In our previous post, we traced a sequence of symbolic reconstruals: from language to science, from science to myth, and from myth to philosophy. Each stage represented a deeper or broader integration of meaning, forming what we called a hierarchy of reconstruals. But this hierarchy does not operate in the abstract. It unfolds within a semiotic ecology populated by individuals.
This post introduces a second dimension to our model: individuation. If reconstrual explains how symbolic systems evolve and relate, individuation explains how meaning differentiates across persons. It is not merely a psychological process, but a semiotic one: the shaping of personal meaning potential within a shared symbolic order.
Individuation: Differentiation of Meaning Potential
In Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL), individuation refers to the relation between the collective meaning potential of a culture and the differentiated meaning potentials of individuals. While instantiation is about moving from potential to instance, individuation is about moving from collective to singular.
Individuation is the differentiation of reality as meaning potential across persons.
Each individual does not merely draw from a neutral system—they actively shape and are shaped by it. Meaning potential is never undifferentiated; it always appears as somebody’s semiotic repertoire, embedded in biography, community, and cultural history.
Reconstrual Across the Axis of Individuation
Let’s revisit our four stages of symbolic activity, now layered with the principle of individuation:
Language construes experience as meaning—but each speaker individuates the linguistic system differently, forming a unique register, idiolect, or symbolic style.
Science reconstrues meaning as theory—but each scientist or community brings their own history of interests, training, and theoretical commitments.
Myth reconstrues theory as existential orientation—but each hearer integrates myth into their own symbolic journey, often unconsciously.
Philosophy reflects on reconstrual—but always through a thinker’s singular engagement with the questions that most trouble or inspire them.
In this way, individuation ensures that symbolic activity is not just collective or cognitive, but personal and situated.
Each reconstrual of meaning is a negotiation between system and self.
The Hero’s Journey as Individuation
This model resonates strongly with Joseph Campbell’s interpretation of myth as a symbolic script for individuation. The hero myth does not simply recount a collective story—it invites the hearer to take up shared meaning potentials and reconstrue them as personal symbolic orientation.
The hero journeys into the unknown, not to escape the world, but to return transformed. So too does individuation involve venturing beyond given meanings in order to reconfigure one’s place within them.
Myth is theory re-individuated—lived, felt, and re-embodied as personal meaning.
Meaning as Semiotic Ecology
When we consider both reconstrual and individuation, we can begin to think of meaning not as a static structure, but as a living ecology. Meaning potential is distributed across persons and systems, across communities and timescales. Each individual is not an isolated node, but a distinct articulation of the system’s potential.
The human condition is not only to live in meaning, but to be a unique differentiation of it.
Individuation, then, is not the narrowing of meaning, but its diversification. It is how the symbolic life of a culture is sustained: not through repetition, but through differentiated resonance.
Conclusion
Individuation adds depth to our model of symbolic reconstrual. It reminds us that meaning is not only constructed and reconstrued at the level of systems, but always embodied, enacted, and transformed by individuals.
As we move from language to science, from science to myth, and from myth to philosophy, we do not move impersonally. We move as selves in the making—each of us a singular site of semiotic resonance, where the ecology of meaning takes shape again and again.