What is a world? How does meaning emerge? How do we inhabit, observe, and participate in the unfolding of potential itself?
This three-series project explores these questions from complementary perspectives—conceptual, ontological, and mythopoetic—inviting readers into a journey across relational space, time, and narrative imagination.
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The Architecture of Possibility examines systems, potential, and the evolution of meaning. It is an exploration of how relational lattices, edges, and constraints shape the emergence of new worlds. Here, the abstract mechanisms of possibility are laid bare, revealing the architecture beneath experience and cognition.
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Relational Semantics, Reimagined turns inward to the semantic stratum. It asks how meaning itself—ideational, interpersonal, textual—is structured, differentiated, and actualised within a relational ontology. This series is rigorous, precise, and deeply technical, uncovering the lattice of potentials through which language and cognition operate.
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Mythos of Meaning moves outward into the narrative and mythopoetic. Here, the concepts of recognition, hesitation, edges, reflection, and duration are embodied in Liora and mythic figures like the MirrorFox and the Caterpillar of Unfolding Durations. Philosophy and narrative converge, showing how relational ontology can be experienced, imagined, and lived.
Together, the series form a layered investigation of how possibility becomes, moving from abstract structures to linguistic architecture, and finally to narrative embodiment. Readers are invited not simply to understand, but to inhabit the lattice of potential, to sense edges, and to explore worlds that are dynamically relational, temporally stratified, and generatively alive.
This is not a guide to static truths. It is an invitation to attune to possibility itself.
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