A groundbreaking framework for discourse analysis, this book reveals how concepts originate and evolve through relational structures. Focusing on the long-contested terrain between religion and science, it introduces relationality analysis, a method to track how meaning emerges through differentiation and likening. Why is Buddhism scientific? How did quantum physics become mystical? Through detailed case studies, this book maps how relational constructs of opposition, nonopposition, identity, and representation drive discursive change. By shifting the question from what terms mean to how they mean, it offers a bold, post-postmodern theory of knowledge construction that reshapes how we understand language and meaning making.