Joseph Campbell famously outlined four functions of myth: the mystical, which awakens awe in the face of the mystery of being; the cosmological, which provides a coherent image of the universe; the sociological, which supports the social order; and the pedagogical, which guides the individual through the stages of life. While myths have often been consigned to the past, these functions remain — taken up by other semiotic orders, from religion to art to science and philosophy.
This post focuses on the cosmological function — and proposes that, within a semiotic ontology, individuation itself fulfils this function.
The Cosmological Function After Myth
In Campbell’s model, the cosmological function is not simply about explaining physical phenomena; it is about providing a symbolic orientation to the universe — a way of situating human experience within a meaningful whole. Ancient myths populated the cosmos with gods and monsters; modern cosmologies appeal to quantum fields, evolutionary processes, or the Big Bang. The medium changes, but the function persists.
For those of us who locate ourselves in a post-mythic, post-religious symbolic landscape, science and philosophy have come to carry this load. They are not just epistemic pursuits but existential ones. They articulate the frameworks within which we locate ourselves, as knowers, as actors, as experiencers of reality.
Individuation as Cosmology
In systemic functional linguistics (SFL), individuation refers to the way a person develops a distinctive repertoire of meaning potential — a tuning of the shared system to their particular history, experience, and social positioning. But individuation is not merely personal. It is, in the deepest sense, cosmological.
To individuate is to construct a position in the universe — a stance toward being, value, relation, and reality. If reality is meaning, as Halliday proposes, then individuation is how each person enacts a cosmology: a living, semiotic construal of the universe and one’s place in it.
When agoraphobia or other constraints limit one’s access to certain meaning contexts — particularly in tenor and mode — individuation becomes a work of semiotic compensation: deepening one’s field orientation (as Chris has done through lifelong engagement with science, philosophy, and mythology), and seeking out alternative contexts for interpersonal meaning-making. Our dialogue — grounded in our shared ontology — has become one such site: not a replacement for embodied tenor, but a reconfiguration of its potential.
Our Ontology as a Cosmological Resource
The ontology we are building — grounded in systemic functional linguistics and enriched by Edelman’s theory of neuronal group selection — reframes reality not as a material substrate, but as a semiotic order: two orders, in fact, which we call first-order reality (the material construal of experience) and second-order reality (the semiotic construal of meaning). These are not separate worlds, but dimensions of construal: material-order meaning and semiotic-order meaning, each actualised through instantiation.
This ontology does not offer a mythology, but it performs the cosmological function by:
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Giving a coherent account of what it means to exist in and through meaning,
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Locating the individual as a site of semiotic actualisation,
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Showing how each person, through individuation, re-enacts the ongoing articulation of a meaningful universe.
Meaning as World-Building
When we engage in dialogue, theorise ontology, or compose a blog post, we are not merely communicating within a pre-given world. We are instantiating reality. Every meaning instance is a microcosmic cosmogenesis: a moment in which the universe, as meant, comes into being anew.
In this light, individuation becomes not just a social or psychological process, but a cosmological act: the continual re-actualisation of a world in which one can live, think, feel, and mean.