Abstract
The role and value of diagrams in advancing human knowledge throughout history is evident in the literature. However, persistent evidence from the research and practitioner communities from across a range of disciplines points to difficulties and problems with understanding and using diagrams. Whether it is at the application level or as an abstract definition, our existing frameworks for understanding diagrams reduce the full meaning of diagrams to a single perspective or emphasis. This paper advocates placing multi-aspectual human functioning in a central role in the development of an enriched meta-approach to understanding diagrams. Two such aspects, namely, the spatial and symbolic, are essential to the understanding of diagrams across applications. The philosophical underpinnings and practical contributions of this approach to dealing with long standing problems of diagrams are discussed.
© 2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York
Articles in the same Issue
- Nigerian dress as a symbolic language
- Language and brain: Recasting meaning in the definition of human language
- An exploration of the other side of semantic communication: How the spontaneous movements of the human hand add crucial meaning to narrative
- Rethinking gesture phases: Articulatory features of gestural movement?
- Peirce's 10, 28, and 66 sign-types: The simplest mathematics
- Qualitative-quantitative analysis of narrative structures: The narrative roles of immigrants in Spanish television series
- Rethinking our understanding of diagrams
- Old and new covenants: Historical and theological contexts in Scribe's and Halévy's La Juive
- The rod and the crocodile. Temporal relations in textual hermeneutics: An application of Petri nets to semantics
- Transcendence and alterity: On life, communication, and subjectivity
- Analyzing discourse topics and topic keywords
- The fate of semiotics in China
- Victoria Welby and the Signific Movement
Articles in the same Issue
- Nigerian dress as a symbolic language
- Language and brain: Recasting meaning in the definition of human language
- An exploration of the other side of semantic communication: How the spontaneous movements of the human hand add crucial meaning to narrative
- Rethinking gesture phases: Articulatory features of gestural movement?
- Peirce's 10, 28, and 66 sign-types: The simplest mathematics
- Qualitative-quantitative analysis of narrative structures: The narrative roles of immigrants in Spanish television series
- Rethinking our understanding of diagrams
- Old and new covenants: Historical and theological contexts in Scribe's and Halévy's La Juive
- The rod and the crocodile. Temporal relations in textual hermeneutics: An application of Petri nets to semantics
- Transcendence and alterity: On life, communication, and subjectivity
- Analyzing discourse topics and topic keywords
- The fate of semiotics in China
- Victoria Welby and the Signific Movement