Difference, Institution, and the Question of Closure: Reconsidering Weber’s Reading of Saussure
“dans la langue il n’y a que des différences.” AI image Introduction Samuel Weber’s reading of Ferdinand de Saussure follows a clear and compelling line of reasoning. If language consists solely of differences, then those differences might appear capable of indefinite expansion. Determination would therefore require limits, and such limits, on this account, are secured by invoking linguistic institution, privileging synchrony, and bracketing diachrony. The resulting system seems closed only because historical movement has been set aside. This reconstruction raises serious philosophical questions. Yet it risks isolating one of Saussure’s most cited formulations ( “dans la langue il n’y a que des différences” ) from the broader conceptual structure of the Course in General Linguistics . A closer examination suggests that difference in Saussure never operates independently of an already instituted system. The problem, then, is not whether Weber’s questions are legitimate, but whet...