Words-as-Law
Words-as-Law The Linguistic Architecture of Authority, Order, and Logos I. Orientation: Why Law Is a Linguistic Phenomenon No law exists without words. This is not metaphorical. It is literal. A law is not a force like gravity. A law is not a substance. A law is not self-executing. A law is a linguistic construct that binds minds, actions, and systems through shared meaning . Remove language, and what remains is power, habit, or violence—but not law. Law begins where words stabilize expectation. Before words, there is instinct. Before words, there is dominance. Before words, there is survival. Law only emerges when meaning is fixed, transmitted, remembered, interpreted, and enforced —all of which require language. II. The Minimal Definition of Law At its core, a law is: A formally articulated command that defines permitted and forbidden actions within a domain, backed by authority and consequence. Each element is linguistic: Articulated → spoken or written ...