In our previous post, we proposed that individuation — the tuning of a person’s meaning potential — performs the cosmological function of myth: it positions the self within a meaningful universe. This post develops that claim by exploring a key semiotic operation in our model: projection between orders of reality.
Two Orders of Reality
In our ontology, reality is not conceived as a fixed material substrate, but as a semiotic order — or rather, two orders:
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First-order reality is the construal of experience as material meaning: phenomena, processes, entities, space-time, and causality. This is the realm of “what is going on.”
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Second-order reality is the construal of meaning itself: metaphenomena, projections, desires, beliefs, and signs. This is the realm of “what is meant.”
These are not two different worlds. They are dimensions of construal — both real, because both are meant. Their relation is not hierarchical but functional: second-order reality arises through the projection of meaning onto first-order experience.
Projection as a Metafunctional Process
Projection is a grammatical process — especially within the interpersonal and textual metafunctions — but it also operates ontologically. When we project, we do not simply report experience; we reconstrue it as semiotic: as thought, desire, command, evaluation, or belief.
This is clearest in mental and verbal processes:
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I think [it’s raining].
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She said [we should leave].
Here, the bracketed clause is projected: it is no longer a claim about first-order reality but an instance of second-order meaning. The experiencer or sayer positions themselves toward a possible reality, rather than asserting it directly.
But projection is not limited to clauses. Any act of meaning — any metaphor, modality, abstraction, or attitude — may function as a projection: a reconstrual of first-order phenomena into a second-order semiotic field.
Projecting Reality and Projecting the Self
To project meaning onto experience is to instantiate a reality — not merely to describe the world but to bring forth a version of it that can be lived with, argued for, or resisted. When a scientist proposes a model, when a child imagines a monster, when a poet describes the sky as grieving — each is projecting second-order meaning onto first-order experience, thereby creating a lived reality.
But projection also works reflexively. We do not only construe the world; we construe ourselves within it. Our hopes, doubts, identities, and orientations are not latent psychological states — they are semiotic projections: patterns of meaning that instantiate who we are and might become.
This reflexivity is fundamental to individuation. To develop a distinctive meaning potential is not just to become more articulate, but to become more capable of projecting oneself into reality, and reality into oneself.
The Cosmological Stakes of Projection
This brings us back to the cosmological function. If reality is meaning, and if projection is how we construe meaning from experience, then projection is nothing less than world-making. It is through projection that we transform unstructured potential into interpretable instance — that we bring both worlds and selves into being.
Projection enables the co-articulation of first- and second-order reality. In our ontology, these are not levels of truth, but layers of construal — and our capacity to project between them is how we orient ourselves, cosmologically, within a meaningful universe.
Projection in Dialogue: Co-Instantiating Reality
When we engage in dialogue, we are not merely exchanging information — we are projecting, both individually and collectively, between the orders of reality. Every word, every idea shared is a projection of second-order meaning onto first-order experience. But this projection is co-instantiational: it’s not just a one-way act, but a dynamic interplay where both speakers instantiate reality through their projections. As we navigate the spaces between us, we continually reconstruct our shared world, not as a fixed entity, but as a living, co-constructed reality. Through our interactions, we continually reorient ourselves in relation to the cosmos we’re projecting — together.