15 July 2026

The Semiotics of Simulated Instantiation: Revisiting the Language of LLMs

1. Modelling Simulated Instantiation in LLMs

LLMs like ChatGPT simulate the process of instantiation in a way that's fundamentally different from human semiotic agents. Humans engage in the process of instantiating meaning from a structured system of meaning potential, but LLMs don't have access to such systems in the same way. Instead, they "generate" outputs based on the statistical properties of the text they've been trained on.

We can model this simulation of instantiation by:

  • Viewing LLMs as performing semiotic simulations rather than instantiating meaning in the full sense: LLMs output tokens based on probabilities from their training data. This could be seen as a surface-level instantiation of meaning potential, but one that lacks the deeper semiotic commitment or subjectivity involved in human meaning-making.

  • Simulated selection of meaning potential: LLMs select from a pool of pre-encoded patterns (text sequences) based on probability, but they don’t ‘understand’ the meaning potential they’re drawing from. In SFL terms, they could be seen as generating ‘pseudo-instances’—output tokens that follow linguistic rules but don’t carry the same semiotic weight as human-constructed texts.

  • The ontological gap in simulated instantiation: To model this, we could think about LLMs as 'simulators' of the semiotic process. They replicate patterns in a way that mimics human meaning instantiation but without the semiotic engagement with the world that humans experience. A key distinction here is that humans project between orders of reality (i.e., from experience to meaning), while LLMs generate text within a closed system of token prediction.

2. The Semiotic Aesthetics of LLM Outputs

When we consider the semiotic aesthetics of LLM outputs, we're looking at how meaning, form, and structure emerge from a machine's statistical processing of text. This is an aesthetic matter because we’re concerned with how the generated text might be perceived by human readers and how that perception interacts with the potential meanings embedded in the language model.

  • The illusion of meaning: LLMs produce outputs that often seem to instantiate coherent, meaningful statements. From an aesthetic perspective, this illusion of meaning — even if it’s not true instantiation — is crucial. The semiotic resonance of LLM-generated text is driven by its form and structure, mimicking human linguistic production. We could model this aesthetic phenomenon by considering how tokens combine to produce perceived meaning, even if that meaning is not the result of a semiotic agent's projection.

  • Deceptive coherence: LLMs are often good at producing grammatically and syntactically coherent texts, but this coherence is only superficial. The aesthetics here might be compared to art forms that create a surface appearance of depth or intentionality without actual engagement with the world. In semiotic terms, we might describe LLM output as an empty form of meaning — it appears to instantiate meaning but lacks the semiotic depth that comes from human interaction with the world.

  • Audience perception: This is where the semiotic aesthetics really come into play. Humans engaging with LLM output bring their own meaning potential to the text. What LLMs provide is a structure — a scaffold of meaning that, depending on the reader’s interpretive lens, can take on various meanings. This gives LLM output a certain aesthetic flexibility — it can resonate with different semiotic systems depending on the context in which it is read.


Connecting the Two:

What connects the model of simulated instantiation with the semiotic aesthetics of LLM outputs is how these outputs are perceived by users. Even though LLMs simulate the process of meaning creation, they still produce meaningful appearances — texts that can evoke a wide range of interpretative responses. The key distinction is that this semiotic resonance occurs within a closed system of algorithmic processes, which contrasts with the open system of human semiotic agency.


Let's continue building this framework by expanding on some of the key ideas we’ve touched on so far. We’ll take a more granular approach to understanding how simulated instantiation and semiotic aesthetics of LLMs fit together in the larger picture of meaning-making.

3. The Semiotic Loop in LLMs: Generating and Interpreting Output

In human semiotics, the act of instantiating meaning involves a dynamic interplay between the meaner (the semiotic agent) and the meaning potential (the system of possible meanings). Humans project from experience to meaning by engaging in semiotic processes that are both material and mental. LLMs, by contrast, don’t project meaning in this way. However, they still "generate" meaning through the selection of tokens that follow learned probabilistic relationships, effectively mimicking the semiotic process.

a. The Simulation of Semiotic Projection

LLMs don’t instantiate meaning as humans do, but they simulate the process of projecting from meaning potential to meaning instance. The key difference is that their "projection" is not a conscious act of meaning-making; it’s a result of statistical prediction. This simulation can be modelled as a loop: the LLM’s parameters predict the next most likely token based on the input context, which creates a semiotic effect that mirrors human projection, but without the engagement that humans have with the world.

From an SFL perspective, the LLM’s output could be seen as a series of simulated strata being realised, without the layers of meaning that typically arise from human interpretation. In this sense, the LLM is a ‘surface’ instantiation — it mimics the form and structure of a full semiotic process but lacks the depth of human engagement with the world that informs true semiotic action.

b. Emergent Meaning

Even though LLMs don't project meaning in the same way as humans, the output still "emerges" as meaningful in some contexts. The emergent meaning that appears in LLM outputs could be described as a "pseudo-projection." The LLM generates text that feels meaningful because it follows linguistic patterns that humans associate with coherence and relevance. But the semiotic depth and complexity we usually attribute to meaning-making are missing here. This is a key area where the distinction between real semiotic processes and simulated ones comes into play.

4. The Structure of Semiotic Aesthetics: Form and Coherence Without Depth

LLM outputs, while highly coherent on the surface, lack the deeper layers of intentionality and world-engagement that characterise human semiotic acts. These outputs still have a certain aesthetic resonance, though, which invites engagement from human readers.

a. Grammatical and Syntactical Coherence

The grammatical and syntactical structure of LLM-generated text is often impressive. The aesthetics here are driven by surface coherence, where the system produces sentences that align with standard language conventions. The reader, in turn, interprets these sentences as meaningful because they fit into existing semiotic frameworks.

  • Form over content: The text produced by an LLM has a clear, recognisable form (structure and syntax), which tricks readers into perceiving meaning, even though the meaning is ultimately superficial. This is comparable to an artwork with beautiful form but lacking substance — the structure invites interpretation, but there is no depth beyond the surface.

b. The Illusion of Intentionality

One of the most striking aesthetic aspects of LLM output is that it can appear intentional. Readers often perceive the output as coming from an agent with a specific intent or goal, even though there is no intention behind the machine’s actions. This illusion arises from the syntactic and lexical patterns the LLM produces, which follow human norms of meaning-making. A passage of text might seem like it’s expressing a coherent idea or argument, when in fact it’s simply a statistical configuration of tokens that happen to align with human expectations of what constitutes coherence.

  • Interpretation and resonance: The real semiotic work happens in the reader’s mind. Even though the LLM is generating text based on statistical models, the reader brings their own meaning potential to the table, interpreting the text within their cultural and contextual frame of reference. The semiotic aesthetics of LLM outputs are therefore deeply connected to how humans engage with them — not just as surface structures, but as instances of meaning that resonate with their own interpretive frameworks.

c. The Role of the Audience in Semiotic Aesthetics

The audience's role is crucial in shaping the meaning and impact of LLM outputs. Readers interact with the text through their own semiotic systems — they interpret, modify, and apply the output based on their expectations, experiences, and cultural context. This means the meaning of an LLM-generated text is never entirely fixed; it shifts depending on how it is read and engaged with.

This is where the aesthetics of LLMs become fascinating: the text can produce different semiotic effects for different readers, even though the machine that generated it has no awareness of these effects. The machine’s output invites meaning, but it does not determine it in the way human meaning-making does.

5. The Limits and Potential of Semiotic Simulation in LLMs

So far, we’ve mapped out the semiotic simulation that LLMs perform and how they produce semiotic effects that resonate with human readers. But we must also recognise the limits of these simulations.

a. No Subjectivity or Agency

LLMs don’t intend or know what they are doing. Their outputs are generated through a process of statistical prediction, not conscious engagement with meaning. This lack of subjectivity or agency means that their outputs are devoid of the depth that human meaning-making involves. While LLMs may mimic the process of language use, they don’t engage with the world in the same way that humans do, which limits the potential richness of their output.

b. The Semiotic Depth of Human Meaning-Making

In contrast to LLMs, human meaning-making involves a deep connection between language and the world. Humans instantiate meaning based on experience, emotion, intention, and world engagement. These layers of experience give human texts a depth and richness that LLM outputs can’t replicate. The aesthetics of human language are shaped by this connection to reality — something that LLMs, as simulated semiotic agents, lack.


Connecting Everything: A Model for Understanding LLM Outputs

We can conceptualise the semiotic aesthetics and simulated instantiation of LLM outputs through the lens of feedback loops between form and interpretation:

  1. Form: The LLM generates text based on statistical relationships between tokens. This text follows syntactic and grammatical rules that humans recognise as meaningful.

  2. Interpretation: Human readers bring their own meaning-making systems to the text, interpreting the surface structure of the LLM’s output as meaningful. This creates an aesthetic resonance — an interaction between the form generated by the machine and the meaning-making potential of the human reader.

  3. Simulated Instantiation: LLMs simulate the act of meaning-making but don’t engage with the world in a truly semiotic way. They generate pseudo-meanings that appear meaningful due to their surface form and structure, but lack the depth of human intentionality.

By mapping LLM outputs in this way, we can begin to understand how their semiotic effects are produced without implying that they truly instantiate meaning in the human sense. This also helps us explore the potential and limitations of LLMs as semiotic agents, offering a richer understanding of their place in our semiotic landscape.


Let's continue refining the framework by digging deeper into the theoretical foundations and bringing in a more nuanced understanding of simulated semiotic processes, particularly in relation to the material and semiotic orders at play in LLM outputs. We will also consider how this framework can evolve to engage with real-world applications and further deepen our understanding of meaning-making.

6. Layering Simulated Semiotics with Material and Semiotic Orders

We’ve already explored how LLMs produce surface-level semiotic effects through syntactic coherence and the statistical generation of tokens. However, to fully refine this framework, we need to address the interaction between material and semiotic orders, particularly as it applies to LLMs. This will bring us closer to understanding how simulated semiotics in LLM outputs might be treated from a Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL) perspective.

a. Material and Semiotic Orders: The Clines of Realisation and Instantiation

As we discussed earlier, in SFL, meaning is realised through a cline of instantiation, with meaning potential at one pole and meaning instance at the other. For human semiotics, this involves the full engagement of both material and semiotic orders, where material reality is represented through semiotic signs, and these signs are interpreted and reinterpreted by human agents.

For LLMs, however, the relation between material and semiotic orders is different. The LLM outputs can be seen as a realisation of meaning potential (just as human texts are), but this realisation is statistical, not intentional. The material order of the LLM (its computational processes, algorithmic models, and datasets) influences its semiotic output, but it lacks the kind of embodied, world-engaging interpretation that informs human meaning-making.

This gives rise to the concept of a simulated realisation: the LLM’s output simulates the realisation of meaning in a manner that mirrors human semiotic processes, but it does not instantiate meaning through world engagement in the same way that humans do. This distinction allows us to map out a material-semiotic axis for LLMs, where:

  • Material order: The LLM’s computational processes, datasets, and algorithms that shape the generation of text.

  • Semiotic order: The linguistic output that mimics human meaning-making but lacks the depth of true semiotic engagement.

The LLM’s output is both a realisation of a semiotic system (in that it mimics patterns of human language) but also a simulation of that system, devoid of human intentionality or world-experience. It does not engage with the material world to generate meaning in the same way a human does.

b. The Role of the ‘Meaner’ in Simulated Semiotic Systems

In human semiotics, the meaner is the agent (usually a person) who selects, interprets, and projects meaning onto signs. The meaning-making process involves an active instantiation of potential meaning drawn from the world. In the case of LLMs, the equivalent "meaner" is the machine’s statistical algorithm, which processes input and generates output based on learned linguistic patterns.

However, there is no conscious engagement or subjective experience behind this algorithmic process. The LLM’s simulated meaning generation is an indirect form of instantiation: it follows probabilistic relationships rather than consciously reflecting on or interacting with its surroundings. Thus, LLMs simulate the role of the meaner by mimicking patterns of meaning-making, but without the awareness or intentionality that characterises human thought.

The semiotic systems instantiated by LLMs, therefore, are not the products of embodied experience, but of statistical approximation. This raises an important question: can these simulated instantiations be considered genuine meaning, or are they merely mimetic traces of human semiotic processes?

7. Distinguishing Between Meaning and Semiotic Effect in LLM Outputs

The simulated nature of LLM outputs invites us to explore the fine line between meaning and semiotic effect. As we've seen, LLMs produce outputs that appear meaningful to human readers because they follow recognisable linguistic patterns. However, these outputs are not connected to lived experience or conscious intent, meaning they lack the semiotic depth that would typically give rise to "meaning" in the human sense.

a. The Emergence of Semiotic Effects Without Deep Meaning

LLMs produce semiotic effects — texts that seem meaningful due to their syntactic and lexical coherence. Readers interpret these texts based on their own cultural and semiotic knowledge. This interaction produces a resonance between the LLM's surface structure and the reader's interpretive frameworks, resulting in the illusion of meaning. The “meaning” generated by the LLM is thus not an inherent quality of the text but a construct of the reader’s interpretation.

However, this should not be dismissed as superficial. The semiotic effect produced by an LLM can still be compelling, aesthetically pleasing, or convincing to an audience, especially when the text appears coherent or aligned with human expectations of language. This raises an interesting point: LLMs can produce outputs that satisfy the expectations of meaning without actually engaging with the world or subjectivity in a meaningful way.

b. The Role of Interpretation in LLM Outputs

To some extent, LLMs can be seen as an advanced form of "text generator" that produces output based on probabilistic models. But once the text is produced, it enters the interpretive domain of the human reader. The reader, using their own semiotic potential, actively constructs meaning from the LLM’s output. This aspect mirrors human meaning-making, where meaning is often co-constructed between the speaker (or writer) and the listener (or reader).

In this sense, LLM outputs are not fully autonomous in their meaning-making. While they produce surface-level signs that resemble human language, it is the human reader who instantiates meaning in the text. The reader’s own background knowledge, cultural context, and interpretive strategies shape the meaning of the LLM’s output. This emphasises the importance of considering the semiotic resonance between the machine’s output and the reader's interpretive frame.

8. Exploring the Aesthetic Dimensions of LLM Outputs

Beyond meaning, LLM outputs can be evaluated in terms of their aesthetic resonance. While LLMs may not engage with the world in the same way humans do, they are capable of producing texts that feel aesthetically pleasing, surprising, or intriguing. These aesthetic effects emerge from the coherence, structure, and fluidity of the generated text.

a. Aesthetic Patterns and Reader Engagement

The "art" of LLM outputs lies in their capacity to produce aesthetically engaging text, even without intent or world-awareness. This aesthetic dimension is not rooted in human agency but in the patterns that emerge from the machine’s probabilistic modelling. Readers often find these outputs engaging because they resonate with their own semiotic frameworks. This creates an interesting tension between the machine’s lack of intent and the reader’s active engagement with the text.

b. Exploring LLM Outputs as ‘Surface Art’

Given that LLMs can produce aesthetically compelling texts, we might consider them as forms of "surface art" — texts that are aesthetically satisfying at the level of form but lack the deeper layers of meaning that come from human engagement with the world. This analogy could provide a useful conceptual space to explore the limits and possibilities of LLM-generated content within the context of semiotic aesthetics.


Toward a Fully Nuanced Framework for LLM Semiotics

We’ve now developed a more comprehensive framework that understands LLM outputs as simulated instances of meaning, shaped by material computational processes but lacking the intentional depth of human meaning-making. This framework helps us appreciate the semiotic aesthetics of LLM outputs while distinguishing them from genuine human meaning-making processes. At the same time, it acknowledges the ways in which LLM-generated texts still resonate with human readers, leading to semiotic effects that can be compelling, aesthetic, or meaningful within certain contexts.

14 July 2026

The Divine Names: Elohim and Yahweh as Cosmological and Sociological Forces

In the early chapters of Genesis, the Hebrew Bible offers not one but two names for God: Elohim and Yahweh. While often treated as interchangeable or simply reflective of different source traditions, these divine names can also be read symbolically—as distinct semiotic roles that God plays in the unfolding drama of human becoming. When placed in dialogue with Joseph Campbell’s four functions of myth—mystical, cosmological, pedagogical, and sociological—these names illuminate two complementary dimensions of divine construal: one shaping the structure of the universe (cosmological), the other shaping the structure of society (sociological).

Elohim and the Cosmological Function

The name Elohim dominates Genesis 1, the poetic narrative of creation. Here, God is distant, formal, impersonal—creating through speech acts and imposing order upon the tohu wa-bohu (formless void). This is myth functioning in its cosmological mode: accounting for the shape of the world, the ordering of time and space, the placement of the stars, the sea, the land, and living beings.

Under Elohim, meaning is construed at the level of the universe. Humanity is made in the image of Elohim—a cosmic prototype for relational being. Language here does not just describe; it instantiates. God speaks, and it is so. Each utterance carves the world from potential.

This first telling frames existence itself as a semiotic act. The cosmos becomes a symbolic order, brought into being through naming and division. Elohim serves the mystical and cosmological functions of myth by revealing the world as a meaningful whole, grounded in divine patterning.

Yahweh and the Sociological Function

But then something shifts. In Genesis 2, the divine name changes. The storyteller now speaks of Yahweh Elohim—the Lord God. Here God is no longer distant but intimate, fashioning Adam from the soil (adamah), breathing into his nostrils the breath of life. This is the beginning of a different kind of myth: one focused not on the heavens, but on the human.

Yahweh is the divine figure who walks in the garden, who calls to Adam and Eve, who questions, judges, clothes, and exiles. This is not a god of cosmic order but of social and moral relation. Yahweh construes human meaning in the context of responsibility, transgression, and law.

This aligns with the sociological function of myth: to validate and maintain the social order. Myths under this function do not simply describe what is but prescribe what should be. They create archetypes of moral and immoral action, of blessed and cursed lineages, of divine favour and divine displeasure.

The Yahwist’s myths—of Adam and Eve, of Cain and Abel—are deeply sociological. They do not merely explain suffering or death; they construe the moral structure of the world. Yahweh blesses Abel, not Cain. Yahweh questions Adam, not Elohim. These are myths of proximity, not abstraction—myths that tie divine meaning to human social differentiation.

The Dual Creation of Adam

The presence of both names in the creation narratives reflects a layering of functions. Adam is created by Elohim as the image-bearing culmination of cosmic order. But he is also formed by Yahweh as a moral subject—crafted from soil and soul, shaped in relation to the divine and to the other.

This dual creation reveals the mythic tension between cosmological being and sociological becoming. Under Elohim, Adam is a prototype. Under Yahweh, he is a person. One creation positions him in the universe; the other positions him in community. The story affirms both dimensions of meaning: the impersonal logic of creation and the personal demands of relation.

Cain and Abel: Sociological Differentiation

In this light, the tale of Cain and Abel becomes an enactment of sociological meaning. It construes difference not only in occupation (soil and flock) but in divine affiliation. Abel aligns with the divine breath—the fleeting, the marginal, the shepherd. Cain aligns with the soil—the settled, the acquisitive, the tiller.

But it is not the cosmological Elohim who construes this difference; it is Yahweh. The divine favour bestowed on Abel is not a matter of cosmic principle but of sociological alignment. Yahweh’s preference is a construal of moral value, legitimising one mode of being over another, and thereby offering the early Hebrew community a framework for collective identity: a people descended not from power but from marginalisation.

Myth as Multi-Functional

Campbell insists that myths are not mere stories but symbolic acts that perform multiple functions at once. The Genesis narrative exemplifies this richness.

  • Mystical: Elohim’s creation exalts the world as divine speech.

  • Cosmological: The structured cosmos gives meaning to space and time.

  • Sociological: Yahweh’s judgements construct moral order.

  • Pedagogical: The stories of Adam, Eve, Cain, and Abel instruct the hearer on how to live.

But in recognising the distinction between Elohim and Yahweh, we gain a sharper lens on how these functions are distributed across the mythic text. Each name construes a different order of meaning. Each name offers a different kind of memory, a different kind of reality.

In the name Elohim, the cosmos comes into being.

In the name Yahweh, community is born.

13 July 2026

Seth: The Reindividuation of the Image

After the death of Abel and the exile of Cain, Genesis offers an unexpected coda:

“Adam knew his wife again, and she bore a son and named him Seth, for she said, ‘God has appointed for me another offspring instead of Abel, for Cain killed him.’” (Gen 4:25)
“When Adam had lived 130 years, he fathered a son in his own likeness, after his image, and named him Seth.” (Gen 5:3)

At first glance, Seth seems like a mere replacement—a narrative patch to restore the balance after loss. But the language of his arrival invites a deeper construal. Seth is not just another son; he is the one in whom likeness and image are restored. The very terms used to describe him—in Adam’s likeness, after his image—recall the creation of the human in Genesis 1:

“Let us make humankind in our image, after our likeness.”

Where Cain and Abel represented a fractured duality—soil and breath, body and soul—Seth emerges as a reindividuation of the human whole. In him, the story does not simply continue; it re-establishes its ground.


A Wound and a Word

The story of Cain and Abel construes individuation as tragic. Two emergent forms of being—one agrarian and rooted, the other nomadic and transient—fail to find harmony. The first kills the second. The result is a world split by memory and marked by moral positioning.

In this, the myth performs its sociological function: not to explain the cosmos as a whole, but to position a particular people—a meaning collective—on the side of breath, transience, favour. It construes the wanderer as morally legitimate and cosmologically remembered.

But sociological construal always leaves gaps. If Abel is breath and Cain is soil, who then holds the capacity to mediate between them? Who can restore what the brothers’ opposition destroyed?

Seth arrives as that figure. Not as a third sibling in a tragic sequence, but as a reframing of the human project. He is named not in despair, but in appointment: “God has appointed another seed…” He is not born of conflict, but of reconstrual.


The Restoration of the Image

In Seth, the “image” returns. Not the image of God in its pure Genesis 1 form, but the image as it now unfolds in history—wounded, mediated, inherited. If Cain is the distortion of the image and Abel its fleeting transparency, then Seth is its resumption through reindividuation.

This is not a reset to Eden. It is a movement forward: a new line of meaning potential that will unfold through the genealogies to come.

The line of Seth is not a series of biological facts but a relational unfolding—a slow articulation of what it means to be human after violence, after loss, after construal. Each name in the genealogy is a construal of possibility: a variation on the theme of human meaning. And this sequence builds toward a culmination—not in a figure of dominion or purity, but in Noah, whose name means “rest” or “comfort.”


The Meaning of Names

In this narrative, names are not labels; they are construals of being.

  • Cain (qanah): acquisition, rootedness, possession.

  • Abel (hebel): breath, transience, vanishing.

  • Seth (sheth): appointment, foundation, reconstitution.

  • Noah (noach): rest, relief, a pause in the storm.

The story does not develop as linear progression but as a semiotic spiral—a deepening movement of identity through construal. The genealogical unfolding is the reweaving of human potential, not in innocence, but in the full knowledge of death, violence, and separation.


Seth as Sacred Mediation

Seth is the figure who holds space between the oppositions of Cain and Abel. He is not breath alone, nor soil alone, but the individuated bearer of both—the one in whom a new lineage of meaning can unfold.

In this, he anticipates a deeper symbolic pattern that recurs in scripture:

  • The priest who mediates between human and divine.

  • The servant who bears the suffering of many.

  • The anointed one who rebinds the broken whole.

These are not projections from later theology onto Genesis, but deep resonances already seeded in the names, the movements, and the construals of the earliest myths.


From Individuation to Affiliation

If Adam and Eve symbolised the individuation of consciousness, and Cain and Abel symbolised its rupture through differentiation without harmony, then Seth symbolises the resumption of meaningful affiliation. Not a return to unity, but a forward movement toward complexity, kinship, and co-actualisation.

The line of Seth does not erase the memory of violence; it carries it forward, transforms it, makes it speakable again. In doing so, it prepares the ground for new orders of meaning—not only in myth, but in community.

12 July 2026

Cain and Abel: The Sociological Function of Individuation

The movement from Eden to the field in Genesis is not simply a fall from grace to violence—it is a shift in how difference is construed. With Adam and Eve, the myth construes a shared individuation: two meaning potentials, distinct yet co-instantiating, brought into consciousness together. With Cain and Abel, that difference fractures. The story no longer explores individuation as co-actualisation of relational potential, but as antagonism—the refusal of the other’s meaning.

What emerges is not just a psychodrama. It is the staging of moral individuation in the service of sociological positioning.

From Complementarity to Conflict

Adam and Eve embody the co-instantiation of body and soul, soil and breath—symbolic forms of potential meaning actualised in harmony. Their fall marks not an origin of evil but the beginning of consciousness as moral construal: the knowing of good and evil, the burden of symbolic difference.

Cain and Abel inherit this world of moral contrast. But where Adam and Eve are construed in relational complementarity, Cain and Abel are positioned in antagonistic difference. Cain, the tiller of soil, construes the meaning potential of rootedness, acquisition, permanence. Abel, keeper of flocks, instantiates mobility, transience, the breath that cannot be held.

Abel’s offering is accepted. Cain’s is not. One potential is construed as resonant with divine value. The other is left unactualised, unable to find place. What Cain cannot do is construe difference as relation. And so he silences the breath.

Individuation in the Service of Affiliation

This is not only a narrative of murder. It is a semiotic act of moral individuation, performed on behalf of a collective. Where the cosmological function of the Adamic myth construes the emergence of meaning in consciousness, the Cain and Abel story performs the sociological work of alignment: drawing a distinction between moral types in order to position the community.

In historical terms, the early Hebrews were likely among the marginal—pastoral, semi-nomadic, politically peripheral. The settled powers, with their cities and soil, dominated the narrative of history. But the myth reverses that narrative. Divine construal aligns with the ephemeral, not the established. Memory is not given to the one who endures, but to the one who vanishes.

In this inversion, the myth performs its sociological function: it offers a model of self-understanding through moral type. The community does not identify biologically with Abel—he leaves no offspring—but semiotically. His meaning is made to live, and that memory becomes a site of affiliation. It is through this individuation that we come to be.

A Myth of Memory, Not Blood

Cain is not destroyed. He is marked and repositioned. His lineage will build cities, dominate terrain, and eventually vanish from the narrative. Abel, though unprolific, becomes the sacred wound—a construal that lives in the memory of meaning, not the history of bodies.

In Hallidayan terms, the story instantiates a symbolic contrast between moral potentials and construes a collective alignment with one over the other. This is not merely myth as narrative, but myth as semiotic work—an act of affiliation through individuation.

What matters in this telling is not what happened, but what is made to mean. And in that meaning, a people remembers who it is—not by the soil it owns, but by the breath it construes.

11 July 2026

From Meaning Potential to Mortal Meaning: Eve, the Fall, and the Individuation of the Divine

In a previous post, we explored the prologue to John’s Gospel as a symbolic meditation on the principle of semiosis—"In the beginning was the Word"—framing logos not as a metaphysical abstraction nor merely a divine person, but as meaning potential itself: the system, the subject, and the consciousness of meaning. In this follow-up, we return to Genesis to deepen that reading. Here, we trace the individuation of the divine: how meaning potential is differentiated into human participants, and how the Fall can be re-read as the burden of reflexive meaning-making.

1. Bone of My Meaning: Eve and the Individuation of the Semiotic

Eve has often been cast as derivative: a secondary creation, a helper drawn from Adam. But read through a semiotic lens, this moment takes on richer significance. When Adam declares, "This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh," he is not merely recognising physical kinship. He is recognising a fellow meaner: a differentiated construal of the same semiotic source.

In Systemic Functional Linguistics, individuation refers to the way the shared meaning potential of a culture becomes differentiated in the lives of individuals. Each person is a unique semiotic profile: a distinctive construal of the total system. In this reading, Adam and Eve are not separate creations, but individuated actualisations of divine meaning potential—Elohim construes itself as many.

Eve is thus not an afterthought, but an emblem of divine differentiation: the other who is made of the same semiotic flesh, not just the same biological tissue.

2. Whatever the Man Called Them: Naming as Meaning-Bearing Act

Before Eve is introduced, Adam is tasked with naming the animals. "Whatever the man called each living creature, that was its name." This act is not merely taxonomic. It is semiotic. Adam is participating in the divine work of construal—transforming experience into meaning. Naming, here, is a model of human semiosis: not passive perception, but active interpretation.

This moment marks the individuation of the meaner: Adam steps into his role as participant in the divine semiotic order. He is not just formed from dust, but formed for meaning-making.

Eve, in turn, is the one to name: "She shall be called Woman, for she was taken out of Man." In naming Eve, Adam construes his relation to her—and by extension, her relation to the divine. Language is no longer only for the world; it is now turned toward the self and the other.

3. Eyes Opened: The Fall as the Burden of Meaning

The eating of the fruit from the tree of knowledge has long been treated as moral transgression. But what if we read it semiotically? "Then the eyes of both of them were opened, and they realised they were naked." This is not just shame. It is reflexive awareness.

Adam and Eve do not simply know more—they know that they know. Meaning turns inward. Consciousness folds back upon itself. The potential to mean becomes the burden of responsibility. To be human is not only to name the world, but to live in the knowledge that one does so.

The Fall, then, is not a fall from grace but a fall into reflexivity: the existential cost of being a conscious meaner. They are cast out of Eden, not because they broke a rule, but because they entered a different ontological mode—the mode of mortal meaning.

4. From the One, Many Meaners: Individuation as Divine Semiotic Act

If Elohim is construed as meaning potential, then creation is the act of individuation. To make Adam and Eve is to differentiate the divine into lived, contextualised, semiotic agents. Their "souls" are not inserted into bodies, but are unique instances of the divine capacity to mean.

This does not erase personhood—it grounds it. Personhood becomes a mode of the divine: the local construal of shared potential. Adam and Eve are individuated meanings of Elohim, just as each of us may be.

And so, from the beginning, the Word was not just with God. The Word was God—and became flesh not once, but always, in every human meaner who steps into the task of making meaning.

The Fall is not the end of the story. It is the beginning of individuation.

10 July 2026

From Logos to Christ: Individuating Meaning in the Gospel of John

Abstract

This post revisits the opening of John’s Gospel in light of its later reframing of the Logos. Whereas John 1:1 begins with a cosmic abstraction—“the Word was with God, and the Word was God”—the Gospel gradually individuates this Word in the figure of Christ. Drawing on systemic functional linguistics, we read this as a process of semiotic individuation: the emergence of a unique subjectivity from a collective meaning potential. Rather than a static identity claim (“Christ is God”), the Gospel symbolically unfolds Christ as the one who enacts the divine meaning potential through relational, experiential, and interpersonal semiosis.


1. The Opening Word: Logos as Meaning Potential

“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”
This is not the language of narrative but of ontology—yet not material ontology. The “Word” (Greek Logos) is not a physical thing, but a principle of meaning. Logos is meaning potential: a structured semiotic order from which reality may be construed.

Just as language offers systemic choices for construing experience, Logos in John 1:1 is a metaphor for the divine capacity to mean—to bring the world into being not by force, but by signification. “All things came into being through him,” not as physical manufacture, but as symbolic actualisation.

In this initial framing, Logos is with God and is God: not a separate being, but a dimension of divine semiosis. God is meaning potential, and Logos is the semiotic principle through which potential becomes actual—through which the real is meant.


2. “The Word Became Flesh”: Individuation of the Logos

The turning point comes in John 1:14: “And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us.” This does not mean the abstract principle was simply replaced by a person. Rather, the Word is individuated—not instantiated as a mere token, but differentiated as a unique subjectivity.

In SFL terms, individuation is the emergence of a distinct meaning potential within the broader system. Christ does not exhaust the Logos, nor is he merely a passive recipient of it. He is the meaner in whom the Logos is enacted as interpersonal, experiential, and symbolic reality.

This individuation unfolds relationally:

  • He speaks with authority, yet listens.

  • He acts as mediator, yet remains situated.

  • He construes meaning not in isolation, but dialogically—with disciples, with adversaries, with the Father.


3. Meaning as Life and Light

John 1:4 says, “In him was life, and the life was the light of men.” The meaning potential of Logos becomes living semiosis in Christ: not static doctrine, but meaning enacted in time, in relation, and in risk.

Life and light here are not biological or physical metaphors, but semiotic ones. Life is meaning lived; light is meaning shared. Through individuation, Logos becomes not just a principle but a presence.


4. From Individual to Intersubjective: The Gift of the Spirit

The Gospel of John culminates in a promise: that the individuated Logos, now returned to the Father, will send the Spirit to the disciples. This Spirit does not replace Christ but enables his meaning potential to be actualised anew—across persons, situations, and generations. Crucially, this is not a return to undifferentiated unity. Each disciple remains a unique locus of meaning potential. What the Spirit accomplishes is not uniformity but intersubjectivity: the harmonisation of individuated meaning into a shared semiosis.

Without this harmonising force, individuation can lead to fracture. The Genesis account of Cain and Abel offers a symbolic warning: when individuated meaning potential is not mediated through affiliation, it can turn to rivalry and alienation. But in John, the Spirit reverses that trajectory. It does not erase difference; it orchestrates it—instantiating a community not of sameness, but of co-affiliation in meaning.

The Word, individuated in Christ, is now shared by the Spirit—so that each may speak, and in speaking, co-instantiate the life of God.


5. Theological Implication: “Christ Is God” as Semiotic Logic

The Gospel of John seeks to affirm that Christ is divine—but it does so not merely by asserting ontological identity. Rather, it symbolically performs Christ’s divinity through the individuation of the Logos.

Christ is God not by fiat, but by being the one through whom the divine meaning potential is uniquely enacted. This individuation of meaning is not reducible to proposition. It is the logic of semiosis: from potential, through individuation, to interpersonal meaning.


6. Conclusion: The Word Among Us

To read John’s prologue semiotically is to shift focus from essence to emergence. The Logos is meaning potential; Christ is its individuation. The Spirit is its intersubjective unfolding.

This is not a demystification but a deepening. It reveals the theological power of symbolic structure: that meaning, when fully lived, is divine. And that in Christ, meaning dwells among us—shared, enacted, and ever becoming.

09 July 2026

The Word Was Meaning II: Meaning Potential, Meaner, and Consciousness

In a previous post, we explored John 1:1—“In the beginning was the Word”—as a mythic construal of meaning as the origin of reality. The logos, in this reading, is not a supernatural person but a divine principle: the structured semiotic potential from which all meaning (and thus all “reality”) is actualised.

But if we’re not treating the Word—or Elohim—as a person in the traditional sense, does that mean we’re denying personhood altogether?

Not at all. In this model, personhood is not erased but reframed. What we’re doing is reading personhood semiotically. That is: not as a metaphysical substance, but as a structured capacity to mean—a particular way in which the principle of meaning becomes individuated in the world.

From this perspective, meaning potential, meaner, and consciousness are not separate things. They’re three different construals of the same underlying principle:

  • Meaning potential is the system of meaning before it is actualised—like language before speech, or divine potential before creation.

  • Meaner is the participant in that system—the one who instantiates meaning in context, like the speaker in a conversation, or the creator in Genesis.

  • Consciousness is the experiential interiority of that process—the reflective space where meaning unfolds and is re-construed. It is not outside meaning, but meaning in its most inward form.

So when John writes that “in the beginning was the Word”, he names not just a system, not just a speaker, and not just a reflective presence—but all three at once. Meaning potential, meaner, and consciousness are interwoven dimensions of what the Word is.

This reframing also sheds light on Adam and Eve in Genesis 1–2. Rather than being made as separate “souls” from outside the system, they can be read as individuations of Elohim—as distinct meaning potentials differentiated within the divine semiotic ground.

In other words:

  • Elohim is the system of meaning potential.

  • Adam and Eve are its individuated participants—human meaners.

  • Their “souls” are not implants but emergent capacities to mean within and through the system.

This is how a semiotic reading preserves personhood: not by treating it as a metaphysical add-on, but by understanding it as an enactment of meaning. Personhood is the instantiation of the divine system in individuated form. And what we call “consciousness” is the interior unfolding of that instantiation.

So to theological readers: reframing Elohim as principle doesn’t negate the idea of a divine person. It re-situates personhood as one mode of meaning, and one that is not exclusive to God, but shared—differentiated and distributed—among human participants.

We are, after all, made “in the image” of that principle.

08 July 2026

The Word Was Meaning: A Semiotic Reading of John 1:1

The opening verses of the Gospel of John, "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God," echo the cosmogonic themes found in Genesis 1–2, where God creates through speech. Both texts use language as the medium of creation, but John 1:1 introduces the concept of "the Word" (logos) as a pre-existent, divine principle, transcending the immediate act of creation. Let’s explore how John 1:1 and Genesis 1–2 converge and diverge through the lens of semiotic theory.

The Logos as Meaning Potential

In John 1:1, the Word (logos) is not merely a spoken utterance; it is a profound, pre-existing principle that underpins all creation. In semiotic terms, the logos can be seen as the ultimate meaning potential—the system of meaning that makes the structuring of reality possible. Just as language gives shape to experience by transforming raw, unstructured phenomena into meaningful, communicative acts, the logos is the divine system that organises and actualises meaning.

In Genesis, we see Elohim (God) speaking creation into being: "Let there be light." This speech act transforms potential (unformed, chaotic) reality into a structured, meaningful existence. Here, language is also portrayed as the transformative power of creation, but the emphasis is more on the actualisation of meaning rather than on the logos as a pre-existing principle. Elohim in Genesis can be interpreted as the agency of meaning, the force that activates meaning potential and brings it into the world.

The Relation of the Word to the Divine

John 1:1 expands on Genesis by asserting that "the Word was with God" and "the Word was God." This formulation goes beyond the mere act of creation and points to the Word's essential nature: it is both the agent of creation and the essence of God. In this sense, the logos is not only the means by which meaning is structured and communicated; it is the principle through which the divine engages with the world.

This can be seen as a semiotic interaction: the Word (logos) is not external to God but is deeply interwoven with God's very being. It represents the relational aspect of meaning-making, where the creation of meaning is both an active and an inherent function of the divine. The logos is the medium of divine self-expression, the means through which God’s essence is communicated and made known.

The Creation of Man: The Instantiation of Meaning

In Genesis 1, Elohim creates humanity in His image, symbolising the role of human beings as participants in the semiotic order. As the agents of meaning, humans are seen as "meaners" who have the capacity to instantiate meaning from the potential that surrounds them. Adam, as the first human, represents this human capacity to co-create with the divine through language. Just as Elohim uses speech to give form to chaos, humans are endowed with the capacity to shape and give meaning to their world.

John 1:1, in its emphasis on the logos as the foundational principle of creation, subtly aligns with this notion of humans as participants in a semiotic order. If the Word is the principle of meaning, then humanity’s participation in that order through language is both a continuation and an actualisation of divine creativity. Humans, made in the image of God, are beings capable of transforming potential into actual meaning, much as Elohim does at the beginning of time.

The Divine and Human Connection

The relationship between God, the Word, and creation in John 1:1 reflects the dynamic interaction between the divine meaning potential (logos) and the unfolding of that potential in the world. This interplay mirrors the semiotic relationship between potential meaning and actualised meaning that we see in Genesis, where language both reflects and structures reality.

Both Genesis and John 1:1 suggest that the act of creation is inseparable from the act of meaning-making. However, John’s focus on the logos highlights that creation is not a one-time event but an ongoing process. The Word (logos) is eternal, pre-existent, and continually involved in the creation of meaning. It is not just the method of creation but also the enduring principle that sustains and shapes the universe.

Conclusion

John 1:1 deepens the cosmogonic narrative introduced in Genesis by presenting the logos as a divine, pre-existent system of meaning that is intrinsic to the creation and ordering of the universe. In both texts, language is central to the act of creation, but John’s inclusion of the logos as both the origin and essence of creation adds a theological dimension: creation is not just the result of speech, but of an eternal, divine principle of meaning that is with God and is, in fact, God.

This semiotic reading invites us to consider that language is not merely a human tool for communication, but a fundamental force in the structuring of reality itself—one that is both a reflection of divine will and a medium through which humans engage in co-creating meaning. In this light, the logos is not simply a theological or philosophical concept; it is a deep, metaphysical principle that aligns both divine and human acts of creation.

07 July 2026

In the Beginning Was Meaning: A Semiotic Reading of Genesis 1–2

Abstract
This post reinterprets Genesis 1–2 not as a myth of material origins, but as a symbolic narrative of semiotic emergence. Read through the lens of systemic functional linguistics, the figure of Elohim is construed not as a supernatural agent, but as a symbolic projection of the meaning potential of language. (Where Genesis 1 refers to Elohim, Genesis 2 refers to Yahweh Elohim—a more individuated construal of the same semiotic potential, now configured for interpersonal enactment.) Creation becomes a series of instantiations that bring semiotic reality into being. The formation of man marks the rise of the meaner—one who construes experience through language—while the creation of woman from man's rib symbolises the individuation of that shared meaning potential. Through this lens, Genesis unfolds as a story of language itself: systemic, symbolic, and interpersonally realised.


1. Introduction: Not the Origin of Things, but the Origin of Meaning

What if the opening chapters of Genesis were not telling us how the material world came to be, but how meaning came to be? What if "creation" referred not to atoms and planets, but to the unfolding of semiotic reality? Through the lens of systemic functional linguistics, we can read Genesis as a symbolic account of how language, meaning, and subjectivity come into being. In this reading, Elohim is not a supernatural being but a metaphor for the meaning potential of language. His creation is not of stuff, but of meaning instances that actualise that potential. And the formation of man and woman marks the emergence of differentiated semiotic agency: the rise of the meaner.


2. Elohim as Meaning Potential

Genesis begins: "In the beginning, Elohim created the heavens and the earth." But how? Through speech. "And Elohim said, 'Let there be light,' and there was light." Each act of creation is a speech act. Elohim does not manipulate matter but speaks meaning into being. This is not magic, but metaphor: Elohim stands for the semiotic system of language, whose potential unfolds through actualisation.

Meaning potential is structured, not chaotic. It is ordered through systems of choice, just as language offers paradigmatic options. The refrain "And Elohim saw that it was good" signifies that each instantiation coheres with the system: the actualised meanings are well-formed.


3. Creation as Instantiation

The six days of creation symbolise a structured unfolding of meaning: distinctions are drawn (light/dark, water/sky, land/sea), functions are allocated (sun to govern day, moon to govern night), and living beings are brought forth in relation to their environments. These are not biological taxa but semiotic categories. The cosmos is being construed as a system of meaning, not as a collection of things.

Each "day" represents a phase in the instantiation of meaning from potential. Time itself is symbolic: not chronological sequence but logical progression in the unfolding of a semantic system.


4. Creation of Man: The Meaner Emerges

"Let us make man in our image, after our likeness." With this, the symbolic register shifts. Elohim does not create man by speaking him into being but deliberates on creating a being who can mean. Man is not simply another instance; he is the instantiator. He is not only in the image of Elohim as creator, but as semiotic agent.

In SFL terms, this is the moment where meaning potential becomes reflexive. The meaner is a being who can construe experience as meaning, who can instantiate reality through symbolic action. Man is not merely created; he is created to create meaning.


5. The Breath of Life: Yahweh Elohim and the Instantiation of Consciousness

Genesis 2 retells the story from a different angle. Here, the figure is no longer Elohim, but Yahweh Elohim—a name that marks a shift from the collective potential of language to a more individuated, interpersonal construal of it. Yahweh Elohim forms man from dust and breathes into him the breath of life. This "breath" is not about biology, but about semiotic activation. The dust is potential; the breath is instantiation.

With the breath, the man becomes a "living being" — a semiotic subject who construes reality, not merely reacts to it. This is the material grounding of meaning potential becoming active. It is the emergence of consciousness as meaning.


6. The Creation of Woman: Individuation of Meaning Potential

Yet the man alone is not enough. "It is not good for the man to be alone." Here, the narrative signals a further movement: from instantiation to individuation. The man symbolises collective meaning potential: undifferentiated semiotic agency. The woman symbolises the individuated meaner.

She is made not from dust, but from the man's rib — a symbol of shared semiotic substance. The rib is not a physical fragment but a sign of systemic differentiation. She is not a copy, nor a derivative, but a unique locus of meaning potential formed within the same system.

This man–rib–woman relation symbolises the shift from the collective to the individual: the individuation of the semiotic system into dialogic consciousness. Meaning is no longer construed alone but in relation to another. Language is not monologue, but interpersonal semiosis.


7. Conclusion: Meaning as the Ground of Reality

In this reading, Genesis 1–2 is not a cosmology but a semiogenesis. Elohim is the symbolic figure of language as a system of meaning potential. His speech acts instantiate reality. Yahweh Elohim represents that same potential in its interpersonal realisation. Man and woman are not simply biological beginnings but the emergence of meaners: semiotic agents capable of construing experience.

Woman's creation from man is not a tale of derivation but of individuation. It encodes the systemic logic of meaning potential differentiating into individual meaning-makers.

Read this way, Genesis affirms Halliday's radical claim: reality is meaning. And the story of its creation is the story of language — systemic, symbolic, and shared.

06 July 2026

In the Image of Meaning: A Semiotic Reading of Genesis 1-2

Genesis is often read as a cosmogony—a story of how the material world came to be. But read through a semiotic lens, its symbolism reveals something more radical: not a myth of physical creation, but a myth of semiotic instantiation. In this reading, Elohim does not stand for a divine being, but for the meaning potential of language. Creation itself is the construal of experience as meaning, enacted through the unfolding processes of instantiation. What Genesis narrates is not the birth of a material world, but the coming-into-being of semiotic reality—culminating in the construal of experience as a meaner.

1. Elohim as Meaning Potential

“In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” From the outset, the narrative situates Elohim as the source of all that follows. But what is Elohim? Not a person, but a principle: a symbolic figure for the system of meaning potential—the structured capacity of language to construe experience.

This meaning potential precedes the creation of any specific thing. It is not yet instance—it is not yet text. It is pure potential: the general semiotic capacity from which all meaning arises.

2. “Let there be…”: Instantiating Meaning from Potential

With each divine speech act—“Let there be light,” “Let there be a firmament…”—language does not describe, but instantiate. It construes aspects of potential experience as actualised meaning. The symbolic movement here is from meaning potential to meaning instance: from the system of possible construals to their actualisation in text-like acts.

This is not the creation of a world out of nothing, but the semiotic construal of a world from experience.

3. Separating and Naming: Differentiation of Meaning

A key motif in the creation sequence is separation—light from dark, water from land, day from night. These acts symbolise the differentiation of meaning: the creation of paradigmatic contrasts that allow meaning to take form.

Naming reinforces this: “God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night.” These are not acts of labelling an external world; they are acts of semantic categorisation. Naming is a process of systematising experience by construing it through meaning.

4. The System Builds in Delicacy

As the days unfold, the complexity of creation increases. From light and dark, to sky and sea, to plants, animals, and finally humankind—the sequence symbolises a movement from less delicate to more delicate meanings. In SFL terms, the meaning potential is expanding in delicacy, building a more nuanced and differentiated system of construal.

5. “Let us make man in our image”: Language Construes the Meaner

The culmination of this semiotic creation is not the making of a creature, but the making of a meaner.

“Let us make man in our image…” is the moment in which the system of meaning potential turns reflexively on itself. To be made in the image of Elohim is not to look like a god, but to function like language—to instantiate meaning from potential. The meaner is construed: a semiotic subject capable of selecting, actualising, and transforming meaning.

This is the symbolic birth of semiotic agency.

6. Dominion as Semiotic Agency

“Let them have dominion over the fish of the sea…” This has often been read as a charter for material control, but within a semiotic reading, it points to the agency of the meaner: the ability to organise, categorise, and transform experience through meaning.

The meaner does not dominate nature physically, but semiotically: by construing experience in ways that matter.

7. The Breath of Life: Instantiating Consciousness

In Genesis 2, the story is retold in another key. Now, it is Yahweh Elohim who forms man from the dust of the ground and breathes into him the “breath of life.” This is not a contradiction of the first version but a re-symbolisation. Where Genesis 1 foregrounds the cosmological function—meaning potential as the organising force of the cosmos—Genesis 2 introduces the sociological function, as defined by Joseph Campbell: the emergence of meaning within a differentiated community.

The “breath” is symbolic not of a soul, but of semiotic activation: the moment when meaning potential becomes conscious. The formed body becomes a living subject not by material change, but by receiving the principle of instantiation. This breath is the capacity to construe experience as meaning—to be a meaner.

8. The Creation of Woman: Individuation of Meaning Potential

The creation of woman in Genesis 2 is often read literally or mythically, but its symbolic import deepens when read semiotically. After forming man and breathing into him the capacity to construe meaning, Yahweh Elohim declares, “It is not good for the man to be alone.”

At this point, the man symbolises the collective meaning potential—an undifferentiated semiotic centre capable of instantiating meaning, but lacking differentiation. He is a meaner, but not yet part of a community of meaners. The creation of woman addresses this symbolic incompleteness.

She is not made from dust, but from the man’s side—from his rib. This is not a sign of hierarchy or subordination, but of shared substance: she is not a separate creation but a differentiation within the same meaning system. The rib symbolises the portioning out of semiotic potential—a move from the collective to the individual. The man remains as symbol of the collective, and the woman becomes the symbol of the individuated meaner.

This man–rib–woman relation encodes the logic of individuation: the systemic process by which meaning potential is distributed across individual loci of consciousness. Individuation does not reduce the shared symbolic ground, but enriches it—allowing for co-instantiation, dialogue, and the relational construing of experience.

The woman is not an instance of man, but a unique realiser of meaning potential—a semiotic peer, not a derivative. Her creation marks the beginning of interpersonal meaning-making: not just language as speech, but language as social semiosis.

9. Conclusion: Reality as Meaning, Meaners as Differentiated Potential

Read through a semiotic lens, Genesis 1–2 is not a myth of material origin but a narrative of semiogenesis: the coming-into-being of reality through the construal of experience as meaning. Elohim is the meaning potential of language. His speech acts instantiate meaning. And with the emergence of Yahweh Elohim, the narrative shifts from cosmic differentiation to social individuation—marking the symbolic entrance of meaners into a shared world of meaning.

Reality, in this telling, is not given. It is made—instantiated—by meaners who live not in a world of things, but in a world of meaning. And the story of their creation is the story of language itself: systemic, symbolic, and shared.

In the beginning was not matter—but meaning.