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The two foci of biology: Matter and sign

  • YOSHIMI KAWADE
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 2. Oktober 2009
Semiotica
Aus der Zeitschrift Band 127 Heft 1-4

Published Online: 2009-10-02
Published in Print: 1999

Walter de Gruyter

Artikel in diesem Heft

  1. Titelei
  2. Sonstiges
  3. Editor’s note: Towards a prehistory of biosemiotics
  4. Peirce and biology
  5. The biological basis of Victoria Welby’s significs
  6. Charles Morris’s biosemiotics
  7. Roman Jakobson and biology: ‘A system of systems’
  8. Towards biosemiotics with Yuri Lotman
  9. Natural selection and Maxwell’s demons: A semiotic approach to evolutionary biology
  10. On genes, cells, and memory
  11. Biosemiotics and the foundation of cybersemiotics: Reconceptualizing the insights of ethology, second-order cybernetics, and Peirce’s semiotics in biosemiotics to create a non-Cartesian information science
  12. An Aristotelian approach to animal behavior
  13. Biohermeneutics and hermeneutics of biology
  14. Evolutionary perspective for cognitive function: Cerebral basis of heterogeneous consciousness
  15. Literary biosemiotics and the postmodern ecology of John Clare
  16. The Sarkar challenge to biosemiotics: Is there any information in a cell?
  17. Semiotics of the artificial: The ‘self’ of self-reproducing systems in cellular automata
  18. Order out of indeterminacy
  19. The concept of nature in ancient Finns and Karelians
  20. The two foci of biology: Matter and sign
  21. Biosemiotics in the twentieth century: A view from biology
  22. A semiotic perspective on biological objects and biological functions
  23. The clock and its triadic relationship
  24. Living signs
  25. A semiotic attempt to corral creativity via generativity
  26. A new causality for the understanding of the living
  27. The origin and evolution of signs
  28. Biosemiotics and formal ontology
  29. Epistemic ordering and the development of space-time: Intentionality as a universal entailment
  30. Semiosis: The transformation of energy into information
  31. Psychic closure: A prerequisite for the recognition of the sign-function?
  32. The emergence of difference: Some notes on the evolution of human semiosis
  33. The relationship between semiotics and mechanical models of explanation in the life sciences
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