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The inferential and equational models from ancient times to the postmodern

  • Giovanni Manetti
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 19. März 2010
Semiotica
Aus der Zeitschrift Band 2010 Heft 178

Abstract

The basic idea that makes John Deely's Four ages of understanding an innovative one is that the notion of the sign is at the center of philosophical development from the start, and proves basic to a postmodern development of thought as well. A full awareness of this notion of sign can be traced way back to the beginning of the fifth century AD, in the works of Augustine, where the two different theories of signs present in the Greek period — the semantic theory of the linguistic sign (following an “equational” model) and the logical-epistemological theory of non-linguistic signs (following an “inferential” model) — are amalgamated. The aim of this paper is to show that Augustine makes a move that is both symmetrical with and a mirror image of what Saussure does: the latter unites the two theories and two classes of sign, setting up the linguistic sign as the guiding principle, while Augustine subsumes all types of sign within the class of non-linguistic signs. But it is the Augustine's move that opens, as Deely also says, a link with the postmodern era, proposing a semiotic model that is homogenous with that of Peirce.

Published Online: 2010-03-19
Published in Print: 2010-February

© 2010 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York

Heruntergeladen am 19.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/semi.2010.011/pdf
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