Philosophical theories of language frequently assume that meaning and reference depend upon privileged access either to internal mental content or to mind-independent entities. At the same time, scientific and ordinary linguistic practices reliably support coordination, explanation, and successful reference despite operating through indirect, theory-laden representational systems rather than transparent access. What remains underdeveloped is an ontological framework capable of explaining how reference and meaning achieve stability without appealing to ontological transparency or mental foundations. This paper proposes a structural interpretation grounded in the Three-Circle Ontology, according to which language functions as a rendered representational system governed by shared structural constraints rather than as a medium of direct access to reality. The account is not intended as a semantic theory, a theory of truth, or a mentalist explanation of meaning. Its primary contribution is to reframe meaning as structural alignment within constraint-governed representational practices, thereby clarifying how reference, coordination, and error remain intelligible without invoking privileged epistemic or metaphysical access.
Jainil Surana (Sun,) studied this question.