Meaning can exist beyond spoken language because communication is fundamentally based on interpretation rather than sound alone. Humans already exchange meaning through mathematics, symbols, images, gestures, music, and even silence. A red traffic light communicates danger or stopping without speaking a single word. Mathematics allows scientists from completely different cultures to understand the same principles despite language barriers. This suggests that meaning itself may be more universal than the spoken forms used to transmit it. Spoken languages are surfaces layered over deeper conceptual structures shaped by experience and cognition.
Marsji explores the possibility that these conceptual structures can be represented more directly through stable semantic relationships instead of culturally evolved vocabulary. Artificial intelligence strengthens this idea because modern AI systems increasingly operate on vector relationships between concepts rather than on human grammar alone. In this sense, language becomes only one medium for expressing meaning, while meaning itself may exist as a more abstract and transferable structure beyond speech or writing.