The Architecture of Language: how writers simultaneously represent experience, enact social relationships, and manage the flow of information
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This episode explores the Architecture of Language through the lens of Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL), specifically demonstrating how this model moves beyond basic grammar to analyze the Greek New Testament as a meaningful communicative event. The text is structured around five core dimensions—structure, system, stratification, instantiation, and metafunction—which redefine language as a vast resource for making meaning rather than a rigid set of rules. Key scholars apply these principles by shifting focus from isolated words to the rank scale of discourse, emphasizing that a text's true intent is found in the co-patterning of grammatical choices across entire passages. Ultimately, this framework provides a robust "grammatics" for interpreting ancient texts, using the metafunctional spectrum to reveal how writers simultaneously represent experience, enact social relationships, and manage the flow of information.
This podcast was created with the assistance of AI tools.