Language does not transmit meaning; it collapses it. Before words appear, meaning exists as a continuous relational manifold — a high dimensional structure shaped by context, history, orientation, and shared reality. When a speaker selects a word, this manifold undergoes a discrete collapse into a linguistic token, fixing only one narrow slice of the underlying structure. The listener then reconstructs meaning by collapsing their own manifold, which may differ in shape, curvature, and constraint. Misunderstanding arises not from error but from misaligned collapse trajectories across differently structured cognitive environments. This paper develops a relational structural ontology of language that explains how meaning, context, and interpretation interact. I show that words function as coordinates rather than containers; that syntax governs the sequential narrowing of interpretive space; and that pragmatics emerges from the residual structure left uncollapsed by the utterance. This model unifies semantics, pragmatics, and communication breakdown under a single mechanism: the dynamics of collapse within a shared or fractured manifold of meaning. The result is a framework that explains why language works when it does, fails when it must, and can be manipulated when collapse is forced into distorted regions of the manifold.
Denis Bailey (Wed,) studied this question.