Title: Towards a Biosemiotic
1Towards a Biosemiotic Epistemology Don
Favareau National University of
Singapore International Society for Biosemiotic
Studies www.biosemiotics.org/favareau/papers.html
2 BIO SEMIOTICS
Life Processes Sign Processes
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4FIRSTNESS Relations of Potentia,
possibility SECONDNESS Relations of Brute
force, actuality THIRDNESS Relations
of Regularity, law
5FIRSTNESS Relations of Immediate
sensation SECONDNESS Relations of Sensory
association THIRDNESS Relations of Pragmatic
knowledge
6FIRSTNESS Immediate sensation REPRESENTATION SECO
NDNESS Sensory association SIGNIFICATION THIRDNES
S Pragmatic knowledge MEANING
7FIRSTNESS Immediate sensation REPRESENTATION
ICONIC RELATIONS SECONDNESS Sensory
association SIGNIFICATION INDEXICAL
RELATIONS THIRDNESS Pragmatic knowledge MEANING
SYMBOLIC RELATIONS
8Dynamic Systems Theory
Umwelt Ecology
Peircean Semiotic
9FIRSTNESS Relations of Potentia,
possibility SECONDNESS Relations of Brute
force, actuality THIRDNESS Relations
of Regularity, law
10Dynamic Systems Theory
Umwelt Ecology
Peircean Semiotic
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12BIOSEMIOTICS IS GROUNDED IN THE NATURALISTIC
ASSUMPTION THAT ALL FORMS OF ORGANIZATION IN THE
UNIVERSE EMERGE FROM INTERACTIONS WITHIN THE
SYSTEM. THE DIVERSITY OF ENTITIES ARISE AS
PRODUCED, TRANSIENT, CAUSAL POINTS OF ORDER.
13NATURAL FORMS ARE THE PRODUCT OF IRREVERSIBILE,
CONSEQUENTIAL CONSTRUCTIVISM IN THE ABSENCE OF
TELEOLOGICAL PURPOSES OR CENTRALLY ORGANIZED
CONTROL
14The Adjacent Possible Those possibilities that
have just been actualized - and the substrate
upon which immediate next actualization must take
place
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20FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF ORGANIZATION
IRREVERSIBILITY INTERACTION EMERGENCE DOWNWARD
CAUSATION AUTOPOESIS
21Emergence Interaction among constituents
results in a property of the whole not found in
any of the properties of the parts
C
22Downward Causation Systemic Pressure increases
downwards with each meta-system transition upwards
C
D
23Autopoesis The measure of functional autonomy
in a systems ability to self-organize as a
result of the recursivity of its own top-down and
bottom-up interactions in coupling itself to
its environment
24FIRSTNESS Relations of Potentia,
possibility SECONDNESS Relations of Brute
force, actuality THIRDNESS Relations
of Regularity, law
25With this introduction of system agency, the
bidirectional causality that organized biotic
forms and their abiotic surrounds co-evolved
exponentially.
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27FIRSTNESS Relations of Immediate
sensation SECONDNESS Relations of Sensory
association THIRDNESS Relations of Pragmatic
knowledge
28Subjective experience is an organizing principle
in nature
29Dynamic Systems Theory
Umwelt Ecology
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31Perceptual capacities develop as organisms
mediate external and internal survival demands.
The sign relations constituting an organisms
perceptual domain comprise the umwelt in which it
chooses action.
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35The smallest unit of information is a
difference that makes a difference to an
organism Gregory Bateson
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37Dynamic Systems Theory
Umwelt Ecology
Peircean Semiotic
38FIRSTNESS Relations of Immediate
sensation SECONDNESS Relations of Sensory
association THIRDNESS Relations of Pragmatic
knowledge
39FIRSTNESS Immediate sensation REPRESENTATION SECO
NDNESS Sensory association SIGNIFICATION THIRDNES
S Pragmatic knowledge MEANING
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44FIRSTNESS Immediate sensation REPRESENTATION
ICONIC RELATIONS SECONDNESS Sensory
association SIGNIFICATION INDEXICAL
RELATIONS THIRDNESS Pragmatic knowledge MEANING
SYMBOLIC RELATIONS
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48REPRESENTATION
Apprehension of mind independent relations
constituting being or entity made present to
an organism directly and iconically
IMMEDIATE SENSATION
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51ICONIC RELATIONS
the objects of experience perceived as
self-evident internally experienced distinctions
that carve the world up into things and states
whose externally existing relations genuinely do
share some trait, thus allowing an organism to
veridically (if only partially) KNOW the world
through the suprasubjective order of those
distinctions and their resemblances
52The smallest unit of information is a
difference that makes a difference to an
organism is also the ground of similarity
relations
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60ICONIC RELATIONS
the objects of experience perceived as
self-evident internally experienced distinctions
that carve the world up into things and states
whose externally existing relations genuinely do
share some trait, thus allowing an organism to
veridically (if only partially) KNOW the world
through the suprasubjective order of those
distinctions and their resemblances
the relata of indexes
61FIRSTNESS Immediate sensation REPRESENTATION
ICONIC RELATIONS SECONDNESS Sensory
association SIGNIFICATION INDEXICAL
RELATIONS THIRDNESS Pragmatic knowledge MEANING
SYMBOLIC RELATIONS
62INDEXICAL RELATIONS
Apprehension of those consistently conjoined
mind-independent regularities having proven to
obtain between the iconic objects of experience.
Signs that connect, or point to, iconic relations
consistently connected to, but other than their
own (e.g., smoke to fire sounds to danger). The
relations involved in associative learning and
unlearning, both in ontogenetic and in
evolutionary time.
relations between icons relata for symbols
63SIGNIFICATION
Apprehension of mind independent relations
between being or entities made present to an
organism via internally generated indexical
mediation
SYSTEM-MEDIATED ASSOCIATION
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66M
S
S
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72FOOD
TRAIL
OBJECT
SIGN
NEST
INTERPRETANT
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82FIRSTNESS Immediate sensation REPRESENTATION SECO
NDNESS Sensory association SIGNIFICATION THIRDNES
S Pragmatic knowledge MEANING
83M
S
S
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87O
I
E
O
S
O
S
I
Knowledge has a history and is built
S
I
I
I
O
S
O
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89Autopoesis The measure of functional autonomy
in a systems ability to self-organize as a
result of the recursivity of its own top-down and
bottom-up interactions in coupling itself to
its environment
90SYMBOLS
Conventional, Virtual, Autopoetic
Signification via a dense web of inter-connected
reference where each sign connects to not a
single referent but to a whole system of signs
that are understood to be signs by their user
relations taken as signs qua signs
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92Each subsequent representation in the semiotic
chain represents the prior object-sign relation,
taken itself as a higher-level semiotic object
(Parmentier, 19945)
The Peircean interpretant is a last
context-formed and next context-creating response
that can then be embedded into upwardly ascending
and downwardly causal chains that we call,
colloquially and with good reason, knowing
about and acting upon the world, respectively
93SYMBOLIC RELATIONS
IDEATION
INDEXICAL RELATIONS
ASSOCIATION
ICONIC RELATIONS
PERCEPTION
94SEMANTIC WEBS
SYMBOLIC RELATIONS
INDEXICAL RELATIONS
HEBBIAN ASSEMBLIES
ICONIC RELATIONS
SINGLE NEURON ACTIVATION
95ICONIC RELATIONS
INDEXICAL RELATIONS
SYMBOLIC RELATIONS
96SYMBOLIZATION
purely intra-system generated relations flexible
and conventional rather than determinist and
necessary its object may be either mind
independent or mind dependant but is always
mediated by a second-order apprehension of the
relations between relations
LANGUAGE, SYMBOLIC THOUGHT
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98FIRSTNESS Immediate sensation REPRESENTATION
ICONIC RELATIONS SECONDNESS Sensory
association SIGNIFICATION INDEXICAL
RELATIONS THIRDNESS Pragmatic knowledge MEANING
SYMBOLIC RELATIONS
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100- Three stages of reorganization in the
internalization of symbols - Completing a symbolically initiated action
- 2. Stabilising an ongoing external activity with
symbols - 3. Establishing ongoing internal activity
regulation with symbols - (v. Clowes 2005, Cowley 2007)
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102FIRSTNESS Relations of Potentia,
possibility SECONDNESS Relations of Brute
force, actuality THIRDNESS Relations
of Regularity, law
103The Adjacent Possible Those possibilities that
have just been actualized - and the substrate
upon which immediate next actualization must take
place
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106The Relevant Next What possibilities have just
been made available for immediate next action?
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108Collapsing the Wave Function of Possibility
109Collapsing the Wave Function of Meaning
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113?
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NP
CONJ
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NECT tionsI mean, dudnt he .?
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CONJ
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MOD
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114NP
CONJ
TRP
HDG
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ask Charles caus maybe well, he has con
NECT tionsI mean, dudnt he .?
ACCT
SS
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CONJ
SR
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FLLIN
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120Fetishism consists of seeing the meaning of
things as an inherent part of their physical
existence, when in fact, that meaning is only
created by their integration into a system of
relations Sut Jhally (198727).
121 www.biosemiotics.org/favareau/papers.html