TheBestLinks.com
TheBestLinks.com
Semiotics, Artificial intelligence, Communication, Charles Sanders Peirce... Print friendly version | Tell a friend
 
Navigation
Search
Toolbox

Semiotics

From TheBestLinks.com

Semiotics is the study of signs (symbols) and signification systems.

Table of contents

Scope and main concepts

General theories of signs are called semiotics or semeiotics.

Semiotics is the investigation of apprehension, prediction and meaning; how it is that we apprehend the world, make predictions, and develop meaning. According to Jean-Jacques Nattiez semiology is not the science of communication (1987; trans. 1990: 16), though he admits this is controversial.

Semiosis or semeiosis, also referring [renvois], is the relationship between signified and signifier, and also the process that forms meaning from our apprehension of the world through signs.

See also communication, syntax, semantics and pragmatics.

History

John Locke (1632-1704) first coined the term "semeiotike" (from the Greek word σημειον, semeion, meaning "mark" or "sign") in 1690, in An essay concerning human understanding. In Locke's view science can be divided into three disciplines.

  • physics - "The knowledge of things, as they are in their own proper beings, their constitution, properties, and operations ..."
  • practice - "The skill of right applying our own powers and actions ..."
  • semeiotike - "The doctrine of signs; the most usual whereof being words, it is aptly enough termed also Logike, logic: the business whereof is to consider the nature of signs, the mind makes use of for the understanding of things, or conveying its knowledge to others."

Charles Sanders Peirce (1839-1914), founder of the philosophical school of pragmatism and a notable logician, concieved of semiotics as "the doctrine of the essential nature and fundamental varieties of possible semiosis" where he defines semiosis as "an action, or influence, which is, or involves, a cooperation of three subjects, such as a sign, its object, and its interpretant ..." ('Pragmatism', Essential Peirce 2:413, 2:411, 1907).

Ferdinand de Saussure (1857-1913), the "father" of modern linguistics, invented, at about the same time as Peirce, a subject he called "semiology." Saussure established a dyadic notion of signs relating the signifier to the signified, in Calvin Thomas' words (2000), language is a "differential system without positive terms".

Charles W. Morris (1901-1979) achieved recognition for his Foundations of the Theory of Signs.

Umberto Eco made a wider audience aware of semiotics by various publications, most notably A Theory of Semiotics. Eco explicitly acknowledges Peirce's importance. One of his novels, The_Name_of_the_Rose, was made into a movie starring Sean Connery and Christian Slater - the book and movie had many significant allusions to semiotics.

Algirdas Greimas developed a structural version of semiotics named generative semiotics. Greimas tried to shift the focus of discipline from signs to systems of signification. Greimas rooted his theory in Saussure, Hjelmslev, Lévi-Strauss and Merleau-Ponty.

Jay Forrester developed formalisms for complex systems that are useful for noting how conflicts in mental models cause problems in group communication. In his paper, "Counterintuitive Behavior of Social Systems," for example, he explained miscommunication in human groups.

Thomas A. Sebeok was one of the the most prolific and wide-ranging of American semioticians. He expanded the purview of semiotics to include non-human signaling and communication systems thus raising some of the issues addressed by philosophy of mind and coining the term zoosemiotics.

Subfields

Biosemiotics is an interdisciplinary science that studies communication and signification in living systems.

Computational semiotics attempts to engineer the process of semiosis in a computationally tractable manner. Computational semiotics may be understood as artificial intelligence and knowledge representation examined from a semiotic perspective.

Literary semiotics applies the theory of signs (and also communication and information theory) to the interpretation of literary works. Literary semioticians often have an interest in the attempt to apply the tools and techniques of the hard sciences, such as mathematical formulae and computer analysis of texts, to literary criticism.

Others, like the French critic, Roland Barthes, and many Marxists, employ semiotic techniques as a tool of political and social criticism and satire. Pop culture artifacts have become frequent targets of the semiotic approach, as for example when Barthes deconstructed tag-team wrestling.

Medical semiotics specifically studies the interpretation of patients' description of their symptoms, and has particular importance for the understanding of how patients describe pain or other symptoms which a physician cannot experience or measure directly.

''Music and Discourse: Toward a Semiology of Music (Musicologie générale et sémiologue, 1987) by Jean-Jacques Nattiez.

Sources

  • Thomas, Calvin, ed. (2000). "Introduction: Identification, Appropriation, Proliferation", Straight with a Twist: Queer Theory and the Subject of Heterosexuality. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0252068130.

See also

External links

af:Semiotiek de:Semiotik es:Semiótica fr:Sémiologie ja:記号学 nl:Semiotiek pl:Semiotyka simple:Semiotics he:סמיוטיקה ru:Семиотика (языкознание)

Related links


Top visited 0 of 0 links

[no links posted yet]

>> place link >>

Discussion

Last posted 0 of 0 messages

[no messages posted yet]

>> post message >>

Watch

You can add this article to your own "watchlist" and receive e-mail notification about all changes in this page.
 
   
Innovate it
This page was last modified 22:19, 29 Sep 2004.
This page has been accessed 1 times during last 10 days.
  Content is available under GNU Free Documentation License 1.2.
Powered by MediaWiki