Looking at Victoria Alexander’s Chapter (2024) “…The Emergence of Subjective Meaning” (Part 4 of 5)
0729 In section 15.2, the author dwells on the distinction between subjectivity and relative objectivity.
So, I guess I got it wrong. Subjective is not “relatively objective”. Objective is.
0730 I attribute the error to my own incoherent self-reinforcing cycles.
Maybe, my confusion may be lifted, if I make a distinction between my Umwelt-oriented self-reinforcing cycles and Innerwelt-oriented self-reinforcing cycles.
The former can be objective (or “relatively objective”) and the latter can be subjective.
0731 This works as long as I remember that they both contribute to semiotic agency2 for a single individual (or species or genus).
Here is a picture of semiotic agency that tells me what Neodarwinism cannot convey (see S and point 707).

0732 Yes, semiotic agency is a bit of a mystery.
That brings me to (U) the third point.
Point (S) says that Neodarwinism is not all there is.
Point (T) says that the living entity lives by way of self-reinforcing cycles.
Point (U) says that subjectivity and objectivity should be regarded as “equivalent”.
Yes, they are two actualities that constitute the single actuality that is semiotic agency2.
Is that the same as equal (“equi-“) in combination (“-valence”)?
0733 That brings me to the sad reality that the author has never had the opportunity to cast eyes upon the diagram of Sharov and Tonnessen’s noumenal overlay.
Point (V) says that the “equivalence” uses Peirce’s natural signs, that is, icons, indexes and symbols.
0734 The author elaborates this point in sections 15.2, 15.3, 15.4 and 15.5 and arrives at the conclusion that directionality and originality are indispensable concepts in evolutionary science. Indeed, they are. Directionalityassociates to the objective presence of message2H. Originality associates to the subjective presence of message2V.
Yes, directionality and originality constitute semiotic agency as a singular actuality.
The inquirer does not have to explain the mechanisms of self-reinforcing cycles that are crucial for sign-processing. Instead, the inquirer may appreciate what biosemiotics really accomplishes.
Biosemiotics offers an account of the one thing that all living processes and organisms have in common.
In doing so, it makes biology comprehensible.