The history of human orientation begins not with movement, but with reference. Navigation has always presupposed a point, a direction, or a field against which deviation, trajectory, and correction could become intelligible. Whether based on stars, horizons, or instruments, orientation is not a property of space itself, but the result of an accepted order.
Orientation, however, is not shaped solely by conventions. Decisions and alignments are also influenced by centers that become decisive through their effect rather than their precision. The Hungarian expression “to be close to the pot” describes this mode of operation. The pot generates a gravitational field: it functions as a center, attracts, and reorganizes the behavior of the periphery within its own domain. Circulation persists, but points of reference become unstable. Deviation can be understood as the actual state of the system, but can equally be read as a limitation of measurement, orientation, or reference, in which orientation itself becomes uncertain.
Footnote
In scientific and technical usage, wobble denotes a class of phenomena characterized by oscillation or deviation from an idealized reference. The term is used in fields such as mechanics, astronomy, and navigation to describe persistent fluctuations in orientation, axis, or trajectory that do not result in immediate failure, but indicate instability within a reference framework.