We have arrived at a claim that cannot remain abstract:
The semiotic and value are coupled as co-constraints on their actualisation.
The immediate question is unavoidable:
Where does this constraint hold?
Not rhetorically. Literally.
Because everything we have excluded returns the moment we answer too quickly.
- If we say it holds in the world, we have introduced a shared substrate.
- If we say it holds in the organism, we have embedded both within a larger system.
- If we say it holds in interaction, we have reintroduced a space of exchange.
Each answer reinstates:
- a container
- a medium
- a site where distinct organisations meet
All are prohibited.
And yet, the constraint must hold.
Not metaphorically. Not “as if.”
If coupling is real, then it must be operative—not in general, but in the only place where anything can be operative:
actualisation.
This is where precision becomes non-negotiable.
Instantiation is not:
- a moment in time
- a location in space
- an event in which processes converge
It is not a site.
It is a perspectival cut.
To say that something is instantiated is not to say that it occurs somewhere.
It is to say that a system is taken from the pole of potential to the pole of instance.
A shift in perspective:
- from what can be
- to what is actualised
The system is simply no longer being viewed as a range of possibilities, but as a specific instance.
Now we can restate the claim:
Coupling holds at instantiation—not as a meeting of systems, but as the alignment of distinct actualisations under constraint.
Every term matters.
1. Not a Meeting
Instantiation is not where the semiotic and value come together.
If we describe it this way, we have already fallen back into a shared event-space.
2. Not a Container
The instance is not something that contains multiple layers—semiotic, biological, social.
It is not a composite.
To treat it as such is to reintroduce a hidden unity in which distinct organisations become components.
3. Alignment Without Convergence
What holds at instantiation is not interaction, but alignment.
But this must be read without metaphor.
Alignment does not mean:
- synchronisation in time
- coordination across a system
- adjustment through feedback
It means:
distinct actualisations are constrained such that they are not independent—without becoming one.
These are not two aspects of a single event.
They are distinct actualisations.
And yet:
4. Constraint Without Location
We are now at the hardest point.
If coupling constrains actualisation, but:
- does not occur in a place
- does not operate through a mechanism
- does not pass between domains
Then where is the constraint?
The answer is deliberately austere:
The constraint is not located. It is constitutive.
It is what it means for the actualisations to hold as they do.
This is where most readers will attempt to recover familiar ground.
They will say:
- “the brain integrates meaning and value”
- “the environment shapes both”
- “the organism coordinates them”
Each of these reinstates:
- a site
- a system
- a process
Each converts coupling back into interaction.
We refuse all of them.
So we are left with a position that is now fully exposed:
- Distinct organisations
- No shared substrate
- No transfer
- No reduction
- No event-space
And yet:
actualisations are constrained such that they are not independent.
This is the pivot of the entire series.
If this holds, then:
- relation does not require connection
- constraint does not require mechanism
- co-presence does not require a shared space
If it fails, everything collapses back into:
- causation
- representation
- or system-integration
We proceed without retreat.
Because the next step will force the issue further.
We now have to reintroduce a concept that is almost always mishandled:
context.
But as a distinct stratum that is itself caught in coupling—without dissolving into either meaning or value.
Next: context, cleaned of its usual confusions, and re-specified under the same constraints.
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