|
|
xiii | |
Foreword: From Cybernetics to Cybersemiotics |
|
xvii | |
|
Introduction: The Quest of Cybersemiotics |
|
3 | (1) |
|
|
3 | (11) |
|
Approach to Writing and Developing the Argument |
|
|
14 | (1) |
|
|
15 | (3) |
|
|
18 | (2) |
|
The Book's View of the Subject Area and Cybersemiotics: A Summary |
|
|
20 | (15) |
|
The Problems of the Information-Processing Paradigm as a Candidate for a Unified Science of Information |
|
|
35 | (68) |
|
The Conflict between Informational and Semiotic Paradigms |
|
|
35 | (2) |
|
Wienerian: Pan-Information |
|
|
37 | (4) |
|
Peircean-Based pan-Semiotics |
|
|
41 | (3) |
|
The Document-Mediating System |
|
|
44 | (3) |
|
The Technological Impetus for the Development of Information Science |
|
|
47 | (4) |
|
The Development of the Information Processing Paradigm on Cognitive Science |
|
|
51 | (8) |
|
Critique of the Objective Concept of Information in the Information Processing Paradigm |
|
|
59 | (10) |
|
The Problem of Language as the Carrier of Information in Document-Mediating Systems |
|
|
69 | (6) |
|
LIS: The Science of Document-Mediating Systems |
|
|
75 | (3) |
|
The Cognitive Perspectives Opening towards a Cybersemiotic Concept of Information in LIS |
|
|
78 | (2) |
|
Aspects That Must Be Further Developed in the Framework of the Cognitive Viewpoint |
|
|
80 | (1) |
|
Analysing the Possibility of an Information Science |
|
|
81 | (3) |
|
|
84 | (10) |
|
Peirce's New List of Categories as the Foundation for a Theory of Cognition and Signification |
|
|
94 | (6) |
|
|
100 | (3) |
|
The Self-Organization of Knowledge: Paradigms of Knowledge and Their Role in Deciding What Counts as Legitimate Knowledge |
|
|
103 | (44) |
|
|
103 | (1) |
|
Science and the Development of World Formula Thinking |
|
|
104 | (2) |
|
|
106 | (10) |
|
The Turn Away for an Externalist towards an Internalist Realism |
|
|
116 | (3) |
|
Developing a Framework to Understand and Relationships among the Science and Other Types of Knowledge |
|
|
119 | (11) |
|
The Role of the Biology of Embodied Knolwedge |
|
|
130 | (7) |
|
A Suggestion for a Transdisciplinary Framework for the Conception of Knowledge |
|
|
137 | (10) |
|
An Ethological Approach to Cognition |
|
|
147 | (27) |
|
|
147 | (3) |
|
The Ethological Research Program |
|
|
150 | (3) |
|
A Selective Historical Summary of the Ethological Science Project |
|
|
153 | (5) |
|
The Necessity of a Galilean Psychology |
|
|
158 | (2) |
|
Reventlow's Theoretical and Methodological Background |
|
|
160 | (5) |
|
The `Rependium': An Attempt to Construct a Fundamental Galilean Concept in Psychology |
|
|
165 | (4) |
|
Limitations to a Galilean Psychology |
|
|
169 | (5) |
|
Bateson's Concept of Information in Light of the Theory of Autopoiesis |
|
|
174 | (33) |
|
The Pattern That Connects |
|
|
174 | (3) |
|
Mind, Information, and Entropy |
|
|
177 | (2) |
|
Autopoiesis, Mind, and Information |
|
|
179 | (2) |
|
The Limits of `Bring-Forth-ism' |
|
|
181 | (4) |
|
Information and Negative Entropy |
|
|
185 | (2) |
|
The Problems of Order and Chance in Physics |
|
|
187 | (7) |
|
A Philosophical Reflection on the Concept of Reality in Second-Order Cybernetics |
|
|
194 | (5) |
|
On Matter and the Universe as the Ultimate Reality |
|
|
199 | (5) |
|
|
204 | (3) |
|
A Cybersemiotic Re-entry Into von Foerster's Construction of Second-Order Cybernetics |
|
|
207 | (57) |
|
|
207 | (1) |
|
From First- to Second-Order Cybernetics |
|
|
207 | (3) |
|
The Ontology of Constructivism and Its Concept of Knowledge |
|
|
210 | (24) |
|
Luhmann's Theory of Socio-Communicative Systems |
|
|
234 | (18) |
|
Semiosis and Second-Order Cybernetics |
|
|
252 | (9) |
|
|
261 | (3) |
|
Foundations of Cybersemiotics |
|
|
264 | (31) |
|
|
264 | (4) |
|
Peirce's Philosophical Framework for Semiotics |
|
|
268 | (3) |
|
One, Two, Three ... Eternity |
|
|
271 | (5) |
|
Sign Trigonometries and Classess |
|
|
276 | (4) |
|
The Ten Fundamental Sign Classes |
|
|
280 | (4) |
|
The Usefulness of Peirce's Approach in LIS |
|
|
284 | (7) |
|
Indexing in Light of Semiotics |
|
|
291 | (4) |
|
Cognitive Semantics: Embodied Metaphors, Basic Level, and Motivation |
|
|
295 | (17) |
|
|
295 | (3) |
|
Basis-Level Categorization |
|
|
298 | (4) |
|
Kinaesthetic Image-Schemas |
|
|
302 | (1) |
|
Metaphors, Metonymy, and Radial Structures |
|
|
303 | (2) |
|
Idealized Congnitive Models |
|
|
305 | (2) |
|
The Concept of Motivation in the Theory of Embodied Cognitive Semantics |
|
|
307 | (5) |
|
The Cybersemiotic Integration of Umweltlehre, Ethology, Autopoiesis Theory, Second-Order Cybernetics, and Peircean Biosemiotics |
|
|
312 | (40) |
|
The Mechanistc Quest for Basic Order |
|
|
312 | (1) |
|
The Biological-Evolutionary View of the Roots of Cognition |
|
|
313 | (12) |
|
The Cybernetics Theory of Information and Cognition |
|
|
325 | (3) |
|
Luhmann's Generalization of the Theory of Autopoiesis |
|
|
328 | (3) |
|
The Relevance of Peirce's Semiotics as a Framework for Biosemiotics |
|
|
331 | (5) |
|
Living Systems as the True Individuals of the World |
|
|
336 | (2) |
|
The Integration of Second-Order Cybernetics, Cognitive Biology (Autopoiesis), and Biosemiotics |
|
|
338 | (4) |
|
Signification Spheres as Umwelten of Anticipation |
|
|
342 | (2) |
|
The Ethological Model of Motivated Cognition Based on a Theory of Feeling |
|
|
344 | (5) |
|
The Ecosemiotics Perspective |
|
|
349 | (3) |
|
An Evolutionary View on the Threshold between Semiosis and Informational Exchange |
|
|
352 | (40) |
|
|
352 | (6) |
|
The Explanatory Quest of the Sciences since Religion Lost Power |
|
|
358 | (8) |
|
Critique of Current Approaches |
|
|
366 | (5) |
|
The Peircean Theory of Mind |
|
|
371 | (10) |
|
Uniting System Science and Semiotics in a Theory of Evolution and Emergence |
|
|
381 | (11) |
|
The Cybersemiotic Model of Information, Signification, Cognition, and Communication |
|
|
392 | (23) |
|
The Cybersemiotic View of Cognition and Communication |
|
|
392 | (3) |
|
Pheno-, Thought-, Endo-, an Intra-semiotics |
|
|
395 | (4) |
|
The Cybersemiotic Model of Biosemiotics |
|
|
399 | (3) |
|
Peirce and Luhmann from a Cybersemiotic Perspective |
|
|
402 | (13) |
|
|
415 | (10) |
|
Indexing and Idealized Cognitive Models |
|
|
415 | (2) |
|
The Need for an Alternative Metatheory to the Information Processing Paradigm in the LIS Context |
|
|
417 | (3) |
|
Indexing and Significance Effect |
|
|
420 | (5) |
|
Summing Up Cybersemiotics: The Five-Level Cybersemiotic Framework for the Foundation of Information, Cognition, and Communication |
|
|
425 | (16) |
|
|
425 | (4) |
|
|
429 | (4) |
|
|
433 | (2) |
|
|
435 | (1) |
|
Abduction as a Meaningful Rationality |
|
|
436 | (1) |
|
|
437 | (4) |
Notes |
|
441 | (12) |
References |
|
453 | (18) |
Index |
|
471 | |