FROM ARBITRARY CONSTRUCTS TO NATURAL METRICS: A PARADIGM SHIFT IN LANGUAGE, JUSTICE, AND AI
Abstract
Modern thought has long treated human language and social norms as arbitrary constructions rather than products of natural or divine order. According to Dr. Mahmudjon Kuchkarov’s Odam Tili (“Human Language”) theory, this shift was not a mere academic evolution but part of a grand strategy – a “symbiotic” alliance of political, theological, and academic elites that replaced objective standards with arbitrary choices to serve their power interests [1]. By detaching words and values from any natural or God-given metric, this paradigm made it easier for those in power to justify any narrative as legitimate. In other words, if there is no fixed truth or standard of justice, public opinion can be swayed to accept virtually anything as “truth” or “justice.” This introduction frames the problem: the arbitrary sign has dominated linguistics and social thought, and Dr. Kuchkarov argues that reclaiming a natural, logical foundation for language and meaning is essential for humanity’s future in the AI era.