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Theoretics

LANGUAGE

The theory of LANGUAGE studies the systemic ordering of relationships for communication.

We use language to form relationships among parts and wholes according to a set of rules. While this is also the principle for all “systems,” to use the term “language” changes our point of view to identify how the relational dynamics form meaningful relationships. The linguistic view of language offers three so-called “dimensions” for analysis, and three ways to “use” language to communicate. 

The three dimensions of language are the syntactic, semantic, and pragmatic. Syntactics represents the formal and structural relations of parts and wholes. Semantics represents what parts and whole mean to convey ideas. Pragmatics represents the functional relation of parts and wholes that serve the purpose of communication. These three dimensions have a concentric relationship, with the syntactic being inside, the pragmatic outside, and the semantic in between the two. However, their relations are interdependent, and therefore inseparable except for their analysis and study.  

Furthermore, the use of language to communicate with means to generalize from three points of view (which I) named: the practicaldialectical, and poetical. The practical serves to communicate with a singleness of meaning for the purpose of informational clarity and directness. The dialectical use of language serves to communicate rhetorically, meaning to encourage, council, or persuade, having some ulterior motive. This typically serves the needs of advertising, propaganda, and political speeches. The poetical use of language serves to inspire and deepen consciousness to expand and broaden understanding. These three uses relate in a concentric relationship, starting in the center with the immediate need to represent, and then expands to color information subjectively, or then to objectively stimulate expanded perceptions. As a concentric dynamic this also means the basic need to communicate is present in all three.