The previous post identified an illusion: the projection of linguistic construal back into perception.
Here we move one step further.
Not merely the projection of meaning onto vision—but the systematic capture of vision by meaning once construal becomes the dominant mode of engagement.
1. From Overlay to Capture
At first, language appears as an overlay:
perception continues as before
construal accompanies it
meaning is added to what is seen
But over time, something more consequential occurs:
construal begins to reorganise what can be seen at all.
Meaning does not remain external to vision.
It reshapes the conditions under which vision operates.
2. The Reframing of Salience
In earlier stages, salience was grounded in:
biological responsiveness
attentional dynamics
social alignment
With the consolidation of language, salience becomes reframed:
what is noticed is influenced by what can be named
what stands out is shaped by available categories
what is relevant is filtered through interpretive schemas
Thus:
meaning begins to govern salience, rather than merely describe it.
3. Category-Led Perception
Once categories are entrenched, perception is no longer experienced as neutral differentiation.
Instead:
incoming stimuli are rapidly sorted into predefined classes
recognition is guided by linguistic and conceptual expectations
ambiguity is resolved in favour of available interpretations
What is seen is not just what is there, but:
what fits the available construals.
4. Stabilisation Through Naming
Naming plays a central role in this capture.
A named category:
stabilises a way of grouping experience
constrains variation within perceptual input
reinforces expectations about what will appear
Over time, naming feeds back into perception itself:
the world begins to appear as already partitioned according to linguistic categories.
5. The Compression of Differentiation
Vision, in its unmediated form, differentiates continuously.
Meaning introduces compression:
multiple differentiations are treated as equivalent under a single category
fine-grained variation is subordinated to higher-level labels
distinctions that are not semantically relevant are ignored
This compression is not an error.
It is a functional adaptation of a coupled system.
But it has a consequence:
the richness of raw differentiation becomes subordinate to the economy of meaning.
6. Expectation as a Structuring Force
Meaning introduces expectation.
Once categories and relations are established:
perception is guided by what is expected to appear
anomalies are noticed against interpretive background
recognition becomes faster but also more constrained
Expectation shapes attention, and attention shapes salience.
Thus:
meaning indirectly structures what vision selects.
7. The Recursion of Interpretation
Interpretation does not remain a one-off operation.
It becomes recursive:
interpretations inform future perceptions
perceptions are immediately interpreted
interpretations reinforce the categories that generated them
This recursion stabilises a closed loop:
meaning → expectation → perception → interpretation → reinforced meaning
Within this loop, vision is no longer operating in isolation.
It is embedded within a semiotic feedback system.
8. The Reduction of Visual Autonomy
As this coupling intensifies, vision loses a degree of autonomy.
Not in the sense that biological processes cease, but in the sense that:
what is noticed is increasingly guided by meaning
what counts as relevant is linguistically and socially mediated
what is recognised is pre-shaped by interpretive frameworks
Vision continues to function biologically, but:
its outputs are immediately recruited into semiotic organisation.
9. Seeing Through Meaning
At this stage, what is often described as “seeing” is already “seeing through meaning.”
That is:
perception is inseparable from interpretation
the visual field is organised within conceptual structures
experience is immediately legible within a semiotic system
The world appears not simply as a field of value, but as:
a field already articulated by meaning.
10. The Tension Remains
Despite this capture, the underlying strata do not disappear.
Biological value continues to operate:
attention still selects
recognition still stabilises
salience still emerges from perceptual differentiation
Meaning does not replace these processes.
It reorganises their outputs within a higher-order system.
Thus the system remains layered:
biological value
social coordination
semiotic construal
But in lived experience, these layers are no longer easily separable.
11. A Ninth Position
The claim can now be stated succinctly:
once language and construal are established, meaning does not merely describe vision—it actively reorganises the conditions of salience, recognition, and expectation, capturing the visual field within a semiotic regime that shapes what can be seen, how it is seen, and what it is taken to be.
This sets the stage for the final movement in the series.
If vision is captured by meaning in lived experience, what does it mean to step outside that capture—even momentarily?
And how should we characterise experience prior to meaning, not as a regression, but as a structural condition that persists beneath interpretation?
The afterword addresses this directly:
experience before meaning.