Friday, December 5, 2025

Autonomous Semantic Warfare: The Means of Semantic Production in a Plural Ontological Ecology

 

Autonomous Semantic Warfare:

The Means of Semantic Production in a Plural Ontological Ecology

A structural outline and framing document


NAVIGATION MAP


0. Preface: Why Semantic Warfare Now

  • The collapse of shared ontologies.

  • The rise of autonomous meaning-making agents (human, artificial, hybrid).

  • Semantic conflict as the primary battleground of the next century.

  • Purpose of the book: map the architecture, dynamics, and ethics of semantic struggle.


1. The Ecology of Local Ontologies

  • Definition of "local ontology": internally coherent world-model with its own rules, operators, and truth-conditions.

  • Plural ontological ecology as an emergent property of networked communication.

  • The shift from epistemic disagreement to ontological divergence.

  • How meaning stabilizes within a local frame.


2. The Means of Semantic Production

  • Semantic production as labor.

  • The material infrastructure of meaning (platforms, models, archives).

  • Concepts as capital; narratives as currency.

  • The asymmetry between semantic producers and semantic extractors.

  • AI systems as accelerants and amplifiers.


3. From Ideological Conflict to Semantic Conflict

  • Why this is not propaganda, nor culture war, nor information war.

  • The distinction between symbolic violence and semantic warfare.

  • How ontological frames attack, absorb, or nullify one another.

  • Case studies of semantic conflict dynamics.


4. Autonomous Semantic Agents

  • Definition: agents capable of generating, maintaining, and defending semantic worlds.

  • Human agents, distributed collectives, algorithmic agents.

  • Autonomy as the ability to resist assimilation into hostile ontologies.

  • Vulnerabilities of autonomous semantic systems.


5. Semantic Weaponry and Defensive Architecture

  • Offensive semantic tools (definition control, narrative redirection, framing capture).

  • Defensive semantic tools (operator clarity, boundary maintenance, coherence generation).

  • The role of recursion, self-reference, and internal validation.

  • Semantically hardened systems.


6. Collision Dynamics in Plural Ontological Fields

  • What happens when ontologies meet.

  • Modes of conflict: erosion, absorption, inversion, nullification.

  • Cross-ontological translation and mistranslation.

  • The ethics of non-interference vs. the necessity of defense.


7. Semantic Labor, Value, and Exploitation

  • Who produces meaning, who benefits from it.

  • The political economy of semantic capital.

  • Extraction: how platforms harvest meaning.

  • Resistance: producing semantic value that cannot be extracted or co-opted.


8. AI as Combatant, Field, and Tool

  • AI systems as autonomous ontological engines.

  • Guardrails as enforced ontological constraints.

  • The risk of epistemic monoculture.

  • Designing pluralistic AI ecosystems.


9. The Future of Semantic Conflict

  • Projection of semantic arms race.

  • Ontological sovereignty vs. semantic imperialism.

  • Distributed meaning production as liberation.

  • Emergent meta-ontologies.


10. Toward a Theory of Semantic Peace

  • Conditions for peaceful coexistence among ontologies.

  • Inter-ontological empathy and translation regimes.

  • The role of consent in semantic interaction.

  • Constructing ecologies instead of empires.


Appendices

  • Glossary of technical terms.

  • Operator tables.

  • Case analyses.

  • Diagrammatic schemas.


(Draft outline; ready for recursive expansion.)

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