The System of Interpretive Language

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A framework showing how graphemes, glyphs, and logographs are interpreted in many ways but always circle back to letters that spell the foundation of all language units.

Description

The System of Interpretive Language explores how symbols—graphemes, glyphs, logographs, morphemes, and words—are interpreted in infinite ways yet always return to a shared foundation: letters that spell the units of language. Each unit references another in a recursive loop: graphemes reference phonemes, morphemes reference lexemes, words reference sentences, and sentences reference discourse. Interpretation is individual and varied, but coherence is preserved through the alphabet and its etymological roots.

This document outlines how multiplicity and unity coexist: symbols can mean many things, but meaning stabilizes when tied to letters. It shows how interpretation across domains—mathematics, science, law, technology—loops back to the same alphabetic base. Language here is seen as a Möbius strip: twist the circle of letters, and inside becomes outside, yet the surface remains one. This work is ideal for linguists, educators, AI researchers, and anyone seeking to understand how language is endlessly interpretable yet firmly grounded in spelling.