Saturday, May 23, 2015
Peirce's semiosis.
From Vincent Colapietro's _Peirce's Approach to the Self: A Semiotic
Perspective on Human Subjectivity_: "The body itself is, in its own way,
a medium. In 'Some Consequences,' Peirce claims that 'the organism is
only an instrument of thought.' But since thought is essentially a
process of semiosis, the kind of instrument that the organism provides
is that of a medium. The person is not 'shut up in a box of flesh and
blood.' The body is not principally something in which the self
is located; rather it is the most immediate medium through which the
self expresses." Peirce's genius was in recognizing that the self is
always a virtual and communal entity: the product of an ecology of signs
coming through and out of the self. What we call the self or the
subject is actually a network, locatable in and through a series of
other permeable and permeating networks: total semiosis. Thus, the
semiotic ecology of things exists on a continua, from nature to persons,
and from minds to concrete things and back.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment