Submitted:
17 November 2025
Posted:
19 November 2025
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
1.1. The Static-Dynamic Gap in Radial Category Theory
1.2. Methodological Lacunae: What Existing Frameworks Miss
- Preserves radial structure (center-periphery organization with motivated extensions)
- Adds temporal dimension (sequences of positions over discourse time)
- Enables quantification (distances, frequencies, transition probabilities)
- Maintains phenomenological grounding (positions feel proximal or distant to speakers)
- Distinguishes levels of epistemic granularity of meaning and experience with meaning (phenomenic, representational and meta-representational)
- Supports systematic comparison (trajectory metrics comparable across contexts)
- Operates from a pre-representational ontology (meaning emerges through navigational dynamics rather than from stored mental content, with zero-point gravitational pull structuring trajectorial space)
1.3. Radial Analysis: An Ontology of Semantic Space
2. Theoretical Framework
2.1. From Conceptual Structure to Navigational Dynamics
2.1.1. Deconstructing the Analytical Setting: The Mother Case
- Activating a radial network of mother-senses
- Evaluating prototype distance (Is this the biological prototype? An adoptive extension?)
- Selecting among competing representations based on featural overlap
- Near-identical phonological form
- Semantic domain (divinity, sacred power, supernatural agency)
- Cultural centrality (prototype effect: core religious concept)
- Potential extensions (theocracy/rule-by-gods; theology/god-study; teodicea/divine-justice)
- Lexical facade: Shared phonological form (/"mVD@r/) creates surface similarity
- Analyst’s : Meta-level abstraction groups disparate contexts by formal criteria
- Post-hoc rationalization: Motivational links (metaphor, metonymy) are identified retrospectively, not prospectively
2.1.2. From Representational Storage to Navigational Convergence
2.2. Diagrammatic Epistemology: From Pedagogical Illustration to Working Notation
2.2.1. The Dual Role of Spatial Representation
2.2.2. What RA Diagrams Inscribe
2.2.3. Comparison: Cognitive Semantics vs. RA Diagrammatics
| Aspect | Cognitive Semantics | Radial Analysis |
|---|---|---|
| Ontological status | Depict mental structures | Inscribe informational dynamics |
| What is represented | Concepts, schemas, spaces | Trajectories, attractors, costs |
| Location | Inside minds | In transpersonal GRS |
| Temporal dimension | Synchronic snapshots | Pre-temporal sequences |
| The navigator | Backgrounded (implicit) | Foregrounded (explicit ) |
| Diagram function | Pedagogical + theoretical | Primary working notation |
| Metric structure | Often absent/impressionistic | Systematic (hexagonal geometry) |
| Reproducibility | Difficult (interpretation-dependent) | Enhanced (coordinate-based) |
2.2.4. Implications for Empirical Practice
2.2.5. Visual Anchoring: A Minimal Radial Representation

Micro-Example (Applied)
2.3. Operator Sigma: Perceptual Tuning and Granularity Recognition
2.3.1. Informational Granularity and the Gaussian Representational Saturation
2.3.2. Three Operational Modes of Sigma
2.3.3. Architectural Transitions versus Granular Adjustments
- Phen → Onto ( descent): Collapse of representational render toward trace-level substrate—loss of representationality itself, entering pre-conscious informational patterning
- Onto → Phen ( ascent): Emergence of render from pre-representational patterns—genesis of conscious differentiation
- Phen ↔ Meta ( adjustment): Transition between phenomenological immediacy and analytical abstraction—board reconfiguration changing what positions/movements are possible
- Meta → Onto (fractal collapse): Resonance when maximal abstraction isomorphically mirrors pre-representational invariants—highly mathematical patterns revealing essentially organic substrate
2.3.4. Thread Thinning and Informational Density
2.3.5. Fractal Self-Similarity Across Scales
2.3.6. Relationship to TDR and Navigation Dynamics
- High : Often correlates with lower TDR for abstract patterns (theoretical frameworks stabilize longer than phenomenal states)
- Low : Variable TDR depending on archetypal stability (some habits are rock-solid, others fragile)
- : TDR reflects lived temporal dynamics of identity maintenance
2.3.7. Dissipative vs. Topped Representations
2.4. HEXID Integration: Formal Foundations
2.5. Trace & Trajectory Semantics: Pre-Representational Dynamics
2.5.1. Foundational Constructs: Traces and Trajectories
2.5.2. The Epistemic Inaccessibility of Trace
- Presumes decomposability: The assumption that complex phenomena can be analyzed into constituent elements
- Employs categorical language: Using terms like “perceptual,” “affective,” “motor,” “taxonomic” to classify aspects
- Seeks mechanistic explanation: Attempting to understand how coordination occurs through component interaction
- Generates formal representations: Producing diagrams, equations, or symbolic notations capturing structural relations
- Perceptual dimensions: Visual appearance, auditory patterns, olfactory signatures
- Affective dimensions: Emotional responses, attachment patterns, threat/safety evaluations
- Motor dimensions: Interaction schemas, approach/avoidance behaviors, gestural coordination
- Taxonomic dimensions: Conceptual categorization (mammal → carnivore → canid)
2.5.3. Operator and Epistemic Stance
- Einstein confronting quantum entanglement: Recognizing “spooky action at a distance” violated representational assumptions but recoiling from full ontological revision
- Heisenberg formulating uncertainty: Approaching the limit where observational precision necessarily disturbs the observed, threatening deterministic frameworks
- Gödel proving incompleteness: Demonstrating formal systems cannot capture their own truth conditions, revealing representational limitation
2.5.4. What T&T Models vs. What Trace Is
- How meta-representational constructions (concepts, categories, analytical frameworks) emerge through navigational convergence
- Patterns of coordination between different analytical approaches when describing the same phenomena
- Quantifiable dynamics (TDR, distance metrics, transition probabilities) governing movement through representational space
- Collective stabilization patterns producing Collective Convergence Interfaces (CCIs)
- Informational maintenance costs explaining why certain positions require sustained effort while others persist easily
- The pre-representational substrate enabling all representational stabilization
- Constitutive presence without describable features or analyzable components
- Accessible only through contemplative descent, not through scientific decomposition
- The “silence” against which all analytical discourse articulates itself
- Ontologically prior to the representational/phenomenal/meta-representational distinction itself
2.5.5. The Pre-Representational Claim: Ontological Priority
2.5.6. as Pre-Representational Zero-Point
- Positions are temporary departures from : Occupying identity-positions (“I as professional,” “I as parent,” “I as citizen”) requires continuous energetic investment against ’s gravitational pull
- Transitions between positions pass through : Moving from one coded identity to another typically involves momentary return to undifferentiated baseline rather than direct point-to-point navigation
- -proximity correlates with TDR: Positions near in informational space exhibit lower maintenance costs; distant positions require sustained corrective effort
- Meta-awareness () enables -recognition: Habitual navigation () operates without conscious recognition of baseline returns; meta-analytical reflection makes -transits visible
2.5.7. TDR and Informational Maintenance: Quantifying Representational Dynamics
- Prototype effects as low-TDR attractors: The “robin” prototype is not the most representative bird stored in memory; it is the lowest-TDR configuration in avian semantic space as analyzed through componential frameworks. Once stabilized, it persists with minimal corrective input. Peripheral instances (penguin, ostrich) exhibit higher TDR—speakers must actively resist gravitational collapse toward the robin-attractor.
- Radial extensions as TDR gradients: The center-periphery topology Lakoff documented reflects TDR gradients radiating from low-maintenance attractors. “Biological mother” anchors low-TDR space; “surrogate mother,” “stepmother,” “adoptive mother” occupy progressively higher-TDR regions requiring contextual scaffolding.
- Metaphorical stability as TDR convergence: Conventional metaphors (TIME IS SPACE, ARGUMENT IS WAR) exhibit low TDR because collective navigational convergence on these configurations deepens attractor basins through repeated use. Novel metaphors exhibit high initial TDR but may stabilize through recurrent navigation.
3. Analytical Architecture
3.1. T&T Foundations for Radial Analysis
3.1.1. Core T&T Principles for Analytical Practice
-
Meta-Principle: “All scientific discourse, analytical intent, and theoretical modeling operates at with respect to phenomenal experience”Analytical implication: RA as scientific framework operates exclusively at meta-representational granularity (). When we inscribe radial diagrams, quantify TDR, or identify CCIs, we engage in rational-analytic decomposition—characteristic operations presupposing phenomenological dynamics without accessing pre-representational trace directly. This is not epistemic limitation but ontological structure: pre-representational trace remains epistemologically inaccessible “as such” to analytical discourse (§2.5.2).However, T&T recognizes a profound possibility: when scientific inquiry transcends rationalist expectations—when reoriented intent (active ) reaches saturation enabling autosimilar collapse—theoretical formulations may resonate with trace-level convergences. At these moments, constructions achieve structural isomorphism with pre-representational patterns, not through deliberate access but through emergent coherence. This is what occurred when Einstein confronted entanglement, Heisenberg formulated uncertainty, or Gödel proved incompleteness (§2.5.3)—each stood at the threshold where meta-representational frameworks revealed their own insufficiency, approaching the deconstructive edge.Critically, this autosimilar collapse cannot be the initial objective. One cannot deliberately seek deconstructive fractures in one’s own analytical process. One cannot set out to find “the dissolution of the seeker” without first engaging in genuine search. The collapse emerges despite rationalist intentions, not because of them—a side-effect of persistent inquiry that inadvertently exhausts representational frameworks.Therefore: RA models phenomenological dynamics at while acknowledging these dynamics emerge from pre-representational substrates beyond analytical decomposition. Our diagrams do not “map the trace” but systematically notate navigational patterns through representational space, maintaining theoretical humility about the ontological foundations presupposed by—but inaccessible to—our analytical apparatus.Practical guideline: When conducting RA analysis, remain conscious of operating at /. Do not claim to “access” or “decompose” pre-representational trace. Instead, model observable phenomenological patterns (speaker trajectories, TDR differentials, convergence dynamics) while recognizing these as representations of processes rooted in epistemologically inaccessible substrates. If your analysis inadvertently approaches autosimilar coherence with trace (you experience conceptual dissolution, framework exhaustion, or deconstructive insight), recognize this as reaching saturation—a threshold you’ve encountered, not constructed. At such moments, theoretical humility becomes paramount.
-
“All is Trace {T} or Trajectory {t}”Radial diagrams inscribe two ontological types as they manifest at analytical level. Positions represent models of stabilized convergence regions (emergent from Trace-level dynamics); movements represent navigational activity (Trajectory-level enactment as observed phenomenologically). Capital T notation references the presupposed pre-representational substrate; lowercase t references observable phenomenological navigation. When analyzing discourse, distinguish structural constraints (T-configured terrain, presupposed ontologically) from agentive moves (t-trajectories speakers traverse, observable empirically).
-
“Only trajectories are meaningful”Meaning emerges through navigational activity, not positional occupancy. A position without an incoming/outgoing trajectory is analytically inert—mere potential rather than actualized semantic content. When inscribing radial analyses, prioritize movement patterns over static position identification. Ask: Which trajectories do speakers actually traverse? Why are certain paths preferred over others?
-
“ configures the board; active builds on it; CA navigates either way”Two orthogonal parameters govern analysis. Lambda () sets structural granularity—the scale at which informational distinctions stabilize (onto/phen/meta strata). Sigma () modulates epistemic stance—the agent’s mode of engaging with informational organization ( = contemplative descent; = phenomenal navigation; = meta-analytical reflection).RA as scientific practice operates at /: analysts engage in meta-analytical reflection using meta-representational granularity. Speakers typically navigate at / (phenomenal everyday discourse), / (habitual/archetypal patterns) are less frequent. Recognize this asymmetry: analytical position (/) ≠ speaker position (/).
-
“Cognitive semantic relations occupy different strata; not all reflect empirical navigation”Stratify identified patterns by phenomenological accessibility AND recognize the -level of your own analytical discourse. Archetypal force-dynamics (representing ) operate pre-reflectively; semantic categories and prototype effects () manifest through collective convergence; theoretical metalanguages () emerge through scientific abstraction—including RA itself as meta-analytical framework.When calibrating analysis: deictic navigation typically unfolds at , not archetypal or meta-theoretical scales. BUT your analysis of that navigation operates at . Avoid confusing the -level of the phenomenon ( deictic navigation) with the -level of the analysis ( diagrammatic inscription).
-
“CCI is co-extensive with present experience; deixis marks convergence salience”A Collective Convergence Interface (CCI) constitutes the phenomenological field of “present experience”—the informational substrate where agents coordinate. Deictic expressions (I, you, here, now) function as convergence salience markers, reducing informational entropy within the CCI by stabilizing shared attentional focus. Analyzing deixis requires tracking which convergence configurations speakers enact, not which “referents” they “point to.”
-
“Language pre-stabilizes trajectorial dynamics via SSPs”Linguistic meaning-making operates through Stabilized Semiotic Patterns (SSPs)—collectively grooved trajectorial sequences with low Temporal Dissipation Rate (TDR). This stabilization creates the phenomenological illusion of an “objective world” by packaging a hexid’s architecture into readily navigable form: animals are "there" in the Pets Shop before my son picks one. When analyzing discourse, we should recognize that lexical forms are coordinated trajectories rather than labels for pre-existing categories. The word “dog” is a pre-packing of navigational constraints, not a pointer to a stored concept. We can express this by saying that, for a given community, the locally relevant “pet” space is not an unbounded open set: it foregrounds “dog” and “cat” as central SSPs (or thread sets ) within a relatively short saturation range—for instance, a cat is stabilized as an animal with such-and-such characteristics and expected behaviour. By contrast, “snake” and “parrot” correspond to higher-TDR stabilizations that require additional conditions of manifestation—for example, a child obsessed with reptiles. Since we do “start” with these conditions, then we can say that “dog” constrains the trajectorial space as part of the collective structural saturation.
-
“Linguistic reference is IIP lowering TDR via recursive stabilization”Reference constrains informational continuity across utterances. Successful reference = coordinated navigation through SSP-stabilized regions (low TDR); reference failure = IIP breakdown (TDR spike, convergence dissolution). Track reference by following deictic/anaphoric trajectories: Which positions get occupied repeatedly? Which transitions exhibit low vs. high maintenance costs?
-
“Indexicality exists only in CCI; deictic center operates radially”Deixis manifests as trajectorial dynamics within CCIs, not context-dependent labeling. The deictic center exhibits radial structure: I anchors at innermost ring ( = RSelf), You emerges minimally at third ring ( = ROther), They disperses at collective zones, Alienated Alter occupies peripheral regions (+). Critically, these are default positions; actual trajectories modulate proximity dynamically. Intimacy trajectorizes “you” inward (); alienation trajectorizes “you” outward (). Prioritize trajectory over static position.
3.1.2. Principles in Practice: Analytical Guidelines
Set Analytical Scale and Track Epistemic Shifts
Recognize Deixis as Convergence Work
Map Deictic Positions Radially, Prioritize Trajectories
Track Reference as Trajectory Coordination
Monitor Informational and Epistemic Costs
Attend to -Attractorial Dynamics
3.2. Axis Polarity and Directional Semantics
- Specific positions (hexes): Angle-bracket notation specifies exact cubic coordinates. Example: identifies a single hexagonal cell.
- Axial directions:, , , , , indicate movement toward or away from axis-positive directions.
- Angular zones: denotes the region between the and axes; denotes the region between and ; etc. These zones contain multiple hexes per ring.
- direction: Movement from individual self toward collective self (“I” → “we as professional community”).
- direction: Movement from collective toward individuated positioning.
- Xself positions along Q: The innermost ring contains just the two positions at both and directions. For highly individuated self-reference (“I, uniquely”), speakers stabilize near (personal axis). For collective self-reference (“we, the group I’m in”), speakers move toward (collective axis) or intermediate zones like (within zone)—given that encodes genericity—meaning something like “self as member of quasi-mythical collective” (e.g., “us, the people of the wind”).
- Trajectory interpretability: Movement from (personal-self zone) to (collective-self zone) is semantically transparent as “individualization → collectivization.”
- Intermediate positioning: Speakers need not occupy “pure” axis endpoints. Positions like exist between axes, capturing mixed or transitional stances.
- Phenomenological accuracy: The bidirectionality reflects lived experience: moving toward “we” does not erase “I”; rather, it modulates the balance between individual and collective framings.
3.2.1. Radial Structure of Deictic Positioning (Principle 7, continued)
- –
-
Xself (First Ring): The deictic center (I) occupies the innermost ring, which Trace & Trajectory (T&T) Semantics divides along Q/R/S axes into multiple facets of self-reference:
- direction (Collective Self): Inclusive we, generic one. Positions like or encode self-as-member-of-group.
- direction (Generic Self): Impersonal constructions (“one must consider…”), role-based framings (“as researchers, we…”).
- direction (Personal Self): Emphatic singular I, highly individuated self-reference. Positions like or .
This is not claiming three distinct cognitive “selves”—it tracks how speakers navigate facets of self-reference within the same ring (Xself). Movement along represents trajectories from individual toward collective framing; movement along represents trajectories emphasizing personal uniqueness. Each <Q,R,S> axis could be refined with different attractor basins—that is, conceptual schemas like personal, generic, familiar, uniqueness, etc. [34,35]— correlations are not the enemy as the board epistemics progresses towards convergent <positions> and each hex is really a product of the three coordinates working together, so no claim of categorial purity is either objective nor possible in this hexagonal logic. - –
-
Xother (Third Ring—Minimal Distance for Otherness): Second-person reference (you) occupies the third ring by default—close enough for direct address, distant enough to constitute alterity. This ring represents the minimal threshold at which another subject is recognized as genuinely other rather than extension of self. However, this is default positioning; actual trajectories modulate proximity dynamically:
- –
- Intimacy trajectory: (or toward Xself boundary) — When addressing a close friend, you is trajectorized inward, collapsing intersubjective distance. In highly intimate Collective Convergence Interfaces (CCIs) such as romantic partnership or deep friendship, the boundary between Xself and Xother may dissolve momentarily under (pre-reflective immersion), where “I” and “you” merge into shared experiential flow.
- –
- Alienation trajectory: — When experiencing betrayal, epistemic distrust, or institutional distance, you is trajectorized outward, increasing affective/epistemic distance. At Xalien (fourth or fifth ring, depending on resolution), you becomes Alienated Alter—still grammatically second-person but phenomenologically remote, experienced as inaccessible or untrustworthy.
- –
- Xother Collective Zone: Third-person reference (they) could either disperse across collective third-person positions within Xother—multiple agents at moderate distance but outside the I-You dyad; or be considered a generic bundle, depending on certain variables: the trajectory, attractor basins at <Q,R,S> or even could be call upon. If disperse others correspond to the trajectorial profile, they could occupy a corresponding angular zone (e.g., , ), reflecting both the distributed nature and the unitary delimitation of third-person reference.
- –
-
Xalien and Beyond (Alienated Alter): Positions in outer rings (fourth ring onward) are occupied by others experienced as epistemically or affectively inaccessible—not merely “distant” but alien. Examples include:
- –
- Depersonalized bureaucratic entities (“the system,” “those in government”)
- –
- Hostile outgroups or adversarial collectives
- –
- Individuals perceived as fundamentally untrustworthy or incomprehensible
3.2.2. Reference as Recursive Stabilization (Principle 6)
“Deictic phenomena are complex.Theserequire careful analysis.”
- Not: Pointing to entities called “deictic phenomena” existing independently of discourse.
- But: Maintaining informational continuity—constraining the second utterance to navigate the same trajectorial region activated by the first. This is an Information Interchange Protocol (IIP): “these” signals “continue navigating where we just were.”
3.2.3. Summary: Principles in Practice
- Distinguish structure (T-level) from navigation (t-level)
- Set your analytical scale () and watch for epistemic shifts ()
- Stratify cognitive relations by phenomenological accessibility (onto/meso/meta)
- Recognize deixis as convergence work, not context-dependent reference
- Map deictic positions radially (I at = , You minimally at = ), but prioritize trajectories over static positions
- Track reference as trajectory coordination, measuring via TDR
- Keep an eye on informational cost, when trajectories make long strides (not progressing through adjacent hexs), and critically evaluate their explanatory adequacy
- Keep an eye on epistemic cost, since it might be possible to interpret/explain a phenomenon making use of different tools or following alternate trajectories. Be mindful of ’s attractorial pull and the probable reason why the analysis justifies low or high epistemic expense
3.3. Quick Reference—RA Core Elements
3.3.1. Core Notational Elements
| Element | Symbol | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Zero-Point | Experiential center; minimal informational cost | |
| Rings | Concentric distance levels from | |
| Zones | , , | Directional regions (Q/R/S axes) |
| Positions | or | Specific locations in hexid space |
| Movements | Directed transitions between positions | |
| Trajectorial Strength | Movement with accumulated inertia | |
| Delta-Trace | (integer.decimal) | Informational differentiation intervals |
| Returns to | Attractorial pull; informational reset | |
| Lambda | hexid() | Structural scale/granularity |
| Sigma | Navigational awareness regime | |
| Threads | Convergent trace dynamics | |
| Optional structural elements: | ||
| CCIs | Shaded regions | Culturally stable attractors |
| IIPs (graded) | , , | Movement constraints (low/medium/high cost) |
3.3.2. Key Notational Conventions
Coordinate System
Zone Labeling
Trajectorial Strength
IIP Gradation
Lambda/Sigma Parameters
Lambda-Bypass Notation
Delta-Trace Indexing


3.4. Extended Notation: Meta-Legitimated Bypass and Partial Projections
3.4.1. Beyond Phenomenological Adjacency: The Meta-Bypass Principle
- Select specific zones for individuated conceptualization
- Bypass phenomenological adjacency constraints
- Operate at differential -scales (temporal-informational grain)
- “Normalize” back into for ordinary semiotic processing
- generates the structural bypass by operating at different temporal-informational scales
- modulates perceptual access within an already-configured scale
- Meta-bypass = legitimates transitions that ignore phen-level adjacency rules
3.4.2. Notation for Meta-Legitimated Positioning
- The first axis component operates in hexid_phen (phenomenological base)
- The second axis component (in parentheses) operates in hexid_meta ( scale)
- The superscript indicates differential structural granularity enabling the bypass
- (adjacent axes)
- (adjacent axes)
- × (non-adjacent → collapses to +q axis, loses dimension)
- Only partial zones project into phenomenological experience
- The scale operates at coarser granularity, “skipping over” phenomenological microstructure
-
Full isomorphic projection (preserving all adjacency rules) occurs only in exceptional cases:
- Highly elaborated fictional worlds
- Detailed mathematical formalizations
- Contexts where phen/meta become practically indistinguishable
3.4.3. Application: Angels and the Individual-Impersonal Bypass
- Individual (+q): Distinct entities with proper names (Gabriel, Michael), agency, particular character
- Impersonal (): Not an embodied “you,” but positioned as a deictic person, albeit excluded from I-you dyadic reciprocity, and phenomenologically distant
- The individual feature (+q) stabilizes in through proper names, narrative agency, iconographic representation
- The impersonal feature () operates at —theological categories that exclude interpersonal reciprocity
- The superscript indicates Meta-legitimated bypass: the combination is semiotically stable despite violating phen-level adjacency
- Meta-instability: Pure positions require sustained cognitive effort () and dissipate without reinforcement
- Phenomenal normalization: Abstract entities like angels undergo collapse in everyday religious practice—treated as “concrete things” despite meta-analytical origin
- Selective projection: Only mininum features exist at at meta-scale: perhaps and some aproximation of hex : "you" on the impersonal axes
- Meta-level trajectorial structure: Could the phen-meta relation alone characterize identity configurations as “impersonal individual” without any radial-sectoral projection (even minimal) at ? No—because without radial-cut structure at meta-scale, would operate as a one-dimensional granularity parameter lacking internal geometric differentiation. Trajectorial activity requires navigable space: the meta-level must maintain at least minimal hexagonal structure (axes, zones, potential movements) for bypass configurations like to be semiotically stable. Pure scalar differentiation (coarser vs. finer grain) cannot generate the directional semantics (individual, collective, personal, impersonal) necessary for identity positioning—thus even meta-projections involve partial radial structure, not mere granularity shift.
- Bypass legitimacy: The non-adjacent combination is stable because granularity doesn’t differentiate the micro-scale adjacency rules operative in
- “I” @ : individual-personal
- “You” @ : other-personal (adjacent axes)
- “We” @ : collective
3.5. Trajectorial Temporality: From Trace to Time
3.5.1. Differential Informational Clocks: Theoretical Foundation
3.5.2. The Notation: Trace-Deltas, Not Time-Deltas
- Integer values mark primary sequence positions in a trajectory
-
Shared integers across trajectories indicate synchronic co-presence:If and , then positions i and j occur “simultaneously” in phenomenal experience
- Decimal refinements mark micro-temporal offsets within a primary interval
- Precision is arbitrary: Decimal notation extends to any required granularity, enabling aspectual, rhythmic, and multimodal analysis.
3.5.3. Gesture-Speech “Mismatch”: Resolved Through Differential
- A child explaining conservation tasks verbally, endorsing incorrect strategies while gesturing correct ones
- Learners describing mathematical procedures inaccurately in speech while embodying correct operations gesturally
- Bilinguals code-switching verbally while maintaining gestural frames from their first language
- Gesture preparation () precedes verbal onset ()—a universal pattern in gesture-speech timing
- Gestural stroke phases (, ) do not align precisely with verbal deixis (2, 3) but occur in coordinated offset
- Both trajectories share integer anchor points (, ) marking major semantic transitions, yet each modality elaborates these transitions through modality-specific microstructure
3.5.4. Extensions: Aspect, Deixis, and Cross-Modal Dynamics
Aspectual Construal
-
Perfective: Event treated as punctual → single integer position → minimal elaboration
-
Imperfective: Event distributed across internal phases → decimal expansion → fine-grained structure
Deictic Anchoring
- “Now” → marks current integer position: where
- “Then” → marks prior integer position:
- “Next” → projects future integer position:
Multimodal Threads
- Identify integer anchor points (semantic "beats") across all
- Map decimal offsets for each modality:
- Calculate coordination indices:where denotes sequence length
- Interpret coordination patterns via T&T framework
Video Game Physics: A Computational Analogy
- Player trajectory set: updates at 60 Hz
- Environment trajectory set: updates at 30 Hz
- Background trajectory set: updates at 10 Hz
3.6. -Return Dynamics: Empirical Evidence for Baseline Recurrence
Methodological Note: Identity vs. Pronominal Analysis
From (0), like, as yori (1), so then, and there it’s a game, and it’s beautiful, it’s beautiful, it’s good, yes. When they (0) invite you (0) to participate in an event, well, you (0) sing, you (0) participate as yori (1). Ah, well, I (0) sing as yori (1), I (0) sing songs as yori (1), and so on. There are yoremes (2) who know songs as yoremes (5), and know songs as yoris (3), and so on. And there it’s a very big motivation, it’s something that satisfies you (0), something that excites you (0), something that opens doors for you (0), you (0) feel the appreciation of the yori (4), you (0) feel it inside yourself (0), you (0) can say, ah, well, it gave me (0) an opportunity, they opened the world of yoris (4) for me (0), well then, we (0) have to participate as yoris (1).
Quantitative Patterns
Theoretical Interpretation
Broader Implications for Identity Management
3.7. Asymmetric IIPs in Deictic Navigation: Theoretical Implications
- I think this framework offers real potential…we should explore its implications systematically.
- ??We’ve established the theoretical foundation…but I personally disagree with the core premise.
3.7.1. IIP Asymmetry Beyond Person Deixis
3.7.2. TDR Dominance Over Causal Directionality
4. Discussion
4.1. Methodological Advantages Over Existing Approaches
4.1.1. Ontological Foundations: Beyond Neopositivist Epistemologies
4.1.2. Integration of Static Structure and Dynamic Process
4.1.3. Methodological Status and Cognitive Reality
4.2. Extensions Beyond Core Analytical Domains
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Use of Artificial Intelligence
References
- Geeraerts, D. Prospects and problems of prototype theory. In Linguistics; Vol. 27, pp. 587–612. 4: Number; 4. [CrossRef]
- Bybee, J. Frequency of use and the organization of language; Oxford University Press.
- Croft, W.; Cruse, D.A. Cognitive linguistics; Cambridge textbooks in linguistics, Cambridge University Press.
- Jansegers, M.; Gries, S.T. Towards a dynamic behavioral profile: a diachronic study of polysemous <span class="nocase">sentir</span> in Spanish. 16. [CrossRef]
- Gries, S.T. Corpus-based methods and cognitive semantics: The many senses of <span class="nocase">to run</span>. In Corpora in cognitive linguistics: Corpus-based approaches to syntax and lexis; Gries, S.T.; Stefanowitsch, A., Eds.; De Gruyter Mouton; pp. 57–99. [CrossRef]
- Gries, S.T. Ten lectures on quantitative approaches in cognitive linguistics: Corpus-linguistic, experimental, and statistical applications. 30. [CrossRef]
- Goldberg, A.E. Explain me this: Creativity, competition, and the partial productivity of constructions; Princeton University Press.
- Hamilton, W.L.; Leskovec, J.; Jurafsky, D. Diachronic word embeddings reveal statistical laws of semantic change. pp. 1489–1501. [CrossRef]
- Collins, A.M.; Loftus, E.F. A spreading-activation theory of semantic processing. 82. [CrossRef]
- Anderson, J.R. The architecture of cognition; Harvard University Press.
- Gärdenfors, P. Conceptual spaces: The geometry of thought; MIT Press.
- Gärdenfors, P. The geometry of meaning: Semantics based on conceptual spaces; MIT Press.
- Goffman, E. Forms of talk; University of Pennsylvania Press.
- Davies, B.; Harré, R. Positioning: The discursive production of selves. 20. [CrossRef]
- Larsen-Freeman, D. Chaos/complexity science and second language acquisition. 18. [CrossRef]
- Ellis, N.C.; Larsen-Freeman, D. Language emergence: Implications for applied linguistics—Introduction to the Special Issue. 27. [CrossRef]
- Hutto, D.D.; Myin, E. Radicalizing enactivism: Basic minds without content; MIT Press.
- Gallagher, S. Rethinking Nature: Phenomenology and a Non-reductionist Cognitive Science. 2, Publisher: Routledge _eprint. [CrossRef]
- Di Paolo, E.A.; Cuffari, E.C.; De Jaegher, H. Linguistic bodies: The continuity between life and language; MIT Press.
- Escobar, L.-. Dellamary, L. CLOUD. Language, identity and meaning as fields of information.
- Escobar, L.-. Dellamary, L. Trace & Trajectory Semantics: Meaning Dynamics in Pre-Representational Space. [CrossRef]
- Hoffman, D.; Prakash, C.; Chattopadhyay, S. Traces of Consciousness. [CrossRef]
- Stjernfelt, F. Diagrammatology: An investigation on the borderlines of phenomenology, ontology, and semiotics; Springer.
- Latour, B. Drawing things together. In Representation in scientific practice; Lynch, M.; Woolgar, S., Eds.; MIT Press; pp. 19–68.
- Peirce, C.S. Collected papers of charles sanders peirce; Vol. 8, Harvard University Press.
- Lakoff, G. Women, fire, and dangerous things: What categories reveal about the mind; University of Chicago Press.
- Rosch, E. On the internal structure of perceptual and semantic categories. In Cognitive development and acquisition of language; Moore, T.E., Ed.; Academic Press; pp. 111–144. [CrossRef]
- Escobar, L. Dellamary, L. Dissipative Representations: A Non-Dualist Approach to Language and Identity. [CrossRef]
- Hoffman, D. The Case Against Reality: Why Evolution Hid the Truth from Our Eyes, illustrated edition ed.; W. W. Norton & Company.
- Varela, F.; Thompson, E.; Rosch, E. The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Human Experience; The MIT Press.
- Faizal, M.; Krauss, L.M.; Shabir, A.; Marino, F. Consequences of Undecidability in Physics on the Theory of Everything. 1: Version Number; 1. [CrossRef]
- Hoffman, D.D.; Singh, M.; Prakash, C. The Interface Theory of Perception. 22, 1506. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hoffman, D.; Prakash, C.; Prentner, R. Fusions of Consciousness. 25. [CrossRef]
- Schwarz, F. Two types of definites across languages. 7. [CrossRef]
- Benveniste, É. Problems in general linguistics; University of Miami Press.
- Wagner, P.; Malisz, Z.; Kopp, S. Gesture and speech in interaction: An overview. 57.
- Pouw, W.; Trujillo, J.P.; Dixon, J.A. The quantification of gesture–speech synchrony: A tutorial and validation of multimodal data acquisition using device-based and video-based motion tracking. 52. [CrossRef]
- Morgenstern, A.; Boutet, D. The Orchestration of Bodies and Artifacts in French Family Dinners. In Diachronic Perspectives on Embodiment and Technology: Gestures and Artefacts; Breyer, T.; Gerner, A.M.; Grouls, N.; Schick, J.F., Eds.; Springer International Publishing; pp. 111–130. [CrossRef]
- Bender, A.; Beller, S. Mapping spatial frames of reference onto time: A review of theoretical accounts and empirical findings. 132.
- Comrie, B. Aspect; Cambridge University Press.
- Langacker, R.W. Foundations of Cognitive Grammar: Descriptive Application; Vol. II, Stanford University Press.
- Klein, W. Time in language; Routledge.
- Langacker, R.W. Foundations of cognitive grammar, volume 1: Theoretical prerequisites; Stanford University Press.
- Herbert, C.; Kukla, R. Ingrouping, outgrouping, and the pragmatics of peripheral speech. 2, C: Publisher. [CrossRef]
- Köder, F.; Maier, E. Children mix direct and indirect speech: Evidence from pronoun comprehension. 43. [CrossRef]
- Anderson, M.L.; Riker, T.; Wilkins, A.M. Application of the Truth and Reconciliation Model to Meaningfully Engage Deaf Sign Language Users in the Research Process. 29. [CrossRef]
- Wortham, S. Narratives in action: a strategy for research and analysis. Place: New York.
- Dahl, Ö. The grammar of future time reference in european languages. pp. 309–328. Place: Berlin Publisher: Mouton de Gruyter.
- Nuñez, R.; Sweetser, E. With the Future Behind Them: Convergent Evidence From Aymara Language and Gesture in the Crosslinguistic Comparison of Spatial Construals of Time. 30.
- Lakoff, G. Cognitive models and prototype theory. In Concepts and conceptual development: Ecological and intellectual factors in categorization; Emory symposia in cognition, 1., Cambridge University Press; pp. 63–100.
- Fauconnier, G.; Turner, M. The Way We Think: Conceptual Blending and the Mind’s Hidden Complexities; Basic Books.
- Escobar, L.-. Dellamary, L.; Castro, L.E.Q. Metáfora enactiva en la música didáctica virtual: una mirada crítica decolonial. pp. 119–156. 7: Number; 77. [CrossRef]
- Bybee, J. Language, usage and cognition; Cambridge University Press.
- Goldberg, A.E. Constructions at work: The nature of generalization in language; Oxford University Press.
- Wheeler, J.A. Recent thinking about the nature of the physical world: It from bit. 655, N: Publisher.
- Sandra, D.; Rice, S. Network analyses of prepositional meaning: Mirroring whose mind—the linguist’s or the language user’s? 6. [CrossRef]
- Navigli, R.; Scozzafava, F.; Campolungo, N. Polysemy—evidence from linguistics, behavioral science, and contextualized language models. 50. [CrossRef]
- Brown, T.L. Making truth: Metaphor in science; University of Illinois Press.
- Tyler, A.; Evans, V. Reconsidering prepositional polysemy networks: The case of <span class="nocase">over</span>. 77. [CrossRef]
- Tyler, A.; Evans, V. The semantics of English prepositions: Spatial scenes, embodied meaning, and cognition; Cambridge University Press.
| 1 | While reconfiguration is theoretically possible across multiple scales, empirical reality exhibits a paradoxical convergence: the overwhelming majority of lived experience stabilizes at . This occurs because when any configuration achieves complete informational projection—full saturational density with coherent predictive stability—agents experience it as “their” reality rather than as one analytical scale among others. The phenomenal level () represents the default convergence point where trace saturation reaches experiential immediacy. Critically, when meta-level configurations () achieve comparable completeness—as in immersive cinematic fiction or virtual environments—they are experienced not as analytical abstractions but as “other worlds,” phenomenologically distinct realities requiring suspension of disbelief. Thus, complete projection erases its own constructed nature: agents inhabit phenomenal reality without recognizing it as one possible informational configuration. Partial projections, by contrast, remain marked as perspectives on reality rather than reality itself. |
| 2 | The notation draws inspiration from Campbell et al.’s (2017) use of discrete temporal intervals in simulation theory. However, we reconceptualize T as Trace rather than time, aligning with CLOUD’s informational ontology. |



Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
