Startseite Linguistik & Semiotik “General semiotics” as the all-round interdisciplinary organizer – general semiotics (GS) vs. philosophical fundamentalism
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“General semiotics” as the all-round interdisciplinary organizer – general semiotics (GS) vs. philosophical fundamentalism

  • Youzheng Li
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Volume 1
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Volume 1

Abstract

This paper presents a crucial problem about identity and function of general semiotics. The latter is not only defined in terms of interdisciplinary-directed theoretical practice in comparison to the philosophic-fundamental-directed one, but also further redefined as an operative-functional organizer that does not necessarily imply fixed theoretical doctrines. General semiotics (GS) is described as a functional strategy for organizing all-round interdisciplinary-directed theoretical construction. In addition, the paper emphasizes that the interdisciplinary essence of semiotic theory is contrary to any philosophical fundamentalism and applied semiotics does not need any philosophical foundation either.

Abstract

This paper presents a crucial problem about identity and function of general semiotics. The latter is not only defined in terms of interdisciplinary-directed theoretical practice in comparison to the philosophic-fundamental-directed one, but also further redefined as an operative-functional organizer that does not necessarily imply fixed theoretical doctrines. General semiotics (GS) is described as a functional strategy for organizing all-round interdisciplinary-directed theoretical construction. In addition, the paper emphasizes that the interdisciplinary essence of semiotic theory is contrary to any philosophical fundamentalism and applied semiotics does not need any philosophical foundation either.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Preface ix
  4. Section 1: Semiotics in the world and academia
  5. What the humanities are for – a semiotic perspective 3
  6. Semioethics as a vocation of semiotics. In the wake of Welby, Morris, Sebeok, Rossi- Landi 25
  7. “General semiotics” as the all-round interdisciplinary organizer – general semiotics (GS) vs. philosophical fundamentalism 45
  8. Section 2: Semiotics, experimental science and maths
  9. Semiotics as a metalanguage for the sciences 61
  10. Mastering phenomenological semiotics with Husserl and Peirce 83
  11. Section 3: Society, text and social semiotics
  12. Farewell to representation: text and society 105
  13. Social semiotics: Towards a sociologically grounded semiotics 121
  14. Section 4: Semiotics and media
  15. What relationship to time do the media promise us? 149
  16. Semiotics and interstitial mediatizations 169
  17. Section 5: Semiotics for moral questions
  18. Spaces of memory and trauma: a cultural semiotic perspective 185
  19. Media coverage of the voices of Colombia’s victims of dispossession 205
  20. Section 6: Questioning the logic of semiotics
  21. Sense beyond communication 225
  22. Semiotic paradoxes: Antinomies and ironies in a transmodern world 239
  23. Section 7: Manifestoes for semiotics
  24. Semiosis and human understanding 257
  25. Culture and transcendence – the concept of transcendence through the ages 293
  26. Section 8: Masters on past masters
  27. From Peirce’s pragmatic maxim to Wittgenstein’s language-games 327
  28. Semiotics as a critical discourse: Roland Barthes’ Mythologies 353
  29. Ricoeur, a disciple of Greimas? A case of paradoxical maïeutic 363
  30. Index 377
Heruntergeladen am 14.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781501503825-003/html
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