From CTMU:
Thus, languages are ultimately self-processing; they must either contain their processors in their expressions, or be expressed in terms of a more basic language fulfilling this requirement. Accordingly, the expressions of SCSPL are dynamic informational configurations of information-processors, implying that SCSPL everywhere consists of information and acceptive-transductive syntax in a state of logical intersection. Together, information and syntax comprise infocognition, self-transducing information in the form of SCSPL syntactic operators that cross-absorptively "communicate" by acquiring each other’s informational states as cognitive-syntactic content. It is to the common basis of these two components that information may be reduced in the SCSPL context. Where the term telesis denotes this common component of information and syntax, SCSPL grammar refines infocognition by binding or constraining telesis as infocognition.
To the extent that any grammar functions by the recursive application of syntactic rules, SCSPL grammar is recursive ("self-calling"). However, SCSPL grammar is not merely deterministically or nondeterministically recursive, but telic-recursive. While an ordinary grammar recursively processes information or binds informational potential to an invariant syntax that distributes over its products, Γ grammar binds telesis, infocognitive potential ranging over possible relationships of syntax and state, by cross-refining syntax and its informational content through telic recursion. Telic recursion is the process responsible for configuring the syntax-content relationships on which standard informational recursion is based; its existence is an ontological requirement of reality. The telic-recursive cross-refinement of syntax and content is implicit in the "seed" of Γ-grammar, the MU form, which embodies the potential for perfect complementarity of syntax and state, law and matter.http://www.megafoundation.org/CTMU/Articles/Langan_CTMU_092902.pdf
The necessary existence of the self-generating, self-reflecting syntactical machine, the SCSPL, is required to bind Telesis as infocognition and so configure the information and syntax of reality over its possible relationships (as information and cognition mean nothing without each other). That is to say, SCSPL grammar is a generative grammar from which to bind and subsequently refine itself. The universe binds and refines itself through Telesis without which, reality could not self-select from a realm of pure infocognitive potential. The interception of information and cognition is required by the generative grammar of SCSPL, Γ grammar, they mean nothing existing apart from each other. So observer-participation is dependent upon the proto-computational SCSPL (and its context-free grammar) as well as the material objects which express themselves as information to be acquired by an observer (information transducer). As understood by Wheeler's "IT from Bit", infocognition is implied by quatum-theoretic observer-participation.
Thus, languages are ultimately self-processing; they must either contain their processors in their expressions, or be expressed in terms of a more basic language fulfilling this requirement. Accordingly, the expressions of SCSPL are dynamic informational configurations of information-processors, implying that SCSPL everywhere consists of information and acceptive-transductive syntax in a state of logical intersection. Together, information and syntax comprise infocognition, self-transducing information in the form of SCSPL syntactic operators that cross-absorptively "communicate" by acquiring each other’s informational states as cognitive-syntactic content. It is to the common basis of these two components that information may be reduced in the SCSPL context. Where the term telesis denotes this common component of information and syntax, SCSPL grammar refines infocognition by binding or constraining telesis as infocognition.
To the extent that any grammar functions by the recursive application of syntactic rules, SCSPL grammar is recursive ("self-calling"). However, SCSPL grammar is not merely deterministically or nondeterministically recursive, but telic-recursive. While an ordinary grammar recursively processes information or binds informational potential to an invariant syntax that distributes over its products, Γ grammar binds telesis, infocognitive potential ranging over possible relationships of syntax and state, by cross-refining syntax and its informational content through telic recursion. Telic recursion is the process responsible for configuring the syntax-content relationships on which standard informational recursion is based; its existence is an ontological requirement of reality. The telic-recursive cross-refinement of syntax and content is implicit in the "seed" of Γ-grammar, the MU form, which embodies the potential for perfect complementarity of syntax and state, law and matter.http://www.megafoundation.org/CTMU/Articles/Langan_CTMU_092902.pdf
The necessary existence of the self-generating, self-reflecting syntactical machine, the SCSPL, is required to bind Telesis as infocognition and so configure the information and syntax of reality over its possible relationships (as information and cognition mean nothing without each other). That is to say, SCSPL grammar is a generative grammar from which to bind and subsequently refine itself. The universe binds and refines itself through Telesis without which, reality could not self-select from a realm of pure infocognitive potential. The interception of information and cognition is required by the generative grammar of SCSPL, Γ grammar, they mean nothing existing apart from each other. So observer-participation is dependent upon the proto-computational SCSPL (and its context-free grammar) as well as the material objects which express themselves as information to be acquired by an observer (information transducer). As understood by Wheeler's "IT from Bit", infocognition is implied by quatum-theoretic observer-participation.