Signs of Meaning: The Need for Semiotics

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  • čas přidán 24. 06. 2022
  • Why is semiotics important? Why do we need it?
    "Allow me to begin with a prefatory comment: it is difficult to give a presentation on semiotics for two reasons. The first, and perhaps more obvious reason, is that few people know what it really is. It is an unusual word-a word that may sound somehow exciting, but also mysterious. The second, very much related to the first, is that semiotics is at once a relatively new doctrine and yet it subsumes and incorporates and even elevates disciplines very ancient. Its explicit recognition has been rare, but its implicit influence ubiquitous in time and place. Moreover, semiotics brings us face to face with something unknown and yet nevertheless deeply familiar; and perhaps, even, unknown because it is so familiar: namely, signs.
    "And so, although the temptation in a presentation such as this-this presentation serving as a certain kind of introduction to semiotics-the temptation is to pass a considerable amount of time traversing the meandering inquiry of what semiotics is-wending through the particularities of its doctrines, its terminologies, its histories-despite this temptation, I will spend relatively little time re-treading those already well-worn steps. There are many books, papers, and presentations already extant which cover the doctrinal, terminological, and historical grounds. Despite these introductions, semiotics remains somewhat mysterious to many. And so I wish today to head in a different direction, and I hope that you all will walk this perhaps even-more meandering path alongside me, for I believe it will give a kind of circumspective view of that well-tread ground, and thereby dispel some of the enigma."
    ---
    Brian Kemple holds a PhD in Philosophy from the University of St. Thomas, in Houston TX, where he wrote his dissertation under the inimitable John Deely. He is the Founder and Executive Director of the Lyceum Institute. He has published two scholarly books-Ens Primum Cognitum in Thomas Aquinas and the Tradition (Brill: 2017) and The Intersections of Semiotics and Phenomenology: Peirce and Heidegger in Dialogue (De Gruyter: 2019), as well as a number of scholarly articles, popular articles, and his own Introduction to Philosophical Principles: Logic, Physics, and the Human Person (2019) and the forthcoming Linguistic Signification: A Classical Course in Grammar and Composition (2021).
    ---
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Komentáře • 8

  • @julesjgreig
    @julesjgreig Před 11 měsíci +1

    Excellent, thank you.

  • @1995yuda
    @1995yuda Před rokem +1

    Brilliant!

  • @pvybe
    @pvybe Před 5 měsíci +1

    Nice work. Thanks.

  • @luyombojonathan6688
    @luyombojonathan6688 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks aot there are few resources on CZcams on semiotics

  • @michahcc
    @michahcc Před 6 měsíci

    "Mr anderson..."

  • @jackdarby2168
    @jackdarby2168 Před rokem +1

    Will semiotics replace logic?

    • @fakeemail4005
      @fakeemail4005 Před rokem +1

      No, it will complement it, like science.

  • @stmartin17773
    @stmartin17773 Před 2 lety +1

    58min50sec "What has always made any inquiry philosophical is that it has been a cenoscopically [cf. ideoscopic] semiotic inquiry. An inquiry that is into the signs of our own knowledge about some object which is conducted according to the well-trained use of the common faculty of human intellectual reasoning."