What if meaning is not something you find but something you form?
In The Grammar of Meaning, Professor Patrick Businge explores one of the deepest questions of human existence: how do we interpret life? Just as language requires grammar to create meaning, human life follows unseen structures that shape how we understand our experiences, our identity, and our purpose. Meaning is not accidental. It is formed through perception, belief, memory, culture, and consciousness.
This book reveals the hidden grammar behind how humans assign value, process suffering, recognise purpose, and make sense of their journey. It shows why two people can live similar lives yet arrive at completely different meanings-and ultimately, different destinies.
Through philosophical depth, lived insight, and powerful reflection, this volume invites the reader to rethink how they see life itself. This is not just a book. It is a framework. A lens. A grammar for living.
If you change your grammar, you change your meaning.
If you change your meaning, you change your life.