This essay presents a concise overview of teleological semantics and the Omega framework. Rather than foregrounding formal notation or philosophical terminology, it examines a simple question: How does meaning organize itself? The central argument is that semantic systems evolve through trajectories that may diverge, circulate, or converge. Where trajectories become sufficiently convergent, attractors emerge. Once these convergences are reinforced through attention and repetition, attractors begin to guide subsequent trajectories and gradually produce curvature within the semantic field. This curvature generates coherence by making some directions more probable than others; over time, however, it can also produce increasing rigidity. The Ω₄ operator can be understood as a response to this problem: a formal way of describing how semantic fields may reopen their own developmental possibilities. Yet this reopening is ambivalent. It can lead either to renewed integration or to destructive re-homogenization.
Hans-Joachim Rudolph (Fri,) studied this question.