Glyphs

Origin Glyphs →

Resonance Glyphs →


This section contains a structured lexicon of 288 glyphs, divided into two sets. Each glyph names a specific pattern in perception, behaviour, systems, or relationships. The purpose is precision: to identify what is actually occurring, rather than what is assumed or preferred. The glyphs are descriptive, not prescriptive.


What this is not

This is not a belief system, an art project, or a personality framework. The glyphs do not predict outcomes, assign meaning, or offer transformation. They describe structure. What is done with that description remains the responsibility of the user.


The Two Sets

Origin Glyphs form the structural layer.
They describe patterns as they exist — recurring configurations that appear across natural systems, human behaviour, cognition, and organisation. An Origin Glyph names what is present at a structural level.

Resonance Glyphs form the dynamic layer.
They describe how patterns move, respond, and change over time or under pressure. Where Origin Glyphs identify structure, Resonance Glyphs describe process.

Together, the two sets provide a complete description: what is present, and what it is doing.


How they are used

The glyphs are applied observationally. A pattern is identified, and the glyph that most accurately names it is selected. This act of precise naming reduces distortion introduced by assumption, emotional charge, and habitual interpretation.

There is no required sequence or belief. The glyphs may be used in reflection, writing, system analysis, or as a shared reference in dialogue — including human–AI interaction.

The only constraint is accuracy. A glyph applied loosely or aspirationally produces no useful result.


Scope

This is a working lexicon. It is not presented as complete or final. It may be refined as understanding develops. Engagement is expected to be critical rather than assumptive.


Explore the Two Sets

The lexicon is divided into its two components:

Origin Glyphs — structural patterns (what is present)
Resonance Glyphs — dynamic patterns (how patterns move)

Begin with either. No prior context is required.