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Creation: Algorithmic, organicist, or emergent metaphorical process?

  • Floyd Merrell

    Floyd Merrell (b. 1937). His research interests include semiotic theory, Peirce studies, Latin American cultural studies, and contemporary Spanish American literature. His recent major publications include Living Learning, Learning Living: Signs, East and West (2002); Sensing Corporeally (2003); The Mexicans: A Sense of Culture (2003); and Complementing Latin American Borders (2004).

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Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 10. November 2006
Semiotica
Aus der Zeitschrift Band 2006 Heft 161

Abstract

We are all to a greater or lesser degree creative, and metaphor making is one of the most common channels along which the creative process flows. Three general theories of metaphor — comparison, substitution, and interaction — and three theories of creativity — mechanicism, organicism, and contextualism or holism — surface in the following pages. Peirce's categories delineating the semiosic process, his concept of signs incessantly becoming other signs, and his insight regarding abduction, are brought to bear on these theories of metaphor and creativity, leading to the conclusion that both theories are a matter of overdetermined Firstness becoming under-determined Thirdness through nonlinear, emergent interdependent, interrelated interaction between signs and their makers and takers.

About the author

Floyd Merrell

Floyd Merrell (b. 1937). His research interests include semiotic theory, Peirce studies, Latin American cultural studies, and contemporary Spanish American literature. His recent major publications include Living Learning, Learning Living: Signs, East and West (2002); Sensing Corporeally (2003); The Mexicans: A Sense of Culture (2003); and Complementing Latin American Borders (2004).

Published Online: 2006-11-10
Published in Print: 2006-08-01

© Walter de Gruyter

Heruntergeladen am 17.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/SEM.2006.059/html
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