In our previous post, we outlined a semiotic triangle linking reconstrual, individuation, and instantiation—three interdependent dimensions of how meaning becomes reality. But this triangle is not a static structure. It is dynamic. Meaning flows, mutates, and multiplies through the ongoing interaction of these dimensions. This post explores the dynamics of that interplay.
1. From Instantiation to System: How Use Becomes Structure
Each act of meaning (an instantiation) draws on potential. But repeated acts don’t just express potential—they shape it. Over time:
Innovations introduced in a local context may spread.
Patterns stabilise into norms.
Idiosyncrasies coalesce into registers.
This is how instantiation feeds back into system. In systemic functional linguistics (SFL), this process is sometimes referred to as "delicacy in flux": the system is never static, always reorganising as it is used.
Use reconfigures potential.
This feedback loop allows for reconstruals to emerge not just from theoretical reflection, but from practice—from meaning-in-action.
2. From Individuation to Reconstrual: How Subjectivities Enable Transformation
Individuated meaning potentials—the partial, patterned repertoires held by individuals or groups—do more than reflect the system. They mediate how systems evolve:
A community with a distinct repertoire may reconstrue a dominant discourse into a counter-discourse.
A thinker with an unusual semantic profile may reconstrue theory as myth, or vice versa.
A culture may resist or enable certain reconstruals depending on how meaning is individuated within it.
Who we are shapes what reconstruals are possible.
Reconstruals, then, are not abstract derivations. They are situated acts, made possible by particular individuations.
3. From System to Self: How Meaning Potentials Shape Persons
While individuation differentiates the system across persons, the reverse is also true: systems shape selves:
Educational, cultural, and discursive systems provide resources (and constraints) for individuation.
What meanings we can make depends on what systems we’ve had access to.
Our positions in a social semiotic field (e.g. centre vs margin) affect the density and range of our meaning potential.
Systems distribute the very conditions of individuation.
In this way, every instantiation carries both agency and inheritance: we act, but we do so within patterns that act on us.
The Pulse of Semiotic Evolution
These interrelations—system feeding into self, self enabling reconstrual, reconstrual reshaping system—form a kind of semiotic metabolism:
Meaning is actualised in situations.
Recurrent instantiations shape and shift the system.
Systems afford or deny individuation.
New individuations enable new reconstruals.
It is through this ongoing, recursive interplay that symbolic systems evolve. Not as pure abstractions, but as lived, enacted, and re-enacted structures.
Living Within the Flow
As participants in this ecology, we are never outside it. We are always:
Instantiating meanings that have been made possible,
Individuating meanings that have been distributed,
Reconstruing meanings that have been sedimented.
The more aware we are of these processes, the more consciously we can engage in them:
To live semiotically is to live in the flow of meaning’s evolution.
We are neither mere recipients nor sole creators of meaning. We are its co-instantiators, co-individuators, and co-reconstruers.
And in that dynamic, we find both our limits—and our possibilities.
