competence into internal inventory.


3. Stratal misalignment

Within relational ontology, the distortion involves reification, internalisation, and separation of performance from system.

(a) Reification of knowledge

Knowledge is treated as an object.

  • instead of a stabilised pattern of relational engagement
  • it becomes a thing possessed by a subject

(b) Internalisation of truth

Truth is located inside mental representations.

  • rather than arising from constrained relational fit within systems of practice
  • it becomes a property of internal states

(c) Separation of knowing from doing

Knowing is detached from action.

  • as if knowledge could exist independently of the practices it enables
  • rather than being enacted through them

4. Relational re-description

If we remain within relational ontology, knowledge is not an object possessed by a subject. It is a stabilised pattern of successful relational engagement within structured systems of practice under constraint.

More precisely:

  • systems instantiate structured relations under constraint
  • organisms participate in these systems through perception, action, and construal
  • over time, certain patterns of engagement become stabilised and reliable
  • these patterns allow consistent navigation of relational environments

From this perspective:

  • knowing is not storing representations
  • it is the capacity for successful, repeatable coordination within relational structure
  • “truth” is not a property of internal states
  • it is the stability of fit between action, construal, and system constraint

Thus:

  • knowledge is not what we have
  • it is what we can reliably do within structured environments

5. Dissolution of the problem-space

Once knowledge is no longer treated as a thing, the question “What is knowledge?” loses its structure.

It depends on:

  • reifying knowledge as object
  • internalising truth as mental property
  • separating cognition from action
  • treating justification as external certification

If these assumptions are withdrawn, there is no static entity to define.

What disappears is not cognition, but the idea that it must be modelled as possession.


6. Residual attraction

The persistence of the question is entirely understandable.

It is sustained by:

  • educational systems that treat knowledge as transferable content
  • language that encodes knowledge as nouns (“a body of knowledge”)
  • epistemological traditions centred on belief states
  • the apparent stability of expertise and skill

Most importantly, knowledge feels like possession:

  • we “have” information
  • we “learn” facts and retain them
  • forgetting feels like loss of something

This experiential framing encourages reification.


Closing remark

“What is knowledge?” appears to ask for the nature of what we possess when we know.

Under relational analysis, it reveals something more precise:
a reification of stabilised relational competence, combined with an internalisation of truth and a separation of knowing from doing.

Once these moves are undone, knowledge is not defined as an object.

It is re-situated:
as a dynamic, stabilised capacity for coordinated engagement within structured relational systems—continuously enacted, context-sensitive, and inseparable from the practices through which it is actualised.

What is meaning? — The projection of semantic stability onto relational processes of construal

Few questions seem more fundamental to human reflection than this one. Meaning appears everywhere: in language, in life, in action, in experience. Yet when pressed, it becomes strangely elusive. We ask: what is meaning, really?

“What is meaning?” appears to ask for the essence of significance itself.

But this framing depends on a prior move: treating meaning as a substance-like entity that must be defined, located, or reduced to a single underlying feature.

Once that move is examined, the question no longer seeks a hidden essence. It reveals a familiar distortion: the reification of relational construal into a stable object called “meaning.”


1. The surface form of the question

“What is meaning?”

In its everyday philosophical form, this asks:

  • what significance fundamentally consists of
  • whether meaning is mental, linguistic, or worldly
  • whether meaning is subjective or objective
  • whether meaning exists independently of interpretation

It presupposes:

  • that meaning is a thing that can be defined
  • that it has an underlying essence
  • that it must be located in one domain (mind, language, world)
  • that meaning exists prior to its use

2. Hidden ontological commitments

For the question to stabilise, several assumptions must already be in place:

  • that meaning is an entity rather than a process
  • that signs carry meaning like objects carry properties
  • that interpretation is secondary to pre-existing significance
  • that language refers to meaning rather than enacts it
  • that meaning must be unified across contexts

These assumptions convert relational activity into static content.


3. Stratal misalignment

Within relational ontology, the distortion involves reification, inversion, and detachment of construal.

(a) Reification of meaning

Meaning is treated as a thing.

  • instead of an effect of relational organisation
  • it becomes a substance to be located

(b) Inversion of process and product

Outcome is treated as prior to process.

  • meaning appears as something that expressions “carry”
  • rather than something produced through construal

(c) Detachment from systems of use

Meaning is separated from its conditions of actualisation.

  • language is treated as pointing toward meaning
  • rather than enacting meaning within systems of practice

4. Relational re-description

If we remain within relational ontology, meaning is not an entity. It is a relational effect of construal arising within structured systems of semiotic and social organisation under constraint.

More precisely:

  • systems instantiate structured relations under constraint
  • within semiotic systems, patterns of variation are stabilised through use
  • construal selects and organises these patterns into interpretable configurations
  • meaning emerges from this ongoing process of relational articulation

From this perspective:

  • meaning is not contained in words
  • nor located in minds or objects
  • it arises in the event of construal itself
  • across interacting systems of language, context, and practice

Thus:

  • meaning is not a thing we find
  • it is a relational achievement we enact

5. Dissolution of the problem-space

Once meaning is no longer treated as an object, the question “What is meaning?” loses its structure.

It depends on:

  • reifying meaning as substance
  • detaching it from processes of construal
  • assuming it must be located in one domain
  • treating language as a carrier rather than an enactment

If these assumptions are withdrawn, there is no hidden essence of meaning to uncover.

What disappears is not significance, but the expectation that it must take the form of a definable object.


6. Residual attraction

The persistence of the question is entirely understandable.

It is sustained by:

  • dictionaries and definitions that treat meaning as definable content
  • translation and interpretation practices that stabilise equivalence
  • the apparent stability of reference in everyday language
  • philosophical traditions seeking semantic foundations

Most importantly, meaning feels like something present:

  • we experience understanding as an achieved state
  • words appear to “have” meaning

This experiential stability encourages reification.


Closing remark

“What is meaning?” appears to ask for the essence of significance.

Under relational analysis, it reveals something more precise:
a reification of a dynamic construal process, combined with an inversion of process into product and a detachment of meaning from its conditions of actualisation.

Once these moves are undone, meaning is not defined.

It is re-situated:
as a relational event of construal—emerging through structured systems of language and practice, continuously enacted rather than possessed, and never separable from the conditions in which it arises.

Can something come from nothing? — The illicit importation of generative transition into the absence of relational structure

Few questions feel as stark—and as paradoxical—as this one. It presses directly on the boundary of explanation: if there were ever nothing, how could anything arise from it? If something exists now, must it always have existed in some form?

“Can something come from nothing?” appears to ask whether being can emerge from non-being.

But this framing depends on a prior move: treating “nothing” as if it were a state capable of undergoing transformation.

Once that move is examined, the question no longer marks a deep metaphysical mystery. It reveals a familiar distortion: the insertion of generative structure into what is defined precisely by its absence.


1. The surface form of the question

“Can something come from nothing?”

In its everyday philosophical form, this asks:

  • whether existence can arise without cause or prior conditions
  • whether the universe could have emerged from nothing
  • whether creation ex nihilo is possible
  • whether something must always have existed

It presupposes:

  • that “nothing” is a state
  • that transitions can occur from it
  • that “coming from” applies across being and non-being

2. Hidden ontological commitments

For the question to stabilise, several assumptions must already be in place:

  • that absence can function as a starting point
  • that generative relations can operate without structure
  • that “nothing” can be placed within a temporal or causal sequence
  • that being and non-being are comparable positions within a shared frame
  • that transformation can apply across the boundary of existence

These assumptions convert a limit concept into a generative condition.


3. Stratal misalignment

Within relational ontology, the distortion involves reification, transpositional error, and generative projection.

(a) Reification of nothing

“Nothing” is treated as a state.

  • instead of the absence of relational specification
  • it becomes something from which processes could begin

(b) Transposition of generative relations

Causal and temporal structures are extended illegitimately.

  • “coming from” presupposes a relational system of transformation
  • this structure is projected onto the absence of all such systems

(c) Projection of generation onto absence

Becoming is applied where no conditions for becoming exist.

  • generation requires constraint and relation
  • both are absent in “nothing”

4. Relational re-description

If we remain within relational ontology, something does not come from nothing. Rather, the very notion of “coming from nothing” is incoherent because generative relations presuppose structured systems of constraint.

More precisely:

  • generation, causation, and transformation occur within relational systems
  • these systems define the conditions under which anything can be actualised
  • “nothing” does not define such a system
  • therefore, no relational transition can originate from it

From this perspective:

  • “coming from” only applies within structured relational fields
  • it cannot bridge the absence of all structure
  • the question attempts to apply a relation where no relations exist

Thus:

  • it is not that something cannot come from nothing
  • it is that the phrase fails to specify a coherent relational scenario

5. Dissolution of the problem-space

Once generative relations are no longer projected onto absence, the question “Can something come from nothing?” loses its structure.

It depends on:

  • treating nothing as a state
  • extending causal language beyond its domain
  • assuming transformation without structure
  • placing absence within a temporal sequence

If these assumptions are withdrawn, there is no transition to evaluate.

What disappears is not explanation, but the illusion of a boundary-crossing event.


6. Residual attraction

The persistence of the question is entirely understandable.

It is sustained by:

  • the intuitive demand for origins
  • the structure of causal explanation (“everything must come from something”)
  • cosmological speculation about beginnings
  • linguistic symmetry between “something” and “nothing”

Most importantly, “nothing” feels like a conceivable starting point:

  • we imagine emptiness
  • we subtract all contents

But these operations occur within systems of construal—they do not access absolute absence.


Closing remark

“Can something come from nothing?” appears to ask whether being can arise from non-being.

Under relational analysis, it reveals something more precise:
a reification of absence combined with a transposition of generative relations and a projection of transformation onto the absence of all relational structure.

Once these moves are undone, the paradox dissolves.

What remains is a simple constraint:
generation only occurs within structured relational systems—and “nothing” is not one of them.

Is information a fundamental building block of reality? — The reification of descriptive abstraction into ontological substrate

Few contemporary ideas have travelled as quickly from technical usage to metaphysical claim as this one. Across physics, biology, and computing, “information” appears everywhere—encoded in DNA, transmitted through signals, measured in bits. From this ubiquity arises a bold suggestion: perhaps reality is fundamentally made of information.

“Is information a fundamental building block of reality?” appears to ask whether information underlies everything that exists.

But this framing depends on a prior move: treating information as a substance-like entity rather than a relational description of structured difference.

Once that move is examined, the question no longer identifies a deeper layer of reality. It reveals a familiar distortion: the elevation of an abstraction into an ontological primitive.


1. The surface form of the question

“Is information a fundamental building block of reality?”

In its everyday philosophical form, this asks:

  • whether everything is ultimately reducible to information
  • whether physical systems are manifestations of informational structure
  • whether information is more basic than matter or energy
  • whether reality is fundamentally computational or encoded

It presupposes:

  • that information is a thing that can exist
  • that it can serve as a substrate of reality
  • that descriptive terms can denote ontological primitives

2. Hidden ontological commitments

For the question to stabilise, several assumptions must already be in place:

  • that patterns of difference can be treated as entities
  • that abstraction reveals underlying substance
  • that information can exist independently of systems that encode or interpret it
  • that measurement and ontology coincide
  • that explanatory success implies ontological fundamentality

These assumptions convert a relational descriptor into a building block.


3. Stratal misalignment

Within relational ontology, the distortion involves reification, abstraction inversion, and detachment.

(a) Reification of information

Information is treated as a thing.

  • instead of a measure or description of structured difference
  • it becomes a substance-like entity

(b) Inversion of abstraction

Higher-level description is treated as foundational.

  • informational descriptions are elevated above the systems they describe
  • abstraction is mistaken for ontological priority

(c) Detachment from relational systems

Information is separated from its conditions.

  • encoding, transmission, and interpretation are ignored
  • as if information could exist independently

4. Relational re-description

If we remain within relational ontology, information is not a building block of reality. It is a descriptor of structured differences within systems of constraint, articulated through specific modes of construal.

More precisely:

  • systems instantiate structured relations under constraint
  • differences within these structures can be stabilised and measured
  • “information” refers to these differences as they are:
    • encoded within systems
    • transmitted across relations
    • interpreted within construal frameworks

From this perspective:

  • information does not exist independently of systems
  • it is not a substrate from which reality is built
  • it is a way of describing relational structure under particular constraints

Thus:

  • informational accounts are powerful because they capture patterns of organisation
  • not because they reveal a deeper ontological layer

5. Dissolution of the problem-space

Once information is no longer reified, the question “Is information a fundamental building block of reality?” loses its structure.

It depends on:

  • treating information as an entity
  • inverting abstraction into foundation
  • detaching description from system
  • assuming that explanatory success implies ontological primacy

If these assumptions are withdrawn, there is no informational substrate to identify.

What disappears is not informational description, but the idea that it must ground reality.


6. Residual attraction

The persistence of the idea is entirely understandable.

It is sustained by:

  • the success of information theory across disciplines
  • the central role of encoding and transmission in biological and technological systems
  • the abstraction power of informational models
  • philosophical trends toward computational and digital metaphors

Most importantly, information feels fundamental:

  • it appears across levels
  • it unifies diverse phenomena

This cross-domain applicability encourages ontological elevation.


Closing remark

“Is information a fundamental building block of reality?” appears to ask whether everything reduces to information.

Under relational analysis, it reveals something more precise:
a reification of descriptive abstraction, combined with an inversion of abstraction into ontological priority and a detachment from relational systems.

Once these moves are undone, information is not diminished.

It is re-situated:
as a relational descriptor of structured difference—powerful because it tracks patterns across systems, but not itself a substance from which those systems are made.