Abstract
There exist two kinds of fundamental signs and significance-effects. A normative fundamental sign and a sub-cognitive fundamental sign; a normative significance-effect and a sub-cognitive significance-effect, also called quasi-empathy. The normative fundamental sign and significance-effect appear within the scientific knowledge domain, where there is a stringent terminology. The sub-cognitive fundamental sign and significance-effect exist within all kinds of communities as a condition for the normative fundamental sign and significance-effect. The aim of this article is to show how it is possible to suggest a normative fundamental sign for a community, which is — not yet at least — scientific and provide this community a starting point for becoming scientific.
©[2012] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- The seventh signification of Sindbad: The “Greeking” of Sindbad from the Arabian nights to Disney
- Presence in the reading of literary narrative: A case for motor enactment
- Iconicity in urban place naming (with examples of names from places in Poland)
- At the circus backstage: Women, domesticity, and motherhood, 1975–2003
- Blackhorse Mitchell's Beauty of Navajoland: Bivalency, Dooajinída, and the work of contemporary Navajo poetry
- Semantics and critique of political economy in Adam Schaff
- The message of print, creative advertising: On the abductive guessing instinct as a prerequisite in comprehension
- Narrative cognition and modeling in new media communication from Peirce's semiotic perspective
- The activation of multileveled responses: James Phelan's rhetorical theory of narrative judgments
- Knowledge profiling the occupational therapy concept of occupation: Theory and case study
- The ideal teacher: An analysis of a teacher-recruitment advertisement
- Peirce's semiotics and Russian formalism: The story of Oedipus Rex
- The semiotics of communication