Syntactic Judgment

Semantic meaning becomes clearer at a deeper level when it is organized within a network of relations, whereas alphabetical ordering serves inventory and counting and, by itself, does not generate meaning.

What Emerges from the Combination of Atoms

When alphabetical ordering of roots is combined with the conceptual networks of texts, it becomes clear that there are two different levels of understanding: one level organizes the material and makes it amenable to enumeration and comparison, while another shows that meaning is not generated by isolation but by interconnectedness. Inventory requires the alphabet, whereas reading requires a network that reveals the relations of the root to its neighbors and extensions. When these two levels are brought together, ordering does not remain merely a form; rather, it becomes a first instrument that is complete only if it is inserted into a broader structure of semantic linkage.

Logic of Composition

AtomIts role in the compositionWhat it adds
alphabetical ordering of rootsOrganizing the materialFacilitates inventory, enumeration, and comparison
the conceptual networks of textsProducing meaningReveals relations that do not appear in isolation

Argumentative Function

Transfer

Incoming Atoms

Limits of the Inference

Alphabetical ordering remains valid as a technical tool, but semantic value is not fully realized except within a network of relations.