Sunday, 7 June 2026

Interpersonal Meaning as Enactment 9. Interpersonal meaning as constrained enactment space

This series began with a deceptively simple question.

What happens if interpersonal meaning is no longer understood through the ontology of exchange?

For much of the history of systemic functional linguistics, the interpersonal metafunction has been described through the language of giving and demanding. Questions are said to demand information. Statements give information. Commands demand goods-and-services. Offers provide them.

This vocabulary has proven remarkably productive. It captures important regularities in discourse and provides a powerful descriptive framework for analysing interaction.

Yet it also carries a persistent assumption:

that interpersonal meaning involves the exchange of something between participants.

The purpose of this series has not been to reject the descriptive achievements of the exchange model.

It has been to ask what becomes visible when exchange ceases to function as the underlying ontology.

The answer, we have argued, is enactment.

From exchange to enactment

The central claim developed throughout this series can be stated simply:

interpersonal meaning is not the transfer of meanings between participants. It is the enactment of relational configurations.

When participants speak, they do not exchange semantic objects.

They configure relations.

These configurations establish structured possibilities for how participants may continue, respond, align, resist, commit, withdraw, accept, refuse, challenge, or comply.

Meaning is not something that moves between interlocutors.

Meaning is something that happens to the relation.

The emergence of enactment space

Once interpersonal meaning is understood as enactment, a second concept becomes necessary.

No enactment occurs in isolation.

Every enactment simultaneously opens and constrains a field of possible continuations.

Questions make some responses relevant and others problematic.

Statements position participants within structures of commitment and uptake.

Offers establish conditional possibilities for future action.

Commands reorganise the field of responsiveness and authority.

These observations led to the concept of enactment space:

the relational field of possibilities and constraints configured through interpersonal meaning.

Enactment space is not a container within which interaction occurs.

It is constituted by interaction itself.

Every speech function restructures this space in particular ways.

Reciprocity as a foundational condition

A crucial step in the argument was the recognition that no speech function can be understood from a single participant position.

Interpersonal meaning is inherently reciprocal.

Questions position both questioner and respondent.

Statements position both speaker and addressee.

Offers position both provider and potential recipient.

Commands position both authority and responder.

This reciprocity does not imply symmetry.

On the contrary, interpersonal meaning frequently operates through asymmetrical positioning.

But asymmetry itself presupposes reciprocity.

There can be no asymmetrical relation without a relation.

Speech functions as regions of enactment space

From this perspective, speech functions cease to appear as exchanges of different kinds of content.

Instead, they emerge as distinct regions within enactment space.

Questions structure answerability space.

They distribute accountability for continuation.

Statements structure responsibility space.

They distribute commitment and its consequences.

Offers structure possibility space.

They distribute conditional availability and future-oriented relational potential.

Commands structure the asymmetry frontier.

They distribute responsiveness under conditions of differential authority and entitlement.

What distinguishes these speech functions is not what they exchange, but how they configure relational possibility.

Constraint as constitutive

The series then expanded beyond speech functions themselves.

If enactment space is continually structured through interpersonal meaning, what determines which configurations become available, legitimate, or effective?

The answer was not individual intention, nor grammatical form alone.

It was constraint.

Tenor was introduced as a primary source of interpersonal constraint.

Status, role, legitimacy, and entitlement condition what kinds of enactment can successfully occur.

The same question, statement, offer, or command does not configure the same enactment space in all circumstances.

Its force depends upon the relational conditions within which it is enacted.

Constraint is therefore not external to interpersonal meaning.

It is one of the conditions of its existence.

Stabilisation and recurrence

The final step involved moving from local enactments to recurrent social configurations.

Interpersonal life is not composed of isolated events.

It consists of recurring situation types within which certain enactment-space profiles become stabilised.

Participants learn what kinds of accountability, commitment, possibility, and responsiveness are likely to occur in particular contexts.

Through repetition, these expectations sediment into recognisable patterns.

From an interpersonal perspective, register can be understood as the recurrent stabilisation of enactment-space configurations across situation types.

This stabilisation does not eliminate variability.

It makes variability socially intelligible.

A reconstructed view of interpersonal meaning

The argument of the series can now be stated in its most general form:

interpersonal meaning is the constrained structuring of enactment space.

Speech functions are not mechanisms for exchanging meanings.

They are recurrent ways of organising relational possibility.

Tenor does not merely influence interpersonal meaning.

It conditions the field within which interpersonal meaning can be enacted.

Situation types do not simply provide settings for interaction.

They stabilise characteristic configurations of enactment space across recurring social circumstances.

The result is a model in which interpersonal meaning appears not as transfer, but as relational organisation under constraint.

What this reconstruction does—and does not—claim

It is important to be clear about the scope of the argument.

Nothing in this reconstruction denies the usefulness of concepts such as giving, demanding, offering, or commanding as descriptive categories.

Nor does it deny the observable regularities that led to the exchange model in the first place.

Questions still tend to be followed by answers.

Statements still tend to be followed by uptake.

Commands still tend to be followed by compliance or refusal.

Offers still tend to be followed by acceptance or rejection.

What changes is the explanatory framework.

Exchange becomes a description of recurrent interactional patterns.

Enactment becomes the underlying relational process through which those patterns arise.

Beyond exchange

Perhaps the most significant consequence of this reconstruction is that it returns the interpersonal metafunction to its own foundational characterisation.

The interpersonal metafunction is commonly described as language functioning as action, negotiation, and enactment of social relations.

The concept of exchange captured part of that reality.

But it also risked reifying meaning into something transferable between participants.

A relational account suggests a different emphasis.

Interpersonal meaning is not primarily about moving meanings between people.

It is about configuring the relations within which people participate.

What language enacts is not an exchange.

It is a structured field of relational possibilities.

And it is within that field that social life unfolds.

Interpersonal Meaning as Enactment 8. Situation type and registerial stabilisation

In the previous post, tenor was introduced as a set of constraints on enactment space. Status, role, legitimacy, and entitlement were shown to condition what kinds of speech functions can successfully configure interpersonal relations, and how strongly they do so.

We now shift one further step outward in abstraction.

If tenor constrains enactment space, and speech functions structure it, then we must ask:

why do certain configurations of enactment space recur in stable, recognisable ways across situations?

The answer lies in situation type and registerial stabilisation.

From single enactments to recurrent configurations

Up to this point, we have primarily analysed individual speech functions as discrete enactments within constrained space.

But interpersonal life is not a sequence of isolated acts. It consists of patterned recurrences:

  • classroom interactions

  • courtroom proceedings

  • clinical consultations

  • casual conversations

  • institutional briefings

  • service encounters

These are not merely collections of utterances. They are stabilised configurations of enactment space.

Each situation type tends to favour particular distributions of:

  • accountability

  • commitment

  • possibility

  • responsiveness

and to suppress others.

Situation type viewed interpersonally

Situation types are not exhausted by interpersonal relations.

Within systemic functional linguistics, situation types are construed through the simultaneous organisation of field, tenor, and mode.

Viewed ideationally, situation types may be understood in terms of recurrent activities, experiences, and domains of social action.

Viewed textually, they may be understood in terms of recurrent patterns of semiotic organisation and communicative channel.

The present series adopts an interpersonal perspective.

Accordingly, situation types are examined here insofar as they stabilise particular configurations of enactment space.

This is not a reduction of situation type to tenor. Rather, it is a selective perspective on situation type motivated by the present object of inquiry: interpersonal meaning.

Situation type as structured recurrence

From an interpersonal perspective, a situation type can be understood as:

a recurrent configuration of tenor constraints and enactment-space profiles.

It is not defined solely by the specific participants involved, but by the regularities through which interpersonal positioning is repeatedly organised.

For example:

In a classroom situation type:

  • questions are recurrently used to structure accountability

  • statements are recurrently used to structure epistemic commitment

  • commands are recurrently used to structure behavioural responsiveness

  • offers are relatively constrained and asymmetrically distributed

In a clinical consultation:

  • questions are strongly asymmetrically allocated to institutional authority

  • statements are heavily weighted toward diagnostic commitment

  • offers are tightly regulated by professional entitlement

  • commands are rare but highly consequential when they occur

These are not incidental patterns. They are stabilised enactment-space profiles.

Register as stabilised enactment space

Register can now be reconceived from an interpersonal perspective as:

the stabilisation of enactment-space configurations across recurrent situation types.

Rather than treating register simply as a linguistic variety associated with context, we may view it as:

  • a patterned clustering of speech functions

  • under recurrent tenor constraints

  • producing recognisable enactment-space profiles

Register is therefore not merely a property of language. It is also a property of recurrently stabilised interpersonal configuration.

Stabilisation through repetition

How do such configurations stabilise?

Not through abstraction, but through recurrence.

When similar tenor conditions repeatedly give rise to similar enactment patterns, those patterns become sedimented as expectations.

Participants come to anticipate:

  • who will ask questions

  • who will issue directives

  • who will make commitments

  • who will extend offers

  • what counts as legitimate response

These expectations are not external to interaction. They are part of what makes interaction intelligible as belonging to a particular situation type.

Stabilisation is therefore a process of constrained repetition within enactment space.

Why situation types cannot be reduced to subject matter

Situation types are often described in terms of subject matter:

  • education

  • medicine

  • law

  • politics

Such descriptions are useful, but they foreground the field dimension of context.

From an interpersonal perspective, however, what distinguishes situation types is not primarily what is being talked about, but how enactment space is structured and distributed among participants.

The same subject matter may occur across different situation types while generating radically different interpersonal configurations.

For example, health may be discussed in:

  • casual conversation (relatively symmetrical distributions of accountability and commitment)

  • clinical consultation (institutionally constrained accountability and commitment)

  • policy discussion (collective responsibility and distributed commitment)

What changes is not merely the topic, but the organisation of enactment space.

Register as probability structure

We can further refine the notion of register by treating it as a probability structure over enactment space.

A register does not determine what must occur. It makes certain configurations more likely and others less likely.

It biases:

  • which speech functions are selected

  • how strongly they are interpreted

  • how tenor constraints are activated

  • how responses are distributed across participants

Register is therefore not deterministic. It is a probabilistic stabilisation of relational patterns.

Enactment space, tenor, and stabilisation

We now have a layered model.

Speech functions structure enactment space locally.

Tenor constrains enactment space relationally.

Situation types stabilise recurrent patterns of contextual organisation.

Register emerges as the recurrent patterning of interpersonal possibilities associated with those situation types.

Together, these levels describe how interpersonal meaning becomes both dynamic and recognisable.

Why stabilisation matters

Without stabilisation, enactment space would remain too fluid to support social intelligibility.

Participants would lack reliable expectations about:

  • who is accountable

  • who is responsible

  • what is possible

  • what counts as legitimate response

Stabilisation does not eliminate variability. It structures it.

It allows enactment space to become both constrained and navigable.

Looking ahead

If interpersonal meaning is enacted through structured speech functions, constrained by tenor, and stabilised through situation types into registerial patterns, then the final question concerns synthesis.

The concluding post turns to:

interpersonal meaning as constrained enactment space

Here, the full architecture of the series is brought together into a single formulation.

Interpersonal Meaning as Enactment 7. Tenor as constraint on enactment space

In the previous posts, we have progressively differentiated enactment space into a set of distinct relational configurations.

Questions structure answerability space.

Statements structure responsibility space.

Offers structure possibility space.

Commands structure the asymmetry frontier of constrained responsiveness.

Each of these speech functions was shown not as a transfer of meaning, but as a specific organisation of relational positioning.

We now shift the level of analysis.

Instead of asking how different speech functions structure enactment space, we ask:

what constrains enactment space itself?

The answer, within the present framework, is tenor.

From speech functions to constraint conditions

Up to this point, speech functions have been treated as operators within enactment space. They configure how participants are positioned in relation to accountability, commitment, possibility, and responsiveness.

However, not all enactments are equally available in all contexts.

The same speech function may be:

  • legitimate in one setting,

  • inappropriate in another,

  • forceful in one relation,

  • inert in another.

This variation cannot be explained by speech function alone. It requires a higher-order concept:

constraint on enactment space.

Tenor names the primary locus of such constraint.

Tenor as relational structuring

Tenor is not a background “context” added to discourse.

It is the structured configuration of social relations that conditions what kinds of enactment are possible between participants.

Within this framework, tenor does not determine what is said. It conditions what can be enacted as a valid relational move.

It operates by structuring:

  • status relations

  • role distributions

  • degrees of familiarity or distance

  • institutional positioning

  • entitlements to initiate, respond, or resist

These are not external factors acting upon language. They are part of the conditions under which enactment space becomes differentially structured.

Status as constraint on initiation

Status relations affect who can legitimately structure enactment space.

A question asked by a judge, a friend, or a child does not enact the same accountability space, even if lexicogrammatically identical.

A command issued by a manager, a colleague, or a stranger does not structure the same asymmetry frontier.

Status therefore conditions the force and legitimacy of initiation, not merely its interpretation.

It shapes what kinds of enactments can successfully configure relational space in the first place.

Role as constraint on expectation

Role distributions further constrain enactment space by stabilising expectations about appropriate relational configurations.

Within institutional roles:

  • teachers are expected to structure accountability spaces

  • managers are expected to structure responsiveness

  • colleagues are expected to structure mutual responsibility

  • clients or customers are positioned within different default configurations of possibility and response

Roles therefore do not merely describe participants. They pre-configure the enactment spaces within which speech functions operate.

Legitimacy and entitlement

Perhaps the most direct expression of tenor as constraint is found in legitimacy.

Legitimacy determines whether a given enactment is recognised as a valid structuring of relational space.

A command may be syntactically well-formed yet lack legitimacy.

An offer may be socially inappropriate.

A question may be perceived as intrusive.

A statement may be dismissed as unentitled assertion.

Entitlement refers to the right to occupy a position within enactment space such that one’s initiations are recognised as binding the structure of response possibilities.

Tenor therefore governs not only what is enacted, but whether an enactment successfully stabilises as a relational configuration.

Constraint without determination

It is important to emphasise that tenor does not determine outcomes in a mechanical sense.

It does not fix what will be said or how it will be responded to.

Rather, it structures a field of differential possibility:

  • some enactments become more likely

  • others become more constrained

  • some become illegitimate or non-viable

  • others become normatively foregrounded

Tenor is therefore not causal in a linear sense. It is configurational.

It shapes the topology of enactment space.

Enactment space under constraint

Once tenor is introduced, enactment space can be seen more precisely as:

a structured field of relational possibilities conditioned by status, role, legitimacy, and entitlement.

Speech functions operate within this field, but they do not define its boundaries.

The same speech function may open radically different enactment spaces depending on tenor configuration.

For example:

A question asked by a superior may sharply constrain answerability space.

The same question asked by a peer may leave it relatively open.

A command issued within a hierarchical institution may intensify the asymmetry frontier.

The same command outside that structure may fail to stabilise as a command at all.

Why tenor cannot be reduced to interpretation

A common tendency is to treat tenor effects as matters of “interpretation” or “social meaning”.

Within the present framework, this is insufficient.

Tenor is not something added after meaning is produced. It is part of what makes meaning enactable as a relational configuration.

Without tenor constraints, enactment space would be indeterminate: speech functions would lack the conditions under which they stabilise as accountability, commitment, possibility, or responsiveness structures.

The conditioning of speech functions

We can now refine the earlier architecture.

Speech functions do not simply operate in enactment space. They operate within tenor-conditioned enactment space.

This means:

  • accountability is shaped by status relations

  • commitment is shaped by role expectations

  • possibility is shaped by entitlement to offer

  • responsiveness is shaped by institutional asymmetries

Tenor is therefore not external to speech functions. It is what gives them differential force and viability.

Looking ahead

If speech functions structure enactment space, and tenor structures the constraints under which enactment space operates, then the next step is to consider how recurrent social situations stabilise these configurations.

The next post turns to:

situation type and registerial stabilisation

Here, enactment space and tenor are brought together into patterns that persist across instantiation, giving rise to recognisable forms of interpersonal regularity.

Interpersonal Meaning as Enactment 6. Commands and the asymmetry frontier

In the previous post, offers were shown to structure enactment space as a field of relational possibility. Unlike interrogation, which structures answerability space, and assertion, which structures responsibility space, offers organise what may become possible between participants under conditions of uptake.

We now turn to the most asymmetry-intensive configuration in enactment space:

the command.

Commands have traditionally been interpreted as the imposition of obligation or the demand for goods-and-services. On this view, they are understood as transferring an obligation from speaker to addressee.

Within the present framework, this interpretation is no longer adequate.

Instead, we begin from a different premise:

a command enacts a configuration of constrained responsiveness within enactment space.

Beyond obligation transfer

The obligation-transfer model appears intuitive because commands often correlate with compliance:

Close the door.
Sit down.
Send the report.

But this correlation obscures what is structurally at stake.

If obligation were literally transferred, we would need to assume that something like “obligation” exists as a movable entity, detachable from one participant and reattached to another. This assumption reintroduces the very ontology of transferable objects that enactment space rejects.

More importantly, it fails to account for what remains when compliance does not occur.

A command that is refused is still a command. A command that is ignored still structures interactional space. Its interpersonal force is not exhausted by uptake.

What persists is a configuration of asymmetry.

Authority as relational positioning

Commands enact authority, but authority here is not a property possessed by an individual.

Authority is a relational position within enactment space in which one participant’s initiation is treated as relevantly structuring the possible actions of another.

To have authority is not simply to be obeyed. It is to occupy a position in which one’s acts reorganise the field of possible responses available to others.

Crucially, this positioning is not absolute. Authority is always locally and contextually constituted within enactment space.

A command is therefore not the exercise of authority as a force, but the enactment of a relational configuration in which authority becomes operative.

Responsiveness as structured constraint

If commands enact authority, they simultaneously enact responsiveness.

Responsiveness is not identical with compliance. It is the positioning of one participant as the site at which action-relevant consequences become organised.

To be positioned as responsive is to have one’s possible continuations constrained in relation to another’s enactment.

This constraint does not determine action. It structures the field within which action becomes relevant, resistant, negotiable, or refused.

Responsiveness therefore names a relational condition, not a behavioural outcome.

The asymmetry frontier

Commands occupy a distinctive region of enactment space because they intensify asymmetry without collapsing reciprocity.

Unlike interrogation, where asymmetry is organised around answerability, or assertion, where it is organised around responsibility, commands reorganise the space of possible action itself.

We can characterise this region as:

the asymmetry frontier of enactment space.

At this frontier:

  • one participant’s initiation has heightened structuring force

  • the other participant’s continuations are differentially constrained

  • the range of legitimate responses is narrowed, but not eliminated

  • reciprocity remains, but is heavily asymmetrically distributed

The result is not unilateral control, but a highly structured relational imbalance.

Compliance, refusal, and reconfiguration

Once commands are understood as structuring constrained responsiveness, compliance is no longer the default or defining outcome.

Compliance is one possible continuation within a constrained field.

Refusal is another.

But refusal is not absence of enactment. It is a reconfiguration of the relational structure itself.

“No.”
“I won’t do that.”
“You can’t make me.”

Each of these does not simply reject content. It repositions authority, responsiveness, and the structure of enactment space.

Even silence, delay, or ambiguity function as positions within this field.

Why obligation transfer fails

The obligation-transfer model cannot account for several key features of commands:

  1. Commands remain structurally active even when unfulfilled.

  2. Refusal does not remove the command from enactment space.

  3. Authority varies without altering the grammatical form of the command.

  4. The same command can be inert in one context and forceful in another.

These variations indicate that what is at stake is not a transferred entity, but a contextual configuration of relational constraints.

Commands as reconfiguration of action relevance

A more precise formulation is therefore:

a command reorganises enactment space such that certain actions become differentially relevant for another participant.

This reorganisation includes:

  • narrowing of permissible continuations

  • elevation of certain responses as normatively foregrounded

  • suppression or marginalisation of alternative trajectories

  • asymmetric distribution of consequences for non-uptake

The command does not transmit obligation. It restructures relevance.

Asymmetry without reduction

Commands are often taken to exemplify hierarchy in its purest form. But within enactment space, hierarchy is not a substance. It is a pattern of constrained reciprocity.

Even in highly asymmetrical configurations:

  • the addressee retains the capacity for response

  • the speaker’s authority is dependent on uptake conditions

  • the relation remains co-constituted, not unilateral

Asymmetry, therefore, is not the absence of reciprocity. It is a specific organisation of it.

The limits of control

One of the implications of this analysis is that commands do not constitute total control over action.

They constitute a structured narrowing of possible continuations, not their elimination.

This is why commands can fail, be resisted, reinterpreted, or ignored without disappearing from enactment space.

Authority operates within constraints; it does not override the relational structure in which it is embedded.

Looking ahead

If interrogation structures answerability space, assertion structures responsibility space, offers structure possibility space, and commands structure the asymmetry frontier of constrained responsiveness, then the next step is to examine how these configurations are conditioned by broader contextual structures.

The next post turns to:

tenor as constraint on enactment space

Here, the focus shifts from individual speech functions to the systemic conditions that modulate what kinds of enactment are possible in the first place.

Interpersonal Meaning as Enactment 5. Offers and relational possibility

In the previous posts, two primary configurations of enactment space were identified.

Interrogation structures answerability space: a field of positioned accountability in which one participant is oriented as responsible for producing a relevant continuation.

Assertion structures responsibility space: a field of positioned commitment in which one participant is oriented as responsible for what has been enacted.

We now turn to a third configuration, which does not fit neatly into either of these structures:

the offer.

Traditionally, offers are treated as a subtype of exchange: the giving of goods or services. On this view, they are understood as transferring potential benefits from speaker to addressee.

Within the present framework, however, this interpretation is no longer available.

Instead, we begin from a different premise:

an offer enacts a configuration of relational possibility within enactment space.

Beyond transfer and obligation

Offers are often mischaracterised when analysed through the lenses developed for questions and statements.

They are not primarily about requesting information (interrogation), nor about asserting propositions (assertion), nor about imposing obligations (command, to be considered later).

An offer does something structurally different.

Consider:

Would you like some help?

I can help you with that.

I’ll drive you to the airport.

What is enacted in each case is not a transfer of content or imposition of obligation, but a structuring of what is possible between participants.

The speaker positions themselves as available within a potential field of action that has not yet been actualised.

Availability as relational positioning

One way to characterise offers is through the notion of availability.

Availability is not a psychological state of willingness. It is a relational configuration in enactment space in which one participant is positioned as a potential resource for future action.

To be “available” in this sense is not simply to be willing. It is to be positioned such that one’s capacities, actions, or resources are made relevant within a field of possible uptake.

Crucially, this availability does not determine its own actualisation.

It is conditional upon the addressee’s orientation toward it.

Conditional commitment and suspended actuality

Offers may also be understood as a form of conditional commitment.

Unlike statements, which establish responsibility for the validity of what is said, offers establish a commitment whose activation depends upon uptake.

I’ll help you with that.

does not function as a completed commitment in the same way as:

I helped you with that.

Rather, it establishes a structured possibility:

  • a commitment is made available

  • its activation depends on acceptance

  • its consequences unfold only if the relational condition is met

This produces a distinctive temporal structure in enactment space: a commitment that is real, but not yet operative.

The structure of possibility space

We can therefore characterise offers as the structuring of what may be called possibility space:

the set of relational continuations that become available when one participant positions themselves as a conditional resource for another.

Possibility space differs from both answerability space and responsibility space.

It does not primarily organise:

  • what must be answered (interrogation),

  • or what must be upheld or contested (assertion).

Instead, it organises what could become actualised under certain relational conditions.

Uptake and refusal

Once offers are understood as structuring possibility space, response becomes a matter of selecting among possible continuations.

Acceptance is not mere receipt of a benefit. It is the activation of a structured relational possibility.

Refusal is not rejection of content. It is the non-actualisation of a potential relation that has been made available.

Negotiation, modification, or delay likewise operate within this field, not as reactions to transferred meaning, but as ways of engaging with structured possibility.

The distinctive asymmetry of offers

Offers introduce a distinctive form of asymmetry within enactment space.

Unlike questions, where one participant is positioned as accountable, or statements, where one participant is positioned as responsible, offers distribute asymmetry through conditional availability.

One participant positions themselves as available for future action.

The other participant is positioned as the site at which that availability may or may not be actualised.

However, this asymmetry is fundamentally open rather than coercive.

It does not determine outcome; it structures possibility.

Why offers resist reduction to exchange

The exchange model struggles with offers because it assumes that what is offered already exists as a transferable object.

But in many offers, nothing is transferred until uptake occurs.

Before acceptance:

  • no action has been performed

  • no obligation has been incurred

  • no benefit has been received

Yet something is nevertheless real: a structured field of possibility within interpersonal relation.

This indicates that what is at stake is not transfer, but the constitution of relational potential.

Offers as visibility of enactment space

Among the speech functions considered so far, offers are particularly revealing.

Where questions foreground accountability and statements foreground commitment, offers foreground possibility itself.

They make visible the fact that enactment space is not only about what has been positioned or what must be answered, but also about what can become possible between participants.

In this sense, offers are not peripheral to interpersonal meaning. They expose one of its foundational properties:

interpersonal meaning always includes the structuring of future-oriented relational potential.

Looking ahead

If interrogation structures answerability space, assertion structures responsibility space, and offers structure possibility space, then the next step is to consider the most asymmetric and constraint-rich configuration of enactment:

commands and the structuring of authority and responsiveness.

Here, enactment space will need to account for not only possibility and responsibility, but the differential structuring of action relevance itself.

Interpersonal Meaning as Enactment 4. Commitment (statements revisited)

In the previous post, interrogation was reconceived not as a demand for information, but as the structuring of answerability space. A question enacts a relational configuration in which one participant is positioned as accountable for producing a relevant continuation.

We now turn to the complementary configuration: assertion.

Traditionally, statements are described as giving information. On this view, they function by transferring propositional content from speaker to addressee.

Within the present framework, however, this description again depends on the assumption that meaning is transferable.

Instead, we begin from a different premise:

a statement enacts a configuration of commitment within enactment space.

The central effect of assertion is not information delivery, but the structuring of positioned responsibility.

From information provision to relational positioning

The informational account assumes that statements fill a gap in the addressee’s knowledge.

But consider a simple assertion:

The meeting starts at nine.

What is immediately established is not merely a piece of content. It is a relational configuration in which the speaker becomes positioned as responsible for the validity, uptake, and consequences of what has been enacted.

The addressee is not simply informed. They are positioned within a field in which alignment, challenge, acceptance, or disregard become relevant continuations.

The statement does not move information. It distributes responsibility.

Commitment as enacted relation

Commitment, in this sense, is not a psychological state of belief or intention.

It is an interpersonal configuration established through assertion.

To make a statement is to occupy a position within enactment space in which one becomes accountable for what has been enacted as a construal of reality.

This accountability is not optional or external. It is constitutive of the act.

Even when no response follows, the structure of commitment persists. The utterance remains available for uptake, challenge, citation, or contestation within the interactional field.

The structure of responsibility space

We can therefore characterise assertion as the structuring of what may be called responsibility space:

the set of relational possibilities that determine what follows from a statement being enacted as validly positioned.

Responsibility space is not uniform. It varies according to how the statement is enacted.

For example:

The meeting starts at nine.

opens a relatively neutral field of uptake possibilities: agreement, disagreement, acknowledgement, or revision.

By contrast:

I guarantee the meeting starts at nine.

reconfigures responsibility space by intensifying the speaker’s positioning as accountable for the outcome of the proposition.

In both cases, however, what is structured is not information transfer, but the distribution of responsibility for what has been enacted.

Assertion and the persistence of consequences

One of the defining features of assertion is that its effects persist beyond the moment of speaking.

A statement continues to organise enactment space after its production. It remains available for:

  • uptake in later discourse,

  • challenge or correction,

  • citation in other contexts,

  • institutional uptake or validation.

This persistence is not a property of transmitted information. It is a property of the relational configuration that has been established.

Once responsibility space has been structured, it continues to condition possible continuations.

Accountability and commitment: a reciprocal pair

The analysis of questions introduced accountability as a structuring of answerability space.

Statements introduce a complementary structure: commitment as responsibility space.

Together, they form a paired configuration within enactment space:

  • questions position participants within structures of answerability

  • statements position participants within structures of responsibility

Importantly, neither structure exists independently of the other. Each presupposes a shared enactment space in which relational positioning is possible.

Agreement, disagreement, and uptake

Once assertion is understood as structuring responsibility space, the range of possible responses becomes more intelligible.

Agreement is not mere reception of information. It is an alignment within responsibility space.

Disagreement is not rejection of content alone. It is a reconfiguration of the distribution of responsibility for what has been enacted.

Acknowledgement, qualification, correction, and silence are likewise distinct ways of occupying the structured field established by the statement.

Each response is not a reaction to information, but a positioning within commitment space.

Why statements cannot be reduced to information delivery

The informational model treats statements as complete when their content has been received.

But this leaves unexplained why statements remain socially active after reception.

If their function were purely informational, their interpersonal consequences would be exhausted once understood.

Yet statements continue to function within discourse precisely because they structure ongoing responsibility relations.

This persistence indicates that assertion is not primarily about transmission, but about relational configuration.

The asymmetry of commitment

Statements also introduce a characteristic asymmetry into enactment space.

The speaker becomes the primary locus of responsibility for the validity of what has been enacted.

The addressee becomes positioned relative to that responsibility, but is not its source.

However, this asymmetry is not unilateral dominance. It is a structured distribution of relational roles within a shared space.

Commitment is therefore not a private state but a public configuration of accountability.

Looking ahead

If interrogation structures answerability space and assertion structures responsibility space, then the next question concerns those enactments in which neither information nor commitment is primary.

The next post turns to offers.

Offers and relational possibility: enactment beyond information and obligation

Here, the structure of enactment space becomes more visibly oriented toward future-oriented possibilities rather than established accountability or commitment.

Interpersonal Meaning as Enactment 3. Accountability (questions revisited)

In the previous post, interpersonal meaning was shown to be inherently reciprocal: no speech function can be understood from a single pole because every enactment distributes relational positions across participants.

We now turn to a specific configuration within this reciprocal field: interrogation.

Traditionally, questions are described as demands for information. On this view, they are successful when an answer is produced that fills an informational gap.

Within the present framework, however, this account is insufficient. It continues to presuppose that meaning is something transferred between participants.

Instead, we begin from a different premise:

a question enacts a configuration of accountability within enactment space.

The central effect of interrogation is not information retrieval, but the structuring of answerability.

From information gap to relational positioning

The information-based account assumes a pre-existing asymmetry:

  • the speaker lacks information

  • the addressee possesses it

  • the question initiates transfer

But this framing obscures a more fundamental operation.

Consider:

Where were you last night?

What is immediately established is not merely a request for content. It is a relational configuration in which one participant is positioned as accountable for producing a relevant continuation.

The question does not simply indicate absence of knowledge. It constructs a field in which a response becomes not only relevant but required for the interaction to proceed coherently.

Answerability is therefore not a reaction to a question. It is the structure the question enacts.

Accountability as enacted relation

Accountability, in this sense, is not a moral property or an external judgement imposed after the fact.

It is an interpersonal configuration established through interrogation.

To be positioned as accountable is to occupy a role within enactment space in which one’s subsequent participation becomes relevantly constrained.

A question does not force an answer. It structures the conditions under which a response becomes the appropriate continuation of the relation.

This distinction is crucial.

The addressee is not compelled in a mechanical sense. Rather, they are positioned within a relational field in which silence, refusal, evasion, or response each acquire specific interpersonal consequences.

The structure of answerability space

We can therefore characterise interrogation as the structuring of what may be called answerability space:

the set of relational possibilities that determine what counts as a relevant continuation following a question.

Answerability space is not uniform. It varies according to how the question is enacted.

For example:

When does the meeting start?

opens a relatively unconstrained space of possible responses.

By contrast:

Did the meeting start at nine?

opens a highly constrained space in which the primary relational orientations are affirmation, negation, qualification, or refusal.

In both cases, however, the key effect is not informational extraction. It is the structuring of what can count as an accountable continuation.

Polar and WH-questions as different answerability structures

Within this framework, the distinction between WH- and polar questions can be reformulated without reference to information transfer.

WH-questions structure answerability space by introducing an open variable:

Who broke the vase?

configures a space in which a range of possible instantiations are relevant, and the addressee is positioned as accountable for supplying a construal that resolves the variable.

Polar questions, by contrast, structure answerability space by foregrounding a specific proposition:

Did Chris break the vase?

configures a space in which the addressee is positioned relative to an already specified relational possibility, and accountability concerns orientation toward that configuration.

In both cases, what is structured is not information flow, but the distribution of acceptable continuations within enactment space.

Silence, refusal, and resistance

Once interrogation is understood as structuring answerability space, non-response becomes theoretically significant.

Silence is not absence of participation. It is a marked position within the answerability space.

Refusal is not failure to answer. It is an explicit reconfiguration of the expected relational continuation.

Evasion, counter-questioning, and topic shift similarly constitute manoeuvres within the same structured field.

These are not breakdowns of communication. They are alternative ways of occupying answerability space.

The emergence of asymmetry

Interrogation is one of the clearest cases in which reciprocity and asymmetry coincide.

Reciprocity is present because the question necessarily positions both participants within a shared enactment space.

Asymmetry arises because that space distributes answerability unevenly.

One participant is positioned as initiating the structure of accountability.

The other is positioned as the site at which that accountability must be resolved.

Yet this asymmetry is not external to the relation. It is the relation.

Why interrogation cannot be reduced to information seeking

The persistence of the information-seeking model arises from its simplicity.

It aligns neatly with the observable pattern:

question → answer.

However, this sequential pattern is the surface manifestation of a deeper relational structure.

Answerability space explains why responses are relevant at all, not merely that they occur.

Without this structuring, the notion of “answer” loses its interpersonal grounding.

An utterance counts as an answer only within a field that has already been configured as answerable.

Looking ahead

If interrogation structures answerability space, then other speech functions must be understood as structuring different dimensions of enactment space.

The next post turns to statements.

Commitment (statements revisited): enactment of positioned responsibility.

Interpersonal Meaning as Enactment 2. Reciprocity of enactment

In the previous post, interpersonal meaning was reconceived as enactment: not the exchange of semantic objects, but the structuring of relational configurations within an enactment space.

This move immediately raises a further question.

If interpersonal meaning is enacted, where does that enactment reside?

Is it located in the initiating act of speaking? In the speaker’s intention? In the grammatical form of the clause?

Or is it distributed across participants?

This post addresses that question directly.

The illusion of single-pole description

It is common, in describing speech functions, to focus on the initiating move.

A question is posed.

A statement is made.

A command is issued.

An offer is extended.

From this perspective, interpersonal meaning appears to originate from a single pole: the speaker.

The addressee appears secondary—positioned as responder, recipient, or reactor to an already completed act.

This asymmetry of description is deeply ingrained in everyday accounts of communication.

Yet it is misleading.

It conflates the initiation of an enactment with the completion of its relational structure.

Enactment is not unilateral

An enactment does not consist solely in the production of an utterance.

It consists in the establishment of a relational configuration that necessarily includes another participant.

A question, for example, does not exist as a completed interpersonal act without the positioning of an addressee as accountable for response.

A statement does not exist without the positioning of others as oriented toward potential alignment, challenge, or uptake.

A command does not exist without the positioning of a responder whose future action becomes relevantly structured.

An offer does not exist without the positioning of an addressee as the site of possible uptake or refusal.

In each case, what is enacted is not located at a single pole. It is distributed across the relation itself.

Reciprocity as structural condition

Reciprocity here does not mean symmetry of power, responsibility, or choice.

It means something more fundamental:

no interpersonal enactment can be constituted without simultaneously configuring more than one participant position.

To enact a speech function is to structure a relation that is inherently multi-positional.

Even when one participant appears to dominate the interactional space, the relational structure still depends on the positioning of another as responsive, accountable, or relevantly absent.

Reciprocity is therefore not an ethical or cooperative principle. It is a structural condition of interpersonal meaning.

Asymmetry without reduction

Recognising reciprocity does not eliminate asymmetry.

On the contrary, asymmetry is one of the primary ways enactment space is structured.

Questions asymmetrically allocate accountability for response.

Commands asymmetrically allocate action relevance and entitlement.

Statements asymmetrically allocate commitment and its consequences.

Offers asymmetrically configure conditional possibilities of uptake.

But asymmetry itself presupposes reciprocity.

There can be no asymmetry without at least two differentiated participant positions within the same enacted relation.

Why single-pole accounts persist

Single-pole accounts persist because initiation is perceptually and grammatically salient.

The speaker produces an utterance. The utterance is observable. The response may be delayed, implicit, or absent.

This makes it easy to treat the utterance as the complete interpersonal act.

However, this is a descriptive compression. It extracts the initiating move from the relational configuration that gives it interpersonal meaning.

What is lost in this compression is the structure of enactment space itself.

Speech functions as relational configurations

Once reciprocity is taken as a structural condition, speech functions can no longer be treated as properties of isolated clauses or speaker actions.

They must instead be understood as configurations that distribute relational positions across participants.

A question is not a form of wording that requests information. It is a configuration that distributes accountability across a relational field.

A statement is not a form that provides information. It is a configuration that distributes commitment and its consequences.

A command is not a form that imposes obligation. It is a configuration that distributes asymmetry in action relevance and entitlement.

An offer is not a form that provides goods or services. It is a configuration that distributes conditional possibility across participants.

In each case, the speech function is the structure of the relation, not the property of a single act.

Enactment space is inherently relational

If enactment is the fundamental operation of interpersonal meaning, then enactment space is not a background against which acts occur.

It is the relational field constituted by those acts.

And because every enactment distributes participant positions, enactment space is necessarily reciprocal in structure.

No speech function can be fully specified from a single pole because no speech function is ever single-pole in reality.

Even apparently unilateral acts depend on the configuration of a responsive other.

Looking ahead

If interpersonal meaning is fundamentally reciprocal, then the next question concerns how different types of reciprocity are structured.

Questions, statements, commands, and offers do not simply distribute participation differently. They structure different kinds of accountability, commitment, authority, and possibility.

The next post turns to one of these configurations directly:

accountability in interrogative enactment.

Interpersonal Meaning as Enactment 1. Enactment space: beyond exchange

Interpersonal meaning is commonly described through the metaphor of exchange.

Within this framing, discourse is understood as a system in which meanings are given and demanded, information is transmitted, and goods-&-services are circulated between participants. Questions demand information. Statements give information. Commands demand goods-&-services. Offers give goods-&-services.

The elegance of this model lies in its apparent clarity. It renders interaction legible as a structured flow of semantic content between interlocutors.

Yet this clarity depends upon a particular assumption: that meaning is something that can be exchanged.

If meaning is not a transferable object, then the explanatory foundation of exchange becomes unstable.

This series begins from that instability.

Beyond exchange

The purpose of this inquiry is not to deny that discourse exhibits regular patterns resembling exchange.

Questions are followed by answers. Statements are followed by alignment or disagreement. Commands are followed by compliance or refusal. Offers are followed by uptake or rejection.

These patterns are real, recurrent, and analytically significant.

The question is not whether they occur, but how they are to be understood.

Rather than treating exchange as the underlying mechanism that produces these patterns, this series proposes a different starting point:

interpersonal meaning is fundamentally enactment.

Through language, participants do not exchange meanings. They enact relations.

These relations are not static properties of individuals. They are dynamically established configurations that arise in and through semiotic activity.

Enactment and relational configuration

To speak is not to transfer content between minds.

It is to act in a way that configures a relation between participants.

Each act of speaking establishes a particular structuring of interpersonal positions:

  • who is accountable for what has been said,

  • who is positioned as responsive,

  • who is entitled to initiate, challenge, or close a sequence,

  • what forms of continuation are made relevant.

These configurations are not added to discourse after the fact. They are what discourse does.

Meaning, in this sense, is not exchanged but enacted as relational structure.

From interaction to enactment space

Once interpersonal meaning is understood as enactment, a further question emerges.

An enactment is never isolated. It always occurs within a field of possibilities and constraints.

A question does not simply demand an answer. It opens a space in which certain responses become relevant, others become marginal, and some become excluded.

A statement does not simply present information. It opens a space in which alignment, challenge, qualification, or rejection become possible continuations.

A command does not simply direct action. It restructures the field of possible responses by foregrounding asymmetry and responsiveness.

An offer does not simply present a benefit. It opens a conditional field in which uptake, refusal, or negotiation become relevant trajectories.

These observations point to a more general concept:

interpersonal meaning operates through the opening and structuring of enactment space.

Enactment space is the relational field of possibilities and constraints that is configured whenever interpersonal meaning is enacted.

Reciprocity without symmetry

Enactment space is inherently reciprocal.

No interpersonal act is complete from the perspective of a single participant. Every enactment configures possibilities for all participants, though not in identical ways.

A question positions both speaker and addressee within a structured field of accountability. A statement positions both within a field of commitment and response. A command positions participants within a field of asymmetry and responsiveness. An offer positions participants within a field of conditional possibility.

Reciprocity does not imply symmetry. Participants are differentially positioned within the same enacted space.

This difference is not secondary to the act. It is constitutive of it.

Why exchange appears

If interpersonal meaning is enacted rather than exchanged, why does exchange remain such a compelling description?

The answer lies in the stability of interactional patterns.

Certain sequences of enactment recur with sufficient regularity that they appear to involve the movement of something between participants. Questions tend to be followed by answers. Statements tend to be followed by uptake or challenge. Commands tend to be followed by compliance or refusal.

These sequences generate the appearance of transfer.

However, appearance is not explanation.

Exchange is best understood as a secondary interpretation of stabilised patterns of enactment, not as their underlying mechanism.

Enactment space as the object of analysis

The shift proposed in this series is therefore not merely terminological. It is ontological.

The primary object of analysis is not the exchange of meanings, but the structure of enactment space:

  • what relational configurations are established,

  • what possibilities are opened or constrained,

  • how participants are differentially positioned within those possibilities,

  • and how such configurations stabilise across interaction.

Speech functions—questions, statements, commands, and offers—are not exchanges of different kinds of content. They are different ways of structuring enactment space.

Looking ahead

If interpersonal meaning is understood as the structured opening and constraining of enactment space, then several further questions arise.

How are different types of enactment space organised and stabilised?

How do status, role, and institutional positioning affect what can be enacted?

Why do certain configurations recur across contexts while others remain rare or fragile?

And how do broader situation types shape the possibilities available within interpersonal meaning?

The following posts develop these questions by examining accountability, commitment, offers, commands, and the contextual constraints that shape their realisation.

The aim is not to replace one descriptive vocabulary with another, but to clarify what kind of phenomenon interpersonal meaning is when it is no longer treated as exchange.

Interpersonal Meaning Beyond Exchange: an enactment reconstruction — 8. Interpersonal meaning without exchange

This series began with a simple but destabilising question:

If meaning is not a transferable object, what becomes of the notion of exchange in Systemic Functional Linguistics?

The investigation has proceeded by examining the three core speech functions traditionally associated with interpersonal meaning:

  • questions,

  • statements,

  • commands.

In each case, the exchange-based interpretation has been shown to rely on ontological assumptions that are not required by the observable structure of discourse.

Questions do not require information transfer to be intelligible.

Statements do not require information transfer to be intelligible.

Commands do not require obligation transfer to be intelligible.

Across all three cases, a consistent alternative has emerged.

From exchange to enactment

The central proposal of this series is that interpersonal meaning is not fundamentally exchange, but enactment.

What is enacted is not the movement of semantic objects between participants.

What is enacted is the configuration of interpersonal relations through semiotic activity.

These configurations include:

  • accountability relations (questions),

  • commitment relations (statements),

  • asymmetrical action-possibility relations (commands),

  • and related forms of conditional uptake structuring (offers).

In each case, what changes is not possession of meaning, but the relational conditions under which meaning is subsequently produced.

The role of asymmetry

A key outcome of this reconstruction is the recognition that interpersonal meaning is inherently asymmetric.

This asymmetry is not a distortion of an underlying symmetry.

It is a structural feature of interpersonal enactment itself.

Participants are not interchangeable nodes within a system of exchange.

They are differentially positioned within evolving relational configurations that are continuously reorganised through discourse.

Questions, statements, and commands each instantiate different forms of asymmetry:

  • in accountability,

  • in commitment,

  • in action relevance.

Why exchange appears

If interpersonal meaning is enacted rather than exchanged, why does the exchange metaphor remain so compelling?

The answer lies in the stability of interactional patterns.

Interrogatives are often followed by responses.

Statements are often followed by alignment or challenge.

Commands are often followed by compliance or refusal.

These recurrent patterns create the appearance of transfer.

But appearance is not ontology.

Exchange is a descriptive abstraction over stabilised sequences of interpersonal enactment, not the underlying mechanism that produces them.

Meaning as relational reconfiguration

Under this account, meaning is not a substance that circulates between participants.

Meaning is the ongoing reconfiguration of relational conditions through which participants become differentially positioned within discourse.

To speak is to alter the interpersonal field.

To respond is to reconfigure that field further.

Dialogue is therefore not the transmission of meaning, but the recursive modulation of relational structure across successive acts of enactment.

What remains of the interpersonal metafunction

The interpersonal metafunction remains intact, but its ontological interpretation shifts.

It is no longer understood as a system for exchanging meanings or obligations.

It is understood as a system for enacting and reorganising social relations through semiotic resources.

The resources identified by Halliday—mood, modality, polarity, and speech function—remain descriptively powerful.

What changes is the interpretation of what they are doing.

They do not mediate transfer.

They organise relation.

A final clarification

This reconstruction does not deny the usefulness of exchange as a descriptive shorthand.

At the level of surface interaction, exchange-like patterns are real, stable, and analytically valuable.

The claim is not that exchange is false.

The claim is that exchange is not fundamental.

It is an emergent interpretation of a deeper process: the ongoing enactment of interpersonal relations through language.

Closing

If meaning is not exchanged, but enacted, then interpersonal discourse cannot be understood as the movement of semantic objects between individuals.

It must instead be understood as a dynamic field of relational reconfiguration.

The clause does not transfer meaning.

It reorganises relation.

And it is within this reorganisation that what we call “dialogue” takes place.

Interpersonal Meaning Beyond Exchange: an enactment reconstruction — 7. Reconstructing speech function

Across the preceding posts, three core speech functions have been reconsidered:

  • questions (traditionally: demanding information),

  • statements (traditionally: giving information),

  • commands (traditionally: demanding goods-&-services).

In each case, the traditional interpretation relies upon a shared assumption: that discourse involves the exchange of meanings or obligations between participants.

This assumption has been progressively destabilised.

Questions no longer require information transfer to be understood, but can be reinterpreted as enactments of accountability relations.

Statements no longer require information transfer, but can be reinterpreted as enactments of commitment relations.

Commands no longer require obligation transfer, but can be reinterpreted as enactments of asymmetrical action-possibility relations.

What remains is the task of reassembling these observations into a coherent account of the system as a whole.

The problem with “giving” and “demanding”

At the heart of the traditional account of speech functions lies a second distinction:

  • giving

  • demanding

This distinction appears to organise the entire interpersonal system.

Statements give information.

Questions demand information.

Offers give goods-&-services.

Commands demand goods-&-services.

Yet once the ontology of exchange is suspended, “giving” and “demanding” become difficult to sustain as literal descriptions of interpersonal processes.

Both terms imply movement of something:

  • giving implies transfer outward,

  • demanding implies extraction inward.

But if meaning is not a transferable object, then neither direction of movement is ontologically grounded.

The distinction remains descriptively useful, but its ontological interpretation becomes unstable.

Relational re-description of “giving”

What is traditionally described as “giving” appears, under a relational account, to involve the enactment of a particular kind of interpersonal positioning.

To “give” a statement is not to transfer information outward.

It is to:

  • publicly commit to a construal,

  • thereby making that construal available for uptake, challenge, or alignment,

  • and establishing a relation of accountability for what has been enacted.

Similarly, to “give” an offer is not to transfer goods-&-services as semantic content, but to:

  • propose a future configuration of action,

  • in which another participant may occupy a position of uptake or refusal.

In both cases, “giving” can be reinterpreted as the enactment of an open relational configuration in which response is made relevant but not determined.

Relational re-description of “demanding”

“Demanding,” by contrast, does not involve extraction of an entity.

Rather, it involves the enactment of a relation in which a response becomes conditionally required for the interaction to proceed coherently.

A question does not extract information.

It establishes a configuration of accountability in which a response becomes relevant and expected.

A command does not extract obligation.

It establishes an asymmetrical configuration in which certain actions become normatively foregrounded as relevant continuations.

In each case, “demanding” can be reinterpreted as the enactment of constrained response relevance under asymmetrical conditions.

Giving and demanding as relational polarity

What emerges from this reconstruction is that “giving” and “demanding” are not operations performed on semantic objects.

They are polar orientations within interpersonal enactment.

Rather than describing movement of content, they describe differences in how relational configurations are structured:

  • “giving” → open configuration of uptake without enforced response trajectory

  • “demanding” → constrained configuration in which response is normatively foregrounded

This polarity is not eliminated in the reconstruction.

It is re-specified.

What changes is not the distinction itself, but the ontology that supports it.

Speech functions as configurations of enactment

Once “giving” and “demanding” are reinterpreted in relational terms, the speech functions can be seen as systematic configurations of interpersonal enactment:

  • Statements: commitment-structuring enactments with open uptake conditions

  • Questions: accountability-structuring enactments with constrained response relevance

  • Commands: asymmetry-structuring enactments with normatively foregrounded action trajectories

  • Offers (to be considered implicitly alongside commands): possibility-structuring enactments with conditional uptake relevance

The system is no longer organised around exchange of entities.

It is organised around variations in how interpersonal relations are configured through semiotic acts.

The disappearance of transfer

Across all cases, a consistent pattern is now visible.

What was previously described as transfer:

  • of information,

  • of obligation,

  • of goods-&-services,

is no longer required to explain the structure of the system.

Instead, speech functions can be understood as recurrent patterns of relational configuration that:

  • establish expectations,

  • distribute accountability,

  • organise response relevance,

  • and structure asymmetry.

The “content” of discourse does not move.

It is the relational field that is reorganised.

Toward system-level reconstruction

If speech functions are not defined by exchange, but by relational configuration, then the entire interpersonal system must be reconsidered.

The final post therefore asks:

What remains of interpersonal meaning once exchange is no longer treated as its foundational ontology?