The meaner isn't simply a passive recipient of meaning, swept along by gravitational forces. Instead, they are an active participant in navigating the meaning field, choosing where to direct attention and, ultimately, what meaning to actualise.
Navigating Through Semiotic Space
The meaning field is vast and multifaceted, with countless potential meanings in constant flux. As a meaner, you don't just passively accept what is in front of you. You actively direct attention, choosing which meanings to engage with, which to ignore, and how to move through the space.
Attention is, in this sense, the navigation tool through a world of interdependent, ever-changing meanings.
But attention is not unlimited — it is a resource. You can only focus on so much at once. This means you must constantly make choices about where your attention goes, and those choices are not made in a vacuum.
You are always navigating within cultural, historical, and social systems of meaning — and those systems exert their own forms of gravity.
The Ethics of Attention: What We Choose to See
The question of where to direct attention isn't just a practical one — it's deeply ethical.
Who gets to decide what deserves our attention? Who benefits from what we choose to ignore? And what forms of meaning are invisible because of the ways we’ve been conditioned to direct our focus?
By focusing on one thing, you may not just neglect others; you may be complicit in sustaining the semiotic inertia that upholds cultural norms and power structures.
For example, focusing only on the voices of those in power means perpetuating a meaning field that is biased, limited, and oppressive. Conversely, shifting attention toward neglected voices can disrupt the semiotic gravity that keeps certain meanings dominant.
Attention as a Form of Agency
In every moment of attention, the meaner exercises agency. But this agency is relational. The forces of semiotic gravity influence where attention naturally goes, but the meaner can choose to counteract that pull.
This is where field navigation becomes an art. It requires awareness of the field’s forces, the ability to distinguish between the gravitational pull of dominant meanings and the more subtle currents of meaning on the margins.
Attention is not neutral. It’s an active, embodied act of meaning-making. It can either sustain the field’s structure or seek new ways of navigating it.
Neurosemiotics and Attention
From a neurosemiotic perspective, attention involves both cognitive and bodily processes. The brain’s neural networks filter out some meanings and amplify others, based on sensory input, past experience, and cultural conditioning.
In this sense, attention isn’t just a mental process; it’s a bodily one. Our attention is shaped by the way we move through the world, how we engage with others, and how we interact with the environments we inhabit.
Just as the body navigates physical space, so too does the meaner navigate the semiotic space of culture.
The Role of Ethical Navigation in Collective Fields
When we consider the meaner’s navigation of the field, we must recognise that this navigation doesn't happen in isolation. It’s a relational act. The choices made by one meaner ripple out, affecting the larger field.
As such, ethical navigation means considering the collective impact of our attention. What are we contributing to? How are we reinforcing or disrupting the dominant norms?
In a world where so many meanings are already weighed down by semiotic gravity, the choice of what to focus on becomes even more significant. Each moment of attention is a decision, not just for oneself, but for the field as a whole.
Attention and Transformation: The Potential for Change
Attention, however, also offers potential for transformation. By directing our focus in new ways, we can challenge and reshape the meaning field itself.
It’s not just about responding to the field; it’s about actively changing the field through how we navigate it. As new meanings gain attention, they can accumulate enough semiotic mass to create alternative centres of gravity.
In this way, the act of attention becomes an act of creation, transformation, and liberation.