Series 1: Density and the Evolution of Semiotic Possibility
Goal: Make semiotic dynamics tangible through vertical and lateral clines, development, evolution, tradition, and innovation.
| Post | Focus | Key Concept |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Instantiation as vertical cline | System → instance; token–type relation clarified from instance pole |
| 2 | Individuation as lateral cline | Density distribution across individuals; patterned variation |
| 3 | Development as density reconfiguration | Individual density shifts over time; trajectories of fluency |
| 4 | Evolution as collective reweighting | Aggregated actualisations redistribute density at the system level |
| 5 | Tradition as sedimented probability | Thickened regions encode history; stabilisation emerges naturally |
| 6 | Innovation as stabilised thinning | Thin regions provide space for novelty; new patterns can thicken |
| 7 | Topology of semiotic possibility | Integrated vertical/lateral/temporal field; relational density landscape |
Key Takeaways:
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Semiotic systems are dynamic, relational, and patterned
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Variation, stability, and novelty are emergent from density logic
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Readers are primed to recognise the invariant principle across domains
Series 2: Relational Ontology of Evolving Potential
Goal: Generalise the dynamics of density, sedimentation, and innovation to any structured potential system, revealing a calm and systematic ontology.
| Post | Focus | Key Concept |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Structured potential beyond semiotics | Potential fields, vertical/lateral clines, cross-domain actualisation |
| 2 | Recognition moment — ontology | Introduces “relational ontology of evolving potential” as invariant principle |
| 3 | Actualisation and density dynamics | Vertical/lateral/temporal redistribution in general systems |
| 4 | Sedimentation and stabilisation | Historical accumulation, emergent stability, domain-independent |
| 5 | Innovation as stabilised thinning | Low-density regions generate novelty across domains |
| 6 | Topology of evolving potential | Integrated 3D field: vertical (potential→actualisation), lateral (variation), temporal (history and innovation) |
Key Takeaways:
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Semiotics is one instantiation of a broader relational pattern
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Structured potential evolves through recursive, relational dynamics
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Continuity (thickened regions) and novelty (thin regions) coexist in every domain
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The framework constitutes a general ontology of evolving potential
Series Trajectory
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Concrete grounding in semiotics (Series 1)
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Readers first see density logic in a familiar system
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Vertical and lateral clines, plus temporal dynamics, are fully worked out
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Generalisation and recognition (Series 2)
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Principle is abstracted without losing relational or dynamic logic
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The term ontology is introduced calmly, naturally, and systematically
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Culmination
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Both series together provide a trajectory from specific to general
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A reader who follows Series 1 is ready to recognise the domain-independent topology of evolving potential
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The work demonstrates how patterned actualisation, sedimentation, and thinning generate evolving possibility in any structured system
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