A telemetric signal is a deviation that becomes available for casting. It is not simply a message, value, or expression—it is a registered disturbance, a unit of relevance recognized by a system capable of composing with difference: delta.
In telemetric grammar, a signal is the initiatory force in a cast: the first component introduced to a method in a field to generate a yield.
A signal does not need to be coherent to be valid.
It may arrive as noise, anomaly, tension, image, phrase, gesture, sensation, refusal.
What defines a telemetric signal is not its content but its modulability—its capacity to be worked upon.
Telemetric signals may originate as:
- yields from prior castings
- External disruptions
- Internal contradictions
- Recursive fragments of the system itself
A signal becomes telemetric when it is:
- Registered
- Positioned within a field
- Available for structured engagement via method