Port-Royal and the Production of Meaning: How Systems Create Their Objects
Introduction: Why Port-Royal Keeps Returning Port-Royal has an uncanny persistence in modern debates on language, knowledge, and human nature. A seventeenth-century grammatical and philosophical project, rooted in a specific historical moment, it nevertheless reappears in contexts that seem to pull it in opposite directions. Ferdinand de Saussure treats it as a distant methodological precursor, Michel Foucault situates it within a historically bounded episteme, and Noam Chomsky invokes it as an early articulation of an innate structure of mind. At first glance, this recurrence invites a familiar question: which interpretation is correct? Yet this question already assumes that Port-Royal carries a stable meaning awaiting discovery. What if the persistence of Port-Royal tells us something else, namely, that meaning does not reside in sources themselves, but emerges from the systems that mobilize them? This article argues that Port-Royal functions as a revealing case study for a bro...