This series of posts, now collected as a unified arc, explores the nature of language and meaning through the lens of relational ontology. The project began as a response to long-standing interiorist assumptions: that thoughts pre-exist language, that meaning resides inside minds, and that communication is a conduit of these inner contents.
From the outset, the goal has been to show that language operates as a relational technology: an emergent system in which meaning is actualised, stabilised, innovated, and coordinated entirely through interaction among system potential, situation types, and histories of use. Across seven posts, readers are guided from construal, through system networks and histories of use, to semiotic experimentation, differentiation of possibility, cross-modal application, and finally a synthesis that positions language as a technology of possibility.
This collection is intended for scholars, analysts, and theorists who seek a rigorous, canonical understanding of language as relational, systemic, and historically situated. It is also an invitation: to approach language not as a mirror of interior thought, but as a medium through which possibility itself evolves.
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