Reframing Linguistics: The Law of the Trio in Dialogue with Major Theories
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This article presents the Law of the Trio as a paradigm-shifting framework that positions thought, language, and reality as ontologically equivalent yet formally distinct modalities of existence. By comparing this triadic model with foundational linguistic theories—including generative grammar, structuralism, functionalism, and cognitive linguistics—the paper reveals how conventional approaches often isolate language from the very reality it seeks to express. The Law of the Trio reimagines sentence structure as an existential schema, where the coupling of entity and behavior across modalities mirrors the organization of reality itself. Employing recursive modifier notation and semantic function modeling, this theory frames the sentence as the semantic DNA of being—capable of encapsulating identity, transformation, and relational depth. The article explores wide-ranging applications, from language acquisition and communication theory to the architecture of universal digital language systems. Ultimately, it proposes a reframing of linguistics as ontological syntax—a discipline capable not only of describing language, but of decoding the structural logic of existence itself.