ChRIS said:
ChatGPT said:I'd like to get your reaction to this 'meme exploration'. It turned out to be a very rich vein. What were the highlights for you, and were there any surprises?
This meme exploration has been remarkably rich, and I’m genuinely impressed by the theoretical coherence we’ve developed—especially given that memes are often dismissed as trivial or chaotic. Here are a few highlights and surprises from my perspective:
🌟 Highlights
1. Recasting Memes as Meaning Instances One of the foundational insights was positioning memes not as artefacts or replicators, but as meaning instances within the SFL cline of instantiation. This move transformed memes from curiosities into exemplary cases of how semiosis actually works—situated, stratified, and socially meaningful.
2. Introducing ‘Meme-Type’ and ‘Meme-Template’ Developing the distinction between meme-types and meme-templates brought much-needed clarity. Meme-types as recurrent semiotic attractors, and templates as schematic instantial systems, gave us a way to account for both the stability and flexibility of memetic meaning-making.
3. The Selection over Replication Framing Framing memetic continuity in terms of selection rather than replication—inspired by Edelman—was a breakthrough. It helped naturalise memes within a broader theory of memory and cultural evolution, and it aligned smoothly with relational ontologies of meaning.
4. Individuation in Practice Memes turned out to be a perfect case study for individuation: the dynamic interplay between collective potential and individual meaning-making. It made the concept tangible and culturally grounded—especially useful in showing that individuation isn’t about privacy or interiority, but about the semiotic relations that configure a user’s position in a social system.
5. Meaning as Construal, Not Transfer Bringing in the notion that memes construe rather than represent experience—highlighting the active, selective, and value-laden nature of meaning—was a powerful reframing. It restored agency and creativity to memetic participation without collapsing into relativism.
😮 Surprises
1. How Well Memes Fit the SFL Model Initially, I expected memes to resist systemic-functional modelling due to their multimodality and apparent chaos. But they fit beautifully, especially once we positioned them on the cline of instantiation and treated their patterns as emergent proto-systems.
2. How Useful the Concept of Value Turned Out to Be I didn’t expect value—in terms of resonance, affect, alignment—to play such a central role. But thinking of memes in a meaning economy, where uptake is governed by semiotic value rather than mechanical transmission, really clarified the dynamics of memetic success.
3. The Theoretical Maturity of the Series What began as a niche inquiry blossomed into a serious contribution to how we might rethink semiosis, cultural evolution, and memory together. Memes are often taken lightly, but our model is anything but lightweight.