12/15/25

Looking at Igor Pilshchikov and Mikhail Trunin’s Article (2016) “The Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics” (Part 14 of 27)

0174 The history of literary structuralism, as portrayed in sections one through three (1-3) may be rendered as the embodiment of a three-level interscope.

All I need to do is add a respectable level3c to put the sensible construction of structuralism3b and semiology3a into perspective3c.

By “respectable”, I mean that it looks a lot like an unfolded empirio-schematic judgment.

After all, science is what the most “socialist” of Soviet academics are looking for.

0175 Here is the resulting social construction.

0176 Well, that was easy.

A perspective level contextualizes the situation level of the fundament interscope.

The normal context of a disciplinary language (that includes formal and final causation, along with material and efficient causation)3c brings a semiological3a structuralist3b model2c into relation with the potential of ‘observing phenomena in a literary text’1c.

0177 Ironically, a complete three-level interscope corresponds to langue, according to Razie Mah’s e-book, Comments on Robert Berwick and Noam Chomsky’s Book (2016) Why Only Us? (available at smashwords and other e-book venues).

0178 Of course, this claim is not obvious.

But, the proposal addresses very important questions, asking, “Is langue a purely relational category-based structure?  Do all humans share this purely relational structure?  Does grammar for all spoken languages assist in filling in the empty slots for a three-level interscope?  Finally, once all the slots are filled in, does that constitute a complete thought?”

0179 If the answers are affirmative, then the three-level interscope diagrammed below constitutes a complete thought,that is, a way of approaching a subject that comports with human intuition.  (And, isn’t that what Aristotle’s tradition does best?)

Once again, here is a diagram of the fundament interscope.

0180 Notably, the perspective level of this three-level interscope derives from the empirio-schematic judgment.  The model2c cannot be rejected by the guardians of Soviet 
Socialist respectability
.  (And, isn’t that necessary in a political system that idealizes itself as “scientific”, as opposed to “superstitious”?) 

0181 The perspective level presents an actuality2c that will overlay the noumenon, the thing itself, in a category-based nested form that corresponds to the Positivist’s judgment.

0182 The Positivist’s judgment?  Unfolded into a category-based nested form?

The triadic normal context of a not-religious intellect3a brings an empirio-schematic judgment2a into relation the possibility of ‘a noumenon [that cannot be objectified as] its phenomena’1(2e).

Here is a picture for the Literary Positivist.

0184 The thing itself is the literary text2af.

But, as with triumphalist science, a model2c is destined to replace the literary text2af – or at least reconfigure its potential – for the content-level of an interscope that is derivative to the fundament interscope.

0185 In other words, the perspective-level of the fundament interscope grounds the content-level of the derivative interscope, on an adjacent higher level of inquiry.

Why?

0186 The empirio-schematic judgment is what ought to be (secondness) for the Positivist’s judgment.

So, substituting a hylomorphe2a into the slot for the empirio-schematic judgment2a significantly alters the Literary Positivist’s judgment.

0187 All in all, a confounding reconfigures the Literary Positivist’s judgment.

0188 To this substitution, I now attend.

12/13/25

Looking at Igor Pilshchikov and Mikhail Trunin’s Article (2016) “The Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics” (Part 15 of 27

0189 A virtual nested form runs down each column in a three-level interscope.

Here is the virtual nested form in secondness for the fundament, along with the hylomorphe2a that I propose should go into the actuality2a of a modified Positivist’s judgment.

0190 The virtual normal context of a structuralist model2c brings the situation-level actuality of {language [substance] literary text}2b into relation with the potential of the content-level actuality of {langue [substance] parole}2a.

This virtual nested form supports an entanglement2a that will replace what ought to be2a (secondness) and remodel the Positivist’s judgment.

0191 Does this make sense?

A writer puts pen to paper.

In doing so langue2am (what is going on in one’s head, talking to oneself) as matter [substantiates] written words as form2af.

This act is virtually situated by {language2bm [substantiating] the literary text2bf}, arising from the potential of ‘the laws of the system’1b.

Then, the literary text2bf may be contextualized by a structuralist model2c, formulated by an expert in linguistics and literature.

0192 But, what is a structuralist model2c?

Perhaps, I can say that a structuralist model2c encourages an entanglement: {literary text as form [entangling] academic language as matter}2a.

0193 To start, the semiological structuralist model2c contextualizes the text2bf (as a situation-level form) even as it substitutes for the text2af (that is, the model2c overlays the noumenon1a).

Next, the substitution shifts the model2c overlaying its noumenon1a out of the realm of possibility1 and into the realm of actuality2, as a form2af that entangles matter2am.

0194 The above figure portrays what I am trying to convey.

0195 Notably, the empirio-schematic judgment has not disappeared.  Rather, it has take a life of its own, as one might expect when material and efficient causalities are no longer truncated of related formal and final causations.

0196 What about potential1a for a remodeled Positivist’s judgment?

In the following figure, the virtual nested form in firstness for the fundament supports a content-level potential1a for the derivative.

0197 The virtual normal context of ‘observing phenomena in a literary text’1c brings the actuality of ‘laws of the system’1b into relation with the potential of ‘Saussure’s formulation of signifier and signified’1a.

0198  Now, the fact that langue and parole2a (as actuality2a) belong to the normal context of Saussure’s semiology3a, means that each spoken word has “closely related placeholders” in two arbitrarily related systems of differences.  The Greimas square turns out to be useful for isolating a particular word or term from nearby words and terms.  But, that does not solve the concern that each instantiation2a of {a langue as matter [substantiates] a parole as form}2a sits squarely in a network of arbitrary relations3a.

The concern is mollified, to a certain extent, by the impression that the dyad, {signifier [and] signified}1a, is not arbitrary.  It is intuitive and referential.

0199 Why does the human mind generate that impression?

As it turns out, according to Razie Mah’s e-book, The Human Niche, language (as defined by Saussure) evolves in the milieu of hand talk.  Hand talk connects a manual-brachial word-gesture (signifier) to a pre-existing referent (signified) through Peirce’s icons and indexes.  Pantomime is iconic.  Pointing is indexal.  After gestures that pantomime and pointare routinized, they becomes symbols.  From Saussure’s linguistic point of view, language requires symbols in order to operate.  Indeed, grammar consists in symbolic operations within a fixed system of differences.

0200 No one in the 1960s or the 1980s knows this.

However, the literary circles of the USSR intuitively discern the correct potentials.

The potential for ‘laws of any language’1b virtually situates the potential that the signifier pictures or points to its signified1a, even when parole2af and langue2am are explicit abstractions and the spoken word2bf cannot picture or point to its… um… 

What was I saying?

0201 While {langue2am [substantiating] parole2af} directly situates the potential of ‘signifier and signified’1a, the potential of ‘laws of the system 1b virtually situates the same potential1a.  Plus, these laws1b define the way that the inquirer observes phenomena in a literary text1c.

0202 Well, maybe the word, “define”, may be inadequate, but the term appears in a nested form that is foundational for Razie Mah’s e-book, How To Define The Word “Religion” (available at smashwords and other e-book venues).

The normal context of definition3 brings the actuality of a spoken word2 into relation with the possibilities of ‘meaning, presence and message’1.

0203 May I substitute the adjective “written” for “spoken”?

To me, this implies that the possibilities inherent in ‘observing phenomena in the literary text’1c launches the potential of ‘meanings, presences and messages that underlie the definitions of the entangled language’1a.

Consult the above figure.

0204 The virtual nested form in the category of thirdness depicts Lotman’s journey during the 1960s through the 1980s.

0205 Lotman’s inquiry stretches the structuralist thing, {semiology [substantiates] aesthetics}, from the content-level of the fundament interscope to the content-level of the derivative interscope.

In terms of normal contexts, a science-inspired language containing formal and final causalities3c in the fundament interscope leaps to the Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics (in its first iteration, from the 1960s through the 1980s) as a literary positivist intellect3a.

The latter normal context3a contextualizes a radically transformed Positivist’s judgment, without challenging the de facto primacy of the original Positivist’s judgment.

0206 Indeed, the positivist intellect of the Tartu-Moscow School3abrings a novel… science-compatible… aesthetic language2am into relation with the potentials of meaning, presence and message1a.

12/12/25

Looking at Igor Pilshchikov and Mikhail Trunin’s Article (2016) “The Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics” (Part 16 of 27)

0207 At this juncture, Juri Lotman and his collaborators achieve the fundament interscope and are well way on their way to build a new – aesthetic – derivative interscope, founded on a refashioning of the Positivist’s judgment.

The new interscope will exploit the advantages of a complete thought (the three-level fundament interscope) that captures talk about literature.

Indeed, this complete thought offers a a model that presents itself as the noumenon, the literary text itself2af.

0208 Here is a picture.

0209 Section four (4) offers clues as to where Lotman is heading.

He aims to construct a field of inquiry that… um… capitalizes on the presentation of a novel “noumenon”, resulting in a transformation of the Positivist’s judgment.

0210 Oh, I mean “situates”, instead of “exploits”.

After all, everyone at this time is supposed to be a communist.

Plus, I already know that… since the form of aesthetics entangles the matter of cultural studies, then aesthetics can be a challenging topic.

0211 Here is a picture.

0212 How do I view the authors’ narrative?

Science remains paramount in the Soviet regime, so Lotman’s success at identifying a construct that veils the noumenonremains angled towards science.

Section four mentions how cybernetics emerges as a priority, immediately after the end of the Second World War.  Indeed, research funding goes into cybernetics.  So, I assume that the entangled language2am in the actuality2a on the content-level of the derivative interscope situates the potential of cybernetic meanings, presences and messages1a.

Does that compute?

In this regard, Lotman publishes two works in 1967.  One is titled “The Study of Literature as an Exact Science”.  The other is titled “Exact Methods in Soviet Literary Studies”.

0213 Surely, Lotman is a genius in regards to agenda management.

The Institute of Cybernetics is established at Tallinn University of Technology in Estonia in 1960.

The potential of meaning1a shifts accordingly, because the entangled language2am is virtually situated by inquiry into cybernetics3b.

0214 Here is a picture.

0215 In the realm of possibility, note how the content level retains the possibility of meaning1a.  Plus, the newly realized situation level offers the possibility of presence1b.

The potential of ‘codes’1b is now present, because cybernetics is all about codes and control.  Codes1b potentiate some sort of matter that may be labeled, “cognition2bm“, and some sort of form that may be labeled, “interaction1bf“.

Too bad that humans are not robots.

12/11/25

Looking at Igor Pilshchikov and Mikhail Trunin’s Article (2016) “The Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics” (Part 17 of 27)

0216  Semiotics is history.

The article under examination celebrates the third wave of paradigms.  

0217 Plus, the third period exhibits transits in several domains.

Soon after Lotman publishes in 1967, the Zeitgeist shifts.

0218 Of course, the initial advantage offered by a remake of the Positivist’s judgment comes from the fact that inquiry into cybernetics3b is ready-at-hand to virtually situate the Tartu-Moscow School of Structuralism and Semiology as a positivist intellect3a.  

0219 However, some scholars in Slavic language and literature are not so interested in codes (or machines, for that matter).

They are eager to pursue inquiries closer to aesthetics, as traditionally understood.

So, during the third paradigm-wave, collaborators in the Tartu-Moscow School propose research projects aiming to expand linguistic and semiotic methods into literary and cultural theory2b.  Vigorous debate follows.  The authors do not say what really happened.

0220 Section four (4) concludes.

Section (5) begins by mentioning how members of the Tartu-Moscow School work on preserving and cultivating the legacy of the Prague Linguistic Circle (involving both Mukarovsky and Jakobson).

Hmmm.

What was going on in Prague?

Do I anticipate further development of the following two-level interscope?

0221 How about the following guess?

What linguist is interested in cybernetics?

0222 During the 1960s, Lotman labors, along with other academics, on a two-volume edition of Mukarovsky’s writings.  He notes (in a text published after his death) that Mukarovsky’s functionalism (think “doctrines of formal and final causalities”) sounds quite modern.  Mukarovsky moves from contemporary semiology as the science of deciphering texts to a general theory of generation, storage and functioning of information in human society (in short, a study of culture).

Mukarovsky describes every civilization as a hierarchically organized structure of functions.  Some of the functions are performed by texts.  Culture… er… “civilization” is a dialectical unity.

0223 Uh-oh.  Where have I heard the term, “dialectics”, before?

Was the qualifier, “materialist”?

0224 Surely, this paean to Mukarovsky comports with the two-level interscope portrayed above, where cultural phenomena2b (on the situation level) objectify literature and language2a.

But, this2am is not the language2bm of the literary text2bf.  This is the language2am that the literary text2af (or is it2af the object2af that the semiological3a structuralist3b model2c stands for?) entangles2a.

0225 On the content (or presentation of “the model as the noumenon” level), the triadic normal context of the positivist intellect of the Tartu-Moscow School3a brings the dyadic actuality, {literary text (as form) [entangles] language (as matter)}2a into relation with the potential of ‘meaning1a, presence1b and message1c‘.

On the situation (or phenomena level), the triadic normal context of cultural studies2b brings the dyadic actuality of {cognition [substantiates] societal interactions}2b into relation with the monadic potential of ‘communication (as the presence virtually situating meaning)’1b.

Perhaps, the term, “communication1b” is a label for the process whereby positivist language2am becomes virtually situated by cognition2bm.

To me, it seems that “communication” is more culture-friendly than “code”.

0226 surely, the normal context of cultural studies3b is not the same as the normal context of inquiry into cybernetics3b.

Indeed, the logics of thirdness includes exclusion, alignment and complement.

The two normal contexts3b of cultural studies3b and cybernetics3b do not align, nor do they complement.

Will the new-fangled “artificial intelligence” change that?

0227 In 1968, a black swan event occurs.  The Soviet Empire suppresses political ferment in Czechoslovakia.  The accelerant for the political exuberance comes from a citizenry jealous of the raucous protests happening on the other side of the Berlin Wall.  Intoxicants and false expectations are provided by wealthy Western political and financial manipulators.  The popular press puts a romantic label on the event: “The Prague Spring”.

12/10/25

Looking at Igor Pilshchikov and Mikhail Trunin’s Article (2016) “The Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics” (Part 18 of 27)

0228 Of course, I am not finished with section four (4).

Why?

At the start of section four, the authors drop a highly technical linguistic term, “semasiology”, in their description of how some logical positivists in the Moscow Linguistic Circle want to build models of poetics based on material modes,such as phonology.

0229 Curiously, “semasiology” has a partner word, “onomasiology”.

Semasiology starts with a spoken word and asks, “What does this word mean?”

Onomasiology starts with a what… a meaning…  and asks for the proper word.

0230 Now, if I were a gambler, I would say that onomasiology studies the ways of the situation-level actuality of the following two-level interscope.

Of course, that means that semasiology studies the ways of the content-level actuality of the above two-level interscope.

0231 Semasiology, operating on the content-level, considers a word from a literary text and asks, “What does this word mean?”.

Given a parole2af, then what is its proper langue2am?

Does this apply to the instance where the fundament entangles the derivative?

The potential of meaning1a underlies the way that the form (or the written words) in a literary text2af [entangle] the matter of language2am in the normal context of the Tartu-Moscow School as an expression of the positivist intellect3a.

0232 On the content level, the contiguity between a literary text as form2af and a language of aesthetics as matter2am,is [entangled].

0233 What entity… er, possibility… might associate with [entanglement]?

It seems like the answer would be, “The signifier.”

The signifier conjures a signified, in the form of spoken words in a language2am of aesthetic (perhaps, “normative”) meaning1a.

Does this apply to the instance where a fundament entangles its derivative?

Does that make any sense?

Or is this a bridge too far?

0234 What are the words2am that semasiology takes for given?

Given a positivist3a language2am, what do the written words2af mean?

I thought that what words mean corresponds to… um… langue2am.

Is that the same as language as matter2am?

0235 On the situation level, the contiguity between cognition as matter and social interaction as form2b is [substantiates].

Based on these assignments, language as matter2am is virtually situated by cognition as matter2bm.

0236 What does cognition as matter2bm [substantiate]?

Does social interaction2bf correspond to something like… ummm…. parole2af?

0237 Can onomasiology1b be inquiry into the ways that cognition as matter2bm [substantiates] cultural interactions as form2bf?

Especially, when the cultural interaction2bf involves speech2af.

If so, then onamasiology recapitulates the content-level of the fundament interscope.

Given a langue2am, then what is the proper parole2af?

Does that suggest that the presence1b underlying the actuality of cognition2am (in the derivative interscope) offers a cultural avenue to situate the possibility1a underlying language2a, as defined by Saussure as two arbitrarily related systems of differences3a (in the fundament interscope)?

0238 As if to certify that the focus of inquiry shifts from structuralist things to cultural things2b, consider Aristotle’s hylomorphe and entanglement as exemplars of the Peirce’s category of secondness.

0239 Here is the general configuration.

0240 Here is this application.

0241 The study of cultural interactions3b virtually situates the science of appreciating the meaning of texts3a.

12/9/25

Looking at Igor Pilshchikov and Mikhail Trunin’s Article (2016) “The Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics” (Part 19 of 27)

0242 The so-called “Prague Spring” (the Czech and Slovakian restlessness that inspires a Soviet (Russian) crackdown) sends ripples through the academic world.  While some circles unwind, the Summer School at Tartu commences.  The coordinators?  Juri Lotman and fellow travelers are responsible.  The waters of anxiety rise.  The waters fall and there the TMS stands, an unexpected treasure box full of memories, unpublished works, and intellectuals with passports.

Some of those intellectuals port their way to outside the Soviet Empire.

0243 1968 is a fate-filled year.

Section five (5) concludes and six (6) begins on the construction of linguistic (and other academic) circles during this turbulence in the Slavic civilization.  The authors mention many names.  The names shift in and out of focus.  These people do not portray the third paradigm-wave.  They embody it.

In section six (6), the authors point out that Summer Schools at the Universities of Tartu and Tallinn continue to serve as an intermediary among Central Europe, Eastern Europe, and Russia, especially in the disciplines of Slavic Studies.  The authors bewail the lack of historical research.  For example, a comparative analysis of Polish, Russian and Estonian versions of semiology has never been undertaken.  Also, correspondence has not been edited and published.

0244 Whether the Tartu-Moscow School of Semiology serves as the administration of an “invisible college” or as an actor in “The Soviet Empire of Signs” does not capture the issue.

Why?

Do these other approaches fail to take a transnational point of view?  Do they neglect the sequence of battles among enlightenment gods?  Do they miss the lesson that semiotics is history?

Or should I say… “history is semiotic”?

0245 The next black swan event occurs in 1989.

No, it is not the replacement of the word, “semiology”, by the term, “semiotics”, even though Saussure’s dyadic sign-configuration shifts into Peirce’s triadic sign-formula.

Yes, an event changes the map of Europe.

More on that, later.

0246 Section six (6) concludes by noting that the scholarly legacy of the Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics is yet to be adequately described.  The authors mention three issues in particular: Poldmae’s theory of verse (in section seven (7)), Mint’s interpretation of intertextuality (7) and Lotman’s concept of “semiosphere” (8).

0247 What is the historical riddle posed in section six (6), which covers the transition from Moscow and Prague linguistic circles to Summer School at the University of Tartu?

How does Juri Lotman and his collaborators negotiate the trauma of the events of 1968 when the perspective level of academic inquiry is something like the following?

0248 In the triadic normal context of Marxist theory3c, the dyadic actuality of {material arrangements [substantiate] human conditions}2c emerges from (and situates) the potential of ‘scientific interpretations of human activities’1c.

0249 The answer may be strangely familiar.

Compare this Soviet nested form to the unfolded empirio-schematic judgment, corresponding to what ought to be(secondness) in the Positivist’s judgment.

0250 What do I see?

I see almost exactly what the academic experts in Slavic civilization have been doing in the Soviet Socialist Union of Republics.

0251 Academics in Slavic Studies configure their models, not as mechanical and mathematical constructions devoid of formal and final causality, but as holistic Aristotelian hylomorphic structures, embedded within a category-based nested form.

Marxist theory3c also brings a hylomorphic structure2c into relation with the potential of ‘a scientific approach to cultural practices’1c.  Plus, the term, “scientific”, indicates “not religious (no Christian faction)” rather than “no metaphysics (Aristotle’s formal and final causalities)”.

0252 Weirdly, this pattern also applies to the proliferation of specialized “sciences” in Western academies after the fall of the Soviet Union.  Just supplant the term, “Marxist”, with whatever “ism” that seems to be the academic fashion of the day.

That includes “capitalism”, by the way, as well as “communism”.

0253 Marxist theory involves a technical vocabulary.  This vocabulary confuses common folk, because familiar terms are given specialized definitions.  Consider the word, “investment”.  The meaning, presence and message underlying the word changes whether one is common folk, a capitalist or a socialist.

The capitalist thing2c is {oligarchal arrangements [substantiate] human conditions}.

In socialist thing2c, is {the arrangements of a coercive administrative state [substantiate] human conditions}.

0254 All “-ismist” theory3c requires book-learning. To speak the lingo appropriately, one needs academic certification.  The process of acquiring academic certification weeds out those who fail to accept that {material (or oligarchic or bureaucratic) arrangements [substantiate] human conditions}2c.  The losers trip on the fact that the positivist intellect exercises a rule.  Metaphysics is not permitted.  And, “metaphysics” now means “religious mumbo-jumbo”.

0255 The above actuality2c is not a mechanical or mathematical model2c, even though Marxist theoreticians attempt to frame their models by collecting and analyzing data.  The reason?  In order to collect observable and measurable facets of human history or civilization, one must… shall I say?… narrow the field of inquiry to… well, phenomena that can be observed and measured, which is really quite limited.  For example, a survey brimming with multiple choice questionsor fill in the blanks does not do justice to the human experience.

Okay, “justice” is not the issue, here.

0256 For example, from what I heard, the rumor is… the closer that one lives to an electric transformer substation, the more likely one is to develop cancer.

0257 A secular academic may feed the statistical data into a materialist dyad2c that arises from the potential ‘scientific sounding interpretations of human activities’1c.

Then, that scholar may generate a scientific sounding explanation… er… “model” that can be used by other ideologically driven government authorities as an excuse to implement a policy regulating the distribution of electric substations in the interest of public health.

12/8/25

Looking at Igor Pilshchikov and Mikhail Trunin’s Article (2016) “The Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics” (Part 20 of 27)

0258 So, what am I saying?

Marxist theory3c constitutes a novel style of scientific inquiry, because the “model2c” is not mechanical or mathematical (in principle), but can be made to appear so through selective acquisition of observations and measurements of phenomena1c.

Indeed, the dyadic actuality2c, {material arrangements [substantiate] human conditions}2c characterizes theory-driven observations and measurements of phenomena1c as “scientific”1c by treating the vocabulary of Marxist theory3c as a disciplinary language3c that satisfies the mandates of the positivist intellect.  

Does any of this seem familiar?

0259 That is not all I am saying.  The reason why the above constitution seems reasonable stems from prior success by physicists, chemists and biologists in substituting their mathematical and mechanical models in for the noumenon. Recall that the noumenon belongs to what is (firstness) in the Positivist’s judgment.

0260 Here is a picture.

0261 A slogan attributed to Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) goes like this.  The empirical sciences study phenomena (the observable and measurable facets of the thing itself) and ignore their noumenon (the thing itself).  In other words, phenomena cannot fully objectify their noumenon.

Within a century, scientists find a way around Kant’s slogan.  Successful models may substitute for or overlay the noumenon.  When that happens, the overlaying model can be objectified as its phenomena.  This gives birth to the disciplines of academic laboratory sciences.

0262 What does this mean for Marxist terminology3c as an empirio-schematic disciplinary language3c?

Here is a diagram.

The Marxist dyad is {material arrangements [account for] human conditions}2c.

0263 Marxist theorists3c profess that a scientific-sounding dyad2c, overlays the thing itself, civilizational history (what is, Positivist’s judgment), because it2c is arises from the possibility of ‘scientific interpretations’1c.

The materialist dyad, {material arrangements [substantiate] human conditions}, can be objectified by phenomena produced by a mechanized civilization.

0264 When the USSR dis-integrates, the declaration2c is no longer credible, even though it2c supports a wide variety of critical theories2c that gain respectability in state-supported academies in the USSA.

0265 USSA?

Recently, the US congress appointed a task group to assess the plausibility that the extra “S” stands for ‘something’.

“Why,” the politicians wonder, “does that extra S appear out of nowhere?  And what is it supposed to mean?”

Meanwhile, the congressional “representatives” ignore the national debt that they have voted into existence.

$38,000,000,000.

0266 So, what are all these ism-ist critical theories2c doing?

Oh yeah, they are identifying phenomena1c that objectify their materialist dyad2c.

0267 What should one call the current configuration of American critical theory?

Besides “hilarious”.

0268 The experts are versed in capitalism and in socialism.

Both styles of expertise produce dyadic models where {material arrangements [substantiate] human conditions}2c.

Then, they pretend that their models are the thing itself.

12/6/25

Looking at Igor Pilshchikov and Mikhail Trunin’s Article (2016) “The Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics” (Part 21 of 27)

0269 In section seven (7), the authors surf into the fourth paradigm.

0270 The material arrangements have changed.  But, what about the immaterial arrangements?  

Who still believes that {material arrangements [substantiate] human conditions}?

When the Soviet Empire fails, Slavic civilization experiences the trauma of… what?… a rebirth?

0271 For seventy years, from 1918 to 1989, the Slavic culture gestates in the womb of Marxist ideology.

Is that so different than the hiatus of Mongol rule (1240-1481)?

The civilizational rebirth of the all the Slavic nations inaugurates the fourth battle among the Enlightenment gods.

Razie Mah’s three-part e-book, Original Sin and the Post-Truth Condition (available at smashwords and other e-book venues) tells the tale, from a western point of view.

0272 The current war may be titled, “Empirio-Normative Domination of Subject Populations”.  The war entails controlling what people say through the use of psychometric expertise.  The USA becomes the USSA: the Umbrella of Sycophantic States in America.  A victor is not yet apparent.

On one hand, subject populations cannot ideate what victory means.

On the other hand, the Relativist One3c has already victoriously implemented a wide-range of interventions2c.  Also, subject populations have been successfully instructed how to talk about these events2a.

0273 To summarize, the current Zeitgeist brings science (as social interaction2bf) beyond science (as what we currently think that the spoken-word means2bm).  Communist and capitalist “models” are not mechanical or mathematical formulations.  They are not shorn of formal and final causation.

For physics, chemistry and the like, formal and final causation cannot enter into mechanical and mathematical models. I call the results, “truncated material and efficient causalities”.

For the applications discussed here, Marxist “models” are dyadic actualities2c embedded in category-based nested forms.  The normal context is a (formalist and finalist) disciplinary language3c.  The potential is ‘an explanation that follows the format of scientific inquiry’1c

0274 For American expertise3b (in the service of Big Government (il)Liberalism), both socialist and capitalist analyses2b are presented in the style of inquiry of the hard sciences.  The formalized lingo1b of science is paradigmatic.  As of 2025, the consequences have been significant.  The citizen is now supposed to “believe the science”, rather than understand it.

0275 Here is a diagram of the three transits for this period.

12/5/25

Looking at Igor Pilshchikov and Mikhail Trunin’s Article (2016) “The Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics” (Part 22 of 27)

0276 Why do I mention this post-truth business?

From the 1950s until 1989, Juri Lotman (1922-1993) is a professor in a Soviet Socialist academic system.  He does not cross the line while… at the same time… tunnels a way under the line that cannot be crossed.

Of course, it is funny to describe academic tunneling, but the further that Lotman digs into a scientific explanation for human conditions, the closer Lotman gets to popping up on the other side of the Marxist line.

0277 Here is a picture of the tunnel.

0278 If structuralism is a thing, then its matter is semiology and its form is aesthetics.

Why is that?

The recognition of structure… of a system… is aesthetic.  This is how humans work, in our current Lebenswelt.  We recognize structure3b and apply a label1b.  That label is validated when it gets applied over and over again to similar structures.  For example, every literary text2bf is different.  However, every literary text belongs to a genre3b.  

0279 The tunnel?

Aesthetics as form entangles cultural studies as matter.

The thing part of this confounding is the topic of sections one and two of the article (1 and 2).  At this point, reviewing the first two sections of the article under examination may prove valuable.  This examination adds value to the authors’ text.

0280 Lotman starts as a traditional literary historian, working in Moscow, the hub of a centralized empire that purports to embody Marxist theory.  Authorities are hell bent on changing material arrangements.  They anticipate changes in the human condition, according to their Marxist overlay of civilizational history itself (the model overlaying the noumenon).

0281 Lotman becomes a literary structuralist (1960s), leading the Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics (er… Semiology) and initiating the University of Tartu Summer School.  During this time, the School produces a remarkable langue(three-level interscope) that culminates in the parole of a semiological3a structuralist3b model2c.

0282 The examiner has already derived the following diagram of the fundament interscope.

0283 Theoretically (A), the perspective-level actuality2c should serve as a science-friendly model that can overlay the noumenon of literature within the Slavic civilization.

But, that does not occur.

Instead, the so-called “Prague Spring”, nudges (B) the network of researchers (who are increasingly touching base with Lotman, whose voluminous correspondences currently reside at the Lotman Archives in Estonia) towards a different opportunity.

0284 What do I mean by that?

First, let me discuss the “should” (A).

Note how the three-level interscope depicted above is sustained by a Saussurean3a content-level actuality2a, arising from the potential of ‘the signifier and the signified’1a.

0285 The actuality2a itself exhibits material causation.  That means that the substance, an arbitrary relation, is real.

Of course, this makes no sense, because how can an arbitrary relation be adaptive?

Okay, that is another story.  See Razie Mah’s e-book, The First Singularity and Its Fairy Tale Trace.

0286 The normal context3a and the actuality3af involves formal causes.  Surely, if parole2af manifests as a system of differences, then langue2am must as well.

0287 Efficient causes couple actuality2a and potential1a.  The potential1a reminds me of the potential that underlies language2am on the content-level of the derivative interscope.  Meaning1a?  What is it1a?  Well, it must involve the interplay between signified and signifier1a in the human mind.

0288 Here, I can harken back to human evolutionary history, by claiming that this interplay differs between implicit and explicit abstraction.  Implicit abstraction is the sole province of hand- and hand-speech talk, belonging to the Lebenswelt that we evolved in.  Explicit abstraction is an opportunity available for speech-alone talk, belonging to our current Lebenswelt.

The actualization of langue2am and parole2af from the potential of ‘signified [&] signifier’1a serves as an example of explicit abstraction.

See Razie Mah’s e-book, A Primer on Implicit and Explicit Abstraction, available at smashwords and other e-book venues. 

0289 Doesn’t this claim sound like a huge research project?

0290 Efficient causes work in alignment with final causation.  

Consider the following category-based nested form: A mechanical decoding and encoding process3a brings the actuality of {neural networks corresponding to three-level interscopes (langue2am) substantiating vocal utterances (parole2af)} into relation with the potential of positive and negative feedback loops1a.

0291 Compare the efficient causalities involved in the actuality2a, {neural network2am [substantiates] vocal utterance2af}, emerging from and situating the potential1a of the final causalities inherent in the following two statements.

The signifier1a associates to parole2afthe spoken word.

The signified1a goes with langue2am, which turns out to be a purely relational structure, such as a three-level interscope.

0292 On the semiological or content level, langue2am is like an impression2am that substantiates a parole2af, a spoken word2af.  Consequently, the fundament interscope is founded in the same way that a person generates a written text.  One must take a pen and inscribe the spoken word2af.  So, the semiological level goes with what I think2am and what I say2af er… write2af.

0293 On the structural or situation level, inscription2af has the potential of following (and thus revealing) the laws of a semiological system1b (or “genre3b“).  Language2bm [substantiates] a literary text2bf (a new signifier, one worth showing to others).  So, the structural level recapitulates what I say2af as a literary text2bf.

0294 The words in my literary text2b carry the potential to be regarded as phenomena of the text as a noumenon1c.  This potential1c introduces the unfolded empirio-schematic judgment as the perspective level of the fundament interscope.

0295 Overall, this is what took place and would have continued uninterrupted (A), if it were not for the so-called “Prague spring” (B).

12/4/25

Looking at Igor Pilshchikov and Mikhail Trunin’s Article (2016) “The Tartu-Moscow School of Semiotics” (Part 23 of 27)

0296 The so-called “Prague spring” (B) occurs in the middle of the first iteration of the TMS.

1968 runs into a disturbance, a black swan event, and…

0297 …the path changes, from a movement that would have mimicked triumphalist science to something far more confounding.

0298 Remember, the perspective level of the fundament three-level interscope presents a model (from the empirio-schematic judgment) that should overlay the noumenon (in the Positivist’s judgment).

0299 The perspective-level actuality2c (what ought to be, Positivist’s judgment) should have proceeded to overlay the noumenon1a (what is, Positivist’s judgment), but that would produce an obvious discrepancy with the Marxist theory of the substantiation of human conditions by material arrangements.

0300 Instead (C), the perspective-level model2c enters the content level of a new derivative interscope, that will eventually constellate the claim.

Furthermore (D), the entangled matter gets confounded with the contiguities in a two level interscope that coheres to Lotman’s move to include cultural studies (described in section six (6)), in a way that does not make a claim contradicting regime sustaining Marxist models.

0301 Let me dwell on the instead (C).

The entrance follows the path of the interventional-sign relation, which is discussed in Looking at John Deely’s Book (2010) “Semiotic Animal”, appearing in Razie Mah’s blog for October, 2023.

0302 Here is a diagram.

0303 In the triadic structure of a sign-relation, a sign-vehicle (SV) stands for a sign-object (SO) in regards to a sign-interpretant (SI).

This interventional sign relation crosses from the perspective-level of the fundament interscope to the content-level of the derivative interscope.

It also passes from the empirio-schematic judgment to the Positivist’s judgment.

0304 A semiological2a structuralist2b model2c (SVi) stands for the dyad, {literary text as form2af (SOi) [entangles] language as matter2am} in regards to the TMS positivist intellect3a operating on the potential of ‘meaning’1a (SIi).

0305 In short, Lotman and his collaborators make an intuitive leap from the language of the mother-tongue, the subject matter for semiology and structuralism, to a language of meaning, presence and message that will… um… act as matterthat substantiates forms that are relevant to… hmmm… the entangled claim.