Monday, 23 March 2026

After Ontology: Applications — 4 Social Coordination Without Meaning Collapse: Value Without Semiosis, Order Without Representation

Social theory typically assumes:

  • societies are held together by shared meanings
  • coordination depends on communication
  • norms are expressions of collective understanding
  • institutions embody values or beliefs

Even in more “materialist” versions, the assumption persists:

coordination is ultimately grounded in something semantic or representational

This is the collapse.


1. The myth: society is meaning-made

The dominant picture:

  • people share meanings
  • meanings produce norms
  • norms produce institutions
  • institutions stabilise society

So social order is seen as:

an emergent property of shared understanding

But this confuses two different strata:

  • semiotic stabilisation (meaning)
  • behavioural stabilisation (coordination)

We separate them.


2. The distinction: meaning vs value systems

We must be precise:

  • Meaning (semiotic): produced through language as selective stabilisation of distinctions
  • Value systems (non-semiotic): constraints on action that organise coordination without requiring representation

Value systems include:

  • norms
  • institutional roles
  • procedural rules
  • incentive structures
  • enforcement mechanisms

They do not require anyone to “represent” them correctly to function.

They require:

stabilised behavioural regularities


3. Coordination as constraint alignment

Social coordination is not:

shared meaning producing shared action

It is:

alignment of constraint regimes across interacting agents

What matters is not:

  • what people believe

but:

  • what patterns of action reliably stabilise across interactions

So coordination is:

achieved when behavioural differentiations become mutually compatible under constraint


4. Institutions as stabilisation devices

Institutions are not:

  • embodiments of collective meaning
  • expressions of social values
  • containers of norms

They are:

engineered constraint systems that stabilise recurring patterns of action

They function by:

  • restricting permissible actions
  • reinforcing repeatable sequences
  • distributing constraints across roles

So institutions are:

persistence mechanisms for behavioural differentiation


5. Suppression: the illusion of shared understanding

We often explain coordination by saying:

  • “people agree”
  • “they share norms”
  • “they understand each other”

But this is retrospective narration.

What actually stabilises coordination is:

the successful alignment of constraint conditions governing action

Shared meaning is often:

an after-the-fact rationalisation of stabilised coordination


6. Leakage: breakdown of coordination

Coordination failure does not always mean misunderstanding.

It can mean:

  • incompatible constraint regimes
  • misaligned incentives
  • structural instability between interacting systems

This produces:

  • conflict
  • friction
  • institutional breakdown

Not because meaning fails.

But because:

constraint alignment fails


7. Language’s role: coordination without control

Language participates in coordination, but does not determine it.

It:

  • transmits constraints
  • stabilises expectations
  • supports role differentiation

But:

saying something does not guarantee coordination

Because coordination depends on:

whether action stabilises under the relevant constraint regime


8. Value without meaning collapse

Crucially:

We must avoid reducing value systems to meaning systems.

Because:

  • meaning is semiotic stabilisation
  • value systems are behavioural constraint structures

They interact, but are not identical.

For example:

  • a rule can function without being semantically understood
  • an institution can operate despite contested interpretations
  • norms can persist through enforcement rather than agreement

So:

coordination does not require semantic unity


9. The deeper structure: distributed constraint

Society is not a unified system.

It is:

a distributed network of interacting constraint regimes

These include:

  • linguistic stabilisations
  • institutional structures
  • material infrastructures
  • behavioural routines

Social order emerges when:

these regimes achieve partial, overlapping stability in their effects on action

Not because they share meaning.

But because they:

produce compatible patterns of differentiation


10. What society becomes

Society is no longer:

  • a collective of meaning-sharing subjects
  • a system of shared norms
  • a communicative totality

It becomes:

a dynamic field of interacting constraint regimes that stabilise coordinated patterns of action without requiring semantic unity

Its coherence is not interpretive.

It is:

operational


Closing pressure

We have now removed one of the most deeply embedded assumptions in social theory:

that coordination depends on shared meaning

What remains is more austere, but more precise:

coordination is a product of constraint alignment across distributed systems of action


Transition

We now have:

  • science as constraint practice
  • mathematics as constraint engineering
  • language as selective stabilisation
  • society as distributed constraint alignment

Next we move to the most contested internal domain:

mind

Where subjectivity, experience, and agency are usually treated as foundational.

Next:

Post 5 — Mind as Field Effect

Where the “subject” is no longer origin, but stabilised outcome of constraint dynamics.

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