Buch, Englisch, 268 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 600 g
The Natural Foundations of Meaning and Symbolism
Buch, Englisch, 268 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 600 g
Reihe: Interdisciplinary Evolution Research
ISBN: 978-3-030-85264-1
Verlag: Springer
This book reviews the evolution of Biosemiotics and gives an outlook on the future of this interdisciplinary new discipline. In this volume, the foundations of symbolism are transformed into a phenomenological, technological, philosophical and psychological discussion enriching the readers’ knowledge of these foundations. It offers the opportunity to rethink the impact that evolution theory and the confirmations about evolution as a historical and natural fact, has had and continues to have today.
The book is divided into three parts:
- Part I Life, Meaning, and Information
- Part II Semiosis and Evolution
- Part III Physics, medicine, and bioenergetics
It starts by laying out a general historical, philosophical, and scientific framework for the collection of studies that will follow. In the following some of the main reference models of evolutionary theories are revisited: Extended Synthesis, Formal Darwinism and Biosemiotics.
The authors shed new light on how to rethink the processes underlying the origins and evolution of knowledge, the boundary between teleonomic and teleological paradigms of evolution and their possible integration, the relationship between linguistics and biological sciences, especially with reference to the concept of causality, biological information and the mechanisms of its transmission, the difference between physical and biosemiotic intentionality, as well as an examination of the results offered or deriving from the application in the economics and the engineering of design, of biosemiotic models for the transmission of culture, digitalization and proto-design.
This volume is of fundamental scientific and philosophical interest, and seen as a possibility for a dialogue based on theoretical and methodological pluralism. The international nature of the publication, with contributions from all over the world, will allow a further development of academic relations, at the service of the international scientific and humanistic heritage.Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Geisteswissenschaften Sprachwissenschaft Sprachwissenschaften Semiotik
- Naturwissenschaften Biowissenschaften Biowissenschaften Evolutionsbiologie
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Semiotik
- Geisteswissenschaften Geschichtswissenschaft Alte Geschichte & Archäologie
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Wissenschaftstheorie, Wissenschaftsphilosophie
Weitere Infos & Material
Biosemiotics and evolution: the natural foundations of meaning and
Symbolism
Elena Pagni
Richard Theisen Simanke
(Eds.)
Introduction
Paniel Reyes Cardenas
Part I Life, meaning, and information
1. Exploring the philosophical background and scientific foundations of naturalist
approaches to meaning and symbolism
Richard Theisen Simanke
Elena Pagni
2. Life sciences and the natural history of signs: can the origin of life processes coincide
with the emergence of semiosis?
Franco Giorgi3. A proposal for a biosemiotic approach to digitalization: literacy as modelling
competence
Alin Olteanu
4. Threshold, meaning and life
Arthur Araujo
5. How information gets its meaning
Vinicius RomaniniPart II Semiosis and evolution
6. Inclusive Fitness teleology and Darwinian explanatory pluralism: a theoretical sketch
and an application to current controversies
Philippe Huneman
7. The origins and evolution of design: a stage-based model
Juan Mendoza-Collazos
Jordan Zlatev
Göran Sonesson
8. Biosemiotics and applied evolutionary epistemology: a comparison
Marta Facoetti
Nathalie Gontier
9. Extended synthesis and Jablonka and Lamb’s four-dimensional view of evolution
Jonathan Luís H. Ferreira
Part III Physics, medicine, and bioenergetics
10. Physical intentionality: the phenomenological roots of biosemiotics
Roberta Lanfredini
11. Cancer and cell death: a biosemiotic perspective
Rogério Estevam Farias
12. Biosemiotics and bioenergetics: two perspectives compared
Giulia Degl’Innocenti
About the authors




