Metamythic Addendum: Relational Ontology and the Mythic Function
In Joseph Campbell’s terms, myth is not merely narrative — it is a vehicle for the structuring of consciousness, a symbolic mediation between the interior and the cosmic, the local and the archetypal. The relational ontologies of both SFL and Bateson offer powerful frameworks for understanding this process not as mystical reverie, but as structured, systemic meaning-making.
1. Myth as Meaning Instantiation
In the SFL-informed model, myth is an instantiation of meaning potential — a patterned realisation of semantic systems that constitute our collective symbolic inheritance. But unlike static symbols, myths actualise meaning through interpersonal selection (values and beliefs) and experiential construal (ideational patterning), making them recursive participants in the co-evolution of consciousness and culture.
Bateson’s ecology of mind complements this by proposing that meaning is born not from things, but from difference and relation — the same principles that underlie mythical oppositions (life/death, chaos/order, man/god). Thus, myth can be reframed as a recursive symbolic ecology — a feedback-rich pattern that mediates human adaptation to reality through story.
2. The Sacred as Patterned Relation
For Bateson, the sacred is not supernatural — it is the recognition of the pattern that connects. In our metamythic framing, this aligns with the need to update the cosmological function of myth in light of contemporary knowledge. A mythic symbol like “God” becomes a relational signifier — not a being, but a semiotic attractor, a symbolic node charged with experiential, interpersonal, and ideational significance.
SFL provides the systemic architecture for how such attractors are structured as text, stratified through meaning, wording, and sounding. Bateson offers the ecological logic: these attractors persist not because they are true, but because they work — they guide recursive adaptation within symbolic ecosystems.
3. The Meaner and the Myth-Pattern
In our model, the meaner collapses potential into instance, just as Bateson’s organism-in-environment learns through recursive distinction. The mythic function of mind, then, is not to believe, but to pattern attention, to guide the selection of meanings from potential into symbolic form. The myth is the memory of pattern that knows it is being selected.
Thus, both Bateson and SFL point toward a sacred semiotics where:
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Meaning is emergent from relation;
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Symbols are systemic;
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Myth is neither false nor literal, but instantiational — a pattern temporarily stabilised in language, experience, and value.
