Thursday, 9 April 2026

Constraint Without Ground: The Final Condition — 2 Constraint Is Not Limitation: Why Possibility Comes First

Constraint is often described as:

  • restricting what can occur,
  • limiting possibilities,
  • ruling out alternatives.

This seems intuitive.

But it is exactly backwards.

Because it assumes:

that possibility exists first,
and constraint comes later to reduce it.

Under constraint, this ordering cannot hold.


1. The Default Picture

The standard picture is:

  • first: a space of possibilities
  • then: constraints that narrow that space

Constraint is treated as:

  • subtractive,
  • secondary,
  • imposed upon an already given field.

This leads to familiar formulations:

  • “constraints limit behaviour”
  • “rules restrict outcomes”
  • “structure reduces freedom”

All of these assume:

possibility is prior.


2. Why This Fails

If possibility were prior to constraint, then:

  • possibilities would have to exist independently
  • as a kind of undifferentiated field

Constraint would then:

  • carve this field,
  • select from it,
  • impose structure upon it.

But this introduces exactly what we have excluded elsewhere:

a pre-given domain.

An unstructured space of “all possibilities” is:

  • not describable,
  • not accessible,
  • and not meaningful within any system.

It is:

an abstraction without function.


3. No Possibility Without Structure

Possibility is not:

  • an infinite set waiting to be reduced.

It is:

always already structured.

For any system:

  • what counts as possible
    is defined by how it is organised.

There is no stage at which:

  • all possibilities exist,
    and are then limited.

Instead:

possibility appears only within constraint.


4. Constraint as Condition of Possibility

This reverses the relation:

  • constraint does not limit possibility
  • it constitutes it

Constraint is what makes it the case that:

  • some things can occur
  • and others cannot

But this is not:

  • reduction of a prior field

It is:

the articulation of a field in the first place.


5. Example Without Mechanism

Consider language.

It is often said:

  • grammar constrains what can be said.

This suggests:

  • an initial freedom,
  • later restricted by rules.

But this is misleading.

Without grammar:

  • there is no “what can be said” at all.

There is only:

  • undifferentiated noise.

Grammar does not:

  • reduce possibilities

It:

makes linguistic possibility possible.


6. Constraint Without Subtraction

Constraint does not:

  • remove options from a pre-existing set.

It does not:

  • subtract,
  • restrict,
  • or narrow.

Instead, it:

defines the space in which anything counts as possible.

This space is not:

  • given in advance,
  • nor independent of organisation.

7. The Error of Limitation

Treating constraint as limitation leads to two errors:


(a) Hidden ground

It reintroduces:

  • a prior domain of possibilities
  • which functions as an implicit ground.

(b) External imposition

It suggests:

  • constraint acts on a system from outside
  • rather than being intrinsic to it.

Both are incompatible with:

  • the non-reductive framework already established.

8. Constraint and Difference (Refined)

We can now refine the earlier formulation:

constraint is not the reduction of possibility,
but the differentiation through which possibility exists.

This means:

  • possibility is always particular,
  • always structured,
  • always internal to an organisation.

9. Consequences

This shift has consequences across everything we’ve done:

  • structure does not limit expression—it defines it
  • value does not restrict action—it organises it
  • coupling does not reduce interaction—it shapes it

In each case:

constraint is productive—not subtractive.


Closing Formulation

Constraint does not limit what is possible.

It makes possibility possible.

There is no prior field of options waiting to be reduced.

There is only the structured differentiation
through which anything can count as possible at all.

To treat constraint as limitation
is to reintroduce a hidden ground—
and to miss the condition that makes organisation itself possible.


Now the term has shifted:

  • from restriction
  • to condition

But one question remains.


If constraint constitutes possibility,

is it still something that belongs to systems?

Or is it:

more fundamental than any system it appears in?


Next Post

“Constraint Before System: Why Organisation Does Not Come First”

Constraint Without Ground: The Final Condition — 1 What Is Constraint? The Last Unexamined Term

Across the preceding series, one term has done continuous work:

  • separating structure from meaning,
  • separating value from meaning,
  • stabilising coupling without collapse,
  • blocking reduction in every direction.

That term is:

constraint.

It has been invoked to explain:

  • how structure shapes output,
  • how value organises behaviour,
  • how distinct organisations relate without merging.

It has functioned as:

  • an explanatory resource,
  • a limiting condition,
  • and a guarantor of distinction.

And yet:

it has not been examined.


1. The Suspicion

Any term that:

  • appears everywhere,
  • resolves multiple problems,
  • and resists reduction,

invites suspicion.

Constraint has been treated as:

  • neither a mechanism,
  • nor a process,
  • nor a substance,

and yet as something that:

does real explanatory work.

This raises a question:

what is constraint, if it is none of these?


2. What Constraint Is Not

We begin by clearing the usual options.


Not a mechanism

Constraint is not:

  • a causal device,
  • a system component,
  • or something that produces effects.

It does not:

  • act,
  • push,
  • or generate outcomes.

Not a process

Constraint is not:

  • something that unfolds over time,
  • a sequence of operations,
  • or a dynamic flow.

It does not:

  • occur,
  • evolve,
  • or develop.

Not a hidden ground

Constraint is not:

  • an underlying layer of reality,
  • a substrate that explains everything else,
  • or a final explanatory base.

It does not:

  • ground meaning,
  • or anchor relation.

If constraint were any of these, it would:

  • reintroduce exactly the kinds of reduction
    we have worked to eliminate.

3. What Constraint Has Been Doing

Despite this, constraint has been used to describe:

  • how structure limits possible sequences,
  • how value shapes possible actions,
  • how coupling restricts interaction without merging systems.

In each case, constraint appears as:

a limitation on what can occur.

But “limitation” here must be handled carefully.

It cannot mean:

  • an external force imposing restriction,
  • nor an internal mechanism enforcing rules.

4. Constraint as Difference

The first step is to recognise:

constraint is not something added to a system.

It is:

the difference that makes some possibilities available and others not.

This is not:

  • an operation,
  • nor a component.

It is:

a condition of organisation.


5. Constraint Without Addition

Consider:

  • a linguistic system
  • a biological system
  • a computational system

In each case:

  • not all possibilities are equally available.

Some sequences:

  • can occur,
  • others cannot.

This is not because:

  • something blocks them,

but because:

the system is organised in such a way that they are not possible.

Constraint is:

  • not imposed,
  • not applied,

but:

intrinsic to organisation.


6. The Risk of Reification

At this point, a mistake becomes tempting:

  • to treat constraint as a thing,
  • or a property that systems possess.

This must be resisted.

Constraint is not:

  • an entity,
  • a layer,
  • or a feature that can be isolated.

It does not exist independently of:

the organisation it characterises.


7. Constraint and Relation

Constraint has also been used to describe coupling:

  • how distinct organisations relate without collapsing.

Here again, it is not:

  • a bridge,
  • a medium,
  • or a shared domain.

It is:

the way in which each organisation limits the possibilities of the other without becoming it.


8. The Emerging Formulation

We can now begin to state:

constraint is the structuring of possibility within an organisation.

This captures:

  • limitation without mechanism,
  • organisation without substance,
  • relation without collapse.

But it remains incomplete.

Because it still risks being read as:

  • a feature of systems,
  • rather than something more fundamental.

9. The Deeper Question

If constraint is:

  • not a mechanism,
  • not a process,
  • not a ground,

and not something added to systems,

then we must ask:

is constraint something that systems have,
or is it something that makes systems possible at all?


Closing Formulation

Constraint has been used to prevent collapse.

But unless it is understood precisely,
it risks becoming the very thing it was meant to exclude:
a hidden ground.

Constraint is not a force, not a process, and not a substrate.

It is the structuring of what can and cannot be—
intrinsic to organisation itself.

The question now is whether this is enough,
or whether constraint must be understood more radically still.


This is the opening.

Not a definition.

A destabilisation.


Next Post

“Constraint Is Not Limitation: Why Possibility Comes First”

Meaning Without Construal: AI Under Constraint — 6 What Remains of AI “Understanding” Under Constraint

The discourse around AI “understanding” oscillates between:

  • over-attribution (“it understands”),
  • and deflation (“it’s just statistics”).

Neither position survives sustained constraint.

What remains is more precise—and less comforting to both sides.


1. What Does Not Survive

The following claims cannot be maintained:


The model understands

There is no basis for attributing:

  • understanding,
  • intention,
  • or meaning

to the model itself.

Because:

  • no construal occurs within the system,
  • no “as”-relation is established internally,
  • no semiotic organisation is present.

Meaning is encoded internally

Internal states do not:

  • contain meaning,
  • represent content,
  • or function as interpretations.

They are:

structured constraints on transformation.


Meaning emerges from complexity

No increase in:

  • scale,
  • data,
  • or architectural sophistication

introduces:

construal.

Complexity amplifies structure.

It does not produce meaning.


Meaning is in behaviour

Appropriate use, no matter how refined, does not:

  • constitute meaning,
  • or establish understanding.

Behaviour is:

functionally effective coordination.


Meaning is shared with the system

Interaction does not:

  • distribute meaning across human and model,
  • or create a shared semiotic field.

Meaning remains:

located in construal.


These removals eliminate the grounds on which “AI understanding” is typically asserted.


2. What Survives

Despite this, something substantial remains.


(a) Structured linguistic competence

The model exhibits:

  • high-level control over linguistic form,
  • sensitivity to context,
  • and the ability to sustain coherent discourse.

This is not trivial.

It is:

large-scale organisation of structure.


(b) Functional alignment with human use

The system produces outputs that:

  • fit human communicative practices,
  • respond appropriately to prompts,
  • and support complex tasks.

This is:

value-aligned behaviour within interaction.


(c) Constraint on meaning-making

The model plays a real role in interaction:

  • it shapes what can be said,
  • constrains possible interpretations,
  • and guides the trajectory of discourse.

It does not produce meaning.

But it:

conditions it.


(d) Coupled participation in discourse

In interaction, the model:

  • participates in exchanges,
  • sustains conversational structure,
  • and enables extended coordination.

This is:

participation without construal.


3. What “Understanding” Reduces To

Under constraint, what is often called “understanding” reduces to a composite of:

  • structured linguistic competence,
  • functional responsiveness,
  • and effective coupling with human interpreters.

These together produce:

the appearance of understanding.

But appearance is not a deficiency.

It is:

a real effect of structured coordination.


4. The Cost of Precision

What is lost:

  • the intuition that the system “means,”
  • the projection of inner understanding,
  • the idea of shared cognition.

What is gained:

  • a clear distinction between structure, value, and meaning,
  • a non-anthropomorphic account of system behaviour,
  • and a precise location for construal.

5. Final Formulation

We can now state, without equivocation:

AI systems do not understand.

They generate structured language,
behave in functionally aligned ways,
and participate in coupled interaction.

Meaning arises only where their outputs are construed as something—
not within the systems themselves.


Closing Remark

The success of LLMs does not show that:

  • meaning has been reproduced artificially.

It shows something more exacting:

that highly structured systems can participate in the conditions under which meaning is produced—without producing it themselves.


And with that, the series closes.

Not by dismissing AI.

But by determining exactly what remains
once the word “understanding” is no longer allowed to do unexamined work.

Meaning Without Construal: AI Under Constraint — 5 Coupling Without Construal: Where Meaning Actually Occurs

When a human interacts with a language model, something happens that cannot be dismissed:

  • questions are answered,
  • interpretations are formed,
  • meanings are taken up and responded to.

From the perspective of the user:

the exchange is meaningful.

This is not an illusion.

But neither is it evidence that:

the model itself construes.

The task now is to account for this without collapsing the distinction we have established.


1. The Site of the Confusion

The confusion arises because:

  • meaningful interaction is observed,
  • and the system is one of the participants.

From this, it is inferred:

meaning must be distributed across the interaction,
or shared between human and machine.

This inference is natural.

It is also incorrect.


2. What Is Actually Coupled

In interaction, several distinct organisations are brought into relation:

  • the model’s structured output generation,
  • the human’s semiotic organisation (construal),
  • and the ongoing coordination of exchange.

These are not the same kind of thing.

They must not be collapsed.

What occurs is:

coupling across a cut.


3. The Role of the Model

The model contributes:

  • highly structured linguistic output,
  • sensitive to prompts,
  • capable of sustaining coherence.

This output:

  • constrains what can be taken up,
  • shapes the trajectory of interaction,
  • and enables coordination.

But it does not:

construe.


4. The Role of the Human

The human participant:

  • interprets the output,
  • takes it as meaningful,
  • integrates it into a semiotic system.

This is where:

  • “aboutness” arises,
  • distinctions are made,
  • meanings are formed.

Construal is located here.

Not distributed.
Not shared.

located.


5. Interaction Without Shared Meaning

Because the interaction is coordinated, it appears as if:

  • meaning is jointly produced,
  • or co-constructed between human and system.

But coordination does not imply:

shared semiotic organisation.

What is shared is:

  • a trajectory of exchange,
  • a pattern of interaction.

What is not shared is:

construal itself.


6. Coupling Without Collapse

The relation can now be stated precisely:

  • the model provides structured output,
  • the human provides construal,
  • and the interaction unfolds as coupled coordination.

These constrain one another:

  • output shapes interpretation,
  • interpretation shapes subsequent prompts,
  • the loop stabilises over time.

But at no point does:

  • the model begin to construe,
  • or meaning migrate into the system.

7. Why the Illusion Persists

The illusion of shared meaning arises because:

  • the coupling is tight,
  • the output is highly responsive,
  • and the interaction is continuous.

This creates:

the appearance of a single system with distributed meaning.

But this is a misdescription.

What we have is:

two distinct organisations, tightly coupled across a boundary.


8. No Transfer of Meaning

Meaning is not:

  • transmitted from human to model,
  • nor generated within the model and received by the human.

Because:

meaning is not a substance that moves.

It arises:

  • in construal,
  • under conditions of coupling,
  • without being located in the coupling itself.

9. Reframing the Interaction

Under constraint, we can state:

LLM interaction is a site where structured output and semiotic construal are coupled without collapsing into a single system.

This explains:

  • why interaction is meaningful,
  • without attributing meaning to the model.

Closing Formulation

Meaning does not reside in the model.

It does not emerge from structure, use, or internal state.

It arises where output is construed as something—
within a semiotic organisation.

The model participates in this process
not by meaning,
but by constraining what can be meant.

This is coupling without construal.


Now the architecture is complete:

  • nothing inside the model carries meaning
  • nothing in behaviour or structure produces it
  • and yet meaning occurs in interaction

One final step remains.

To state, cleanly and without concession:

what survives of “AI understanding” once all equivocations are removed.


Final Post

“What Remains of AI ‘Understanding’ Under Constraint”

Meaning Without Construal: AI Under Constraint — 4 No Interpreter Inside: Why Internal States Do Not Construe

Large language models are often described as containing:

  • internal representations,
  • latent spaces,
  • embeddings of meaning,
  • or distributed semantic structure.

Even when these terms are used cautiously, they suggest:

that something like meaning exists within the system.

The claim is rarely explicit.

But it takes a familiar form:

  • the model does not merely produce patterns,
  • it organises internal states that correspond to meanings.

From this, a conclusion follows:

meaning is present internally, even if not directly observable.


1. What Internal States Actually Are

At a technical level, LLMs consist of:

  • layers of transformations,
  • weight matrices,
  • activation patterns,
  • and vector representations.

These internal states:

  • change dynamically during processing,
  • reflect learned statistical structure,
  • and influence output generation.

They are:

  • complex,
  • high-dimensional,
  • and highly structured.

But they are still:

configurations of transformation.


2. The Temptation of Representation

Because these states are structured, they are often interpreted as:

  • representing concepts,
  • encoding meanings,
  • or capturing semantic relations.

For example:

  • similar words cluster in vector space,
  • analogical relations can be computed,
  • latent dimensions appear interpretable.

This suggests:

that meaning is “inside” the model, in encoded form.


3. Mapping Is Not Meaning (Again)

These observations establish:

  • correlations between internal structure and linguistic patterns.

They show that:

  • the model’s internal organisation reflects regularities in language use.

But they do not establish:

that the model construes anything as anything.

Once again:

  • mapping is not meaning,
  • structure is not content.

An internal vector may correlate with “cat,”

but it is not:

the concept of a cat,
nor something taken as a cat.


4. No “As” in the System

Meaning requires:

an “as”-relation—something is taken as something.

Internal states, however:

  • do not differentiate between sign and object,
  • do not establish aboutness,
  • do not organise interpretation.

They participate in:

  • transformations from input to output,

not in:

construal.

There is no level within the system where:

  • tokens are interpreted as referring to entities,
  • or where relations are organised as meaning.

5. The Homunculus Problem

The idea that internal states contain meaning often implies:

  • an internal interpreter,
  • a subsystem that “reads” representations,
  • a locus where meaning is realised.

But this leads to a regress:

  • if a representation needs an interpreter,
  • then that interpreter must itself interpret.

And so on.

Ecological and enactivist approaches rejected this.

But LLM discourse often reintroduces it implicitly:

meaning is inside, but nowhere in particular.


6. Distributed Does Not Solve It

To avoid the homunculus, meaning is often said to be:

  • distributed across the network,
  • emergent from the whole system,
  • not localised in any single component.

This avoids localisation.

But it does not introduce:

construal.

A distributed pattern is still:

  • a pattern.

It does not become meaning simply by being:

  • spread out,
  • dynamic,
  • or complex.

7. Internal States as Constraint

Under constraint, internal states can be understood precisely:

they are configurations that constrain how inputs are transformed into outputs.

They:

  • encode statistical structure,
  • shape generation,
  • and enable flexibility.

But they do not:

  • interpret,
  • construe,
  • or mean.

8. No Hidden Layer of Meaning

There is no hidden layer where:

  • meaning “really” resides,
  • waiting to be uncovered by better analysis.

All layers of the system:

  • participate in transformation,
  • not in semiosis.

Meaning is not:

  • latent,
  • implicit,
  • or encoded internally.

Because:

encoding is not construal.


9. Reframing the Model Again

We can now state:

the model contains structured internal states that enable coherent language generation, but these states do not constitute meaning.

They are:

  • necessary for performance,
  • but insufficient for semiosis.

Closing Formulation

There is no interpreter inside the system.

Internal states constrain transformation—
they do not construe.

No representation, whether local or distributed,
becomes meaning simply by existing within the model.

Meaning requires an “as”-relation.

And that relation is not found in the internal dynamics of the system.


At this point, all internal attributions have been removed:

  • structure ≠ meaning
  • use ≠ meaning
  • internal states ≠ meaning

What remains is the only place left where meaning might appear:

in the interaction between system and user.


Next Post

“Coupling Without Construal: Where Meaning Actually Occurs”

Meaning Without Construal: AI Under Constraint — 3 Use Is Not Meaning: Why Behaviour Does Not Construe

A common response to the limitations of structural accounts is to relocate meaning into use.

On this view:

  • meaning is not an internal property,
  • nor a feature of structure alone,

but:

something that arises in practice—through use, behaviour, and interaction.

Applied to LLMs, the claim becomes:

  • the model uses language appropriately,
  • participates in discourse,
  • and produces context-sensitive responses.

Therefore:

its outputs are meaningful because they function meaningfully.

This position avoids:

  • naive attribution of inner states,
  • and reductive appeals to structure alone.

It grounds meaning in:

observable activity.


1. The Strength of the Appeal

The appeal to use captures something real.

LLMs do:

  • respond appropriately to prompts,
  • adapt to context,
  • maintain coherence across turns,
  • and fulfil communicative roles.

From the outside, this looks indistinguishable—at least locally—from meaningful participation.

Meaning, in human contexts, is inseparable from:

  • how language is used,
  • how it functions in interaction,
  • and how it coordinates activity.

So the move is natural:

if it behaves meaningfully, it is meaningful.


2. The Hidden Assumption

This move depends on an implicit equivalence:

use = meaning.

Or more precisely:

appropriate behaviour is sufficient for meaning.

But this equivalence is not established.

It is assumed.


3. Behaviour Without “As”

Use consists of:

  • producing outputs in response to inputs,
  • adjusting behaviour based on context,
  • and aligning with expectations.

This is:

  • observable,
  • describable,
  • and functionally effective.

But none of this, by itself, requires:

that anything is taken as anything.

Behaviour can be:

  • appropriate,
  • effective,
  • and well-coordinated,

without involving:

  • construal.

4. The Distinction Reasserted

The distinction must be held:

  • value:
    what works, what is effective, what matters in action
  • meaning:
    what is construed as something within a semiotic organisation

Use belongs to the first.

It describes:

  • success,
  • coordination,
  • and functional alignment.

It does not, by itself, establish:

semiotic organisation.


5. Why Function Is Not Meaning

The fact that an utterance:

  • produces an appropriate response,
  • fits the context,
  • or achieves a goal,

does not entail:

  • that it is meaningful in itself.

It entails:

that it functions within a system of activity.

Function can be described entirely in terms of:

  • inputs and outputs,
  • conditions and effects,
  • coordination and outcome.

Meaning cannot.


6. The Illusion of Participation

Because LLMs participate in discourse, it is tempting to treat them as:

  • participants in meaning-making.

But participation here is:

  • behavioural,
  • not semiotic.

The system produces outputs that:

  • fit into human practices,
  • and are taken up by human interpreters.

This creates the appearance of:

shared meaning.

But the sharing occurs:

  • on the side of the interpreters,
  • not within the model.

7. Use as Condition, Not Ground

Use is indispensable.

Without use:

  • meaning does not manifest,
  • language does not function,
  • communication does not occur.

But use is a condition for meaning, not its ground.

It provides:

  • the context in which meaning is realised,

not:

the mechanism by which meaning is constituted.


8. Reframing LLM Behaviour

Under constraint, we can state:

LLMs produce behaviour that is functionally aligned with human language use.

This explains:

  • their effectiveness,
  • their adaptability,
  • and their integration into communicative practices.

But it does not entail:

  • that they construe anything as anything.

9. Where Meaning Actually Occurs

Meaning arises when:

  • outputs are taken up within a semiotic organisation,
  • and construed as meaningful by participants.

The model contributes:

  • structured output,
  • functionally appropriate behaviour.

But the construal:

is not located in the behaviour itself.


Closing Formulation

Behaviour does not construe.

Use describes what works—
how outputs function within a system of activity.

But meaning requires that something is taken as something.

No degree of appropriate use,
no matter how refined,
produces construal on its own.


This removes the second fallback:

  • meaning is not secured by use alone.

At this point, two collapses have been blocked:

  • structure ≠ meaning
  • use ≠ meaning

What remains is the most persistent assumption:

that meaning must be somewhere inside the system.


Next Post

“No Interpreter Inside: Why Internal States Do Not Construe”