In: McNamara, P., Jones, A.J.I., Brown, M.A. (eds) Agency, Norms, Inquiry, and Artifacts: Essays in Honor of Risto Hilpinen. Synthese Library, vol 454. Springer, Cham, 2022
Many authors have defined artworks as artifacts, objects intentionally manufactured or modified f... more Many authors have defined artworks as artifacts, objects intentionally manufactured or modified for a certain purpose. Here, artworks are not physical things, but external semiotic processes (semioses). Treating artworks as signs-inaction suggests that their ontology has to account for semiotic properties, such as temporal distribution, future-orientedness, emergence, self-organization, and distributed agency. We examine authorship of artworks from a process semiotics perspective. This implies a spatiotemporally distributed notion of authorship. Authorship itself can be viewed as a distributed and external legisign-inaction , which is irreducible to particular events and properties of individual subjects. An author is not a causal originator of authorship, but a locus of the action of the authorship sign. Strict application of Peirce's triadic model of semiosis should modify the ontological status of hypothetical entities such as "author", "artifact", "intention", "artwork", reorganizing the metaphysical picture of the phenomenon in terms of temporally-distributed, emergent and self-organized processes.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
""
p. 1. Introduction: Diagrammatical reasoning and Peircean logic representations
João Queiroz, Frederik Stjernfelt
p. 5. Images, diagrams, and narratives: Charles S. Peirce's epistemological theory of mental diagrams
Markus Arnold
p. 21. The fine structure of Peircean ligatures and lines of identity
Robert W. Burch
p. 69. When is a bunch of marks on paper a diagram? Diagrams as homomorphic representations
Balakrishnan Chandrasekaran
p. 89. Ligatures in Peirce's existential graphs
Frithjof Dau
p. 111. Iconic thought and diagrammatical scripture: Peirce and the Leibnizian tradition
Rossella Fabbrichesi
p. 129. Linear notation for existential graphs
Eric Hammer
p. 141. Peircean Algebraic Logic and Peirce's Reduction Thesis
Joachim Hereth, Reinhard Pöschel
p. 169. Remarks on the iconicity and interpretation of existential graphs
Risto Hilpinen
p. 189. Cognitive conditions of diagrammatic reasoning
Michael H. G. Hoffmann
p. 213. External diagrammatization and iconic brain co-evolution
Lorenzo Magnani
p. 239. Computers as medium for mathematical writing
Morten Misfeldt
p. 259. Peircean diagrams of time
Peter Øhrstrøm
p. 275. Space, complementarity, and “diagrammatic reasoning”
Michael Otte
p. 297. Diagrams, iconicity, and abductive discovery
Sami Paavola
p. 315. Moving pictures of thought II: Graphs, games, and pragmaticism's proof
Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen
p. 333. Peirce's alpha graphs and propositional languages
Sun-Joo Shin
p. 347. Peirce's tutorial on existential graphs
John F. Sowa
p. 395. On operational and optimal iconicity in Peirce's diagrammatology
Frederik Stjernfelt
p. 421. Existential graphs and proofs of pragmaticism
Fernando Zalamea, Jaime Nubiola"
The Commens Papers accepts a broad variety of intellectual products in various formats, including:
Conference papers
Manuscripts made available for comments and criticism before submission for peer review
Reports of original research, such as archival research
Catalogues or other systematic summaries of (parts of) Peirce’s writings
Reports from scientific meetings
Lectures, as text, video, or audio
Posters presented at academic conferences"
Chapter 1. ‘Genes’ and ‘information’ as conceptual
problems;
Chapter 2. The problem of the gene;
Chapter 3. Biosemiotics and information talk in biology;
Chapter 4. Information and semiosis in Peirce’s science
of signs;
Chapter 5. Some other ideas about information
Chapter 6. A semiotic analysis of genes and genetic
information;
Chapter 7. Emergence of semiosis: A general model;
Chapter 8. Levels of semiosis in the genetic information
system;
Chapter 9. Genes, information, and semiosis.
Lafayette de Moraes & João Queiroz
Capítulo 2: O PENSAMENTO ICÔNICO E DIAGRAMÁTICO NA OBRA DE C.S. PEIRCE
Rossella Fabbrichesi
Capítulo 3: DIAGRAMAS: UM FOCO PARA UMA EPISTEMOLOGIA PEIRCEANA
Frederik Stjernfelt
Capítulo 4: GRAFOS, JOGOS E PROVAS DO PRAGMATICISMO
Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen
Capítulo 5: COGNIÇAO E PENSAMENTO DIAGRAMÁTICO
Michael H.G. Hoffmann
Capítulo 6: UMA INTERPRETAÇÃO AOS SISTEMAS ALFA E BETA DOS GRAFOS EXISTENCIAIS DE C.S.PEIRCE
Risto Hilpinen & Joao Queiroz
Capítulo 7: A = B: UMA VISÃO PEIRCEANA
Michael Otte
João Queiroz & Angelo Loula
> Artificial Life: Prospects of a Synthetic Biology
Jon Umerez
> Interdisciplinary Engineering of Intelligent Systems. Some Methodological Issues
Gerd Doeben-Henisch, Ute Bauer-Wersing, Louwrence Erasmus, Ulrich Schrader, and Matthias Wagner
> Is Life Computable?
Anthony Chemero and Michael T. Turvey
> First steps toward a cognitive architecture based on adaptive automata
Joao Eduardo Kogler Junior and Reginaldo Inojosa Filho
> An Emotional-Evolutionary Technique for Low-Level Goal Definition in a Multi-Purpose Artificial Creature
Patrícia de Toro, Ricardo Gudwin, and Mauro Miskulin
> A Memory Model for Cognitive Agents
Guilherme Bittencourt
> Intelligent agents capable of developing memory of their environment
Gul Muhammad Khan, Julian F. Miller, and David M. Halliday
"
account the philosophy of the mind and to be aware of the issues of that field within current philosophic speculations as it is to develop a practical methodology of the technologies of semiotic intelligent systems.
The book is divided into four parts. Section I: Theoretical Issues includes chapters with a more philosophical tone. Section II: Discussions on Semiotic Intelligent Systems includes chapters that still have a philosophical flavor but move beyond philosophical speculations toward some kind of implementation of intelligent systems. Section III: Semiotics in the Development of Intelligent Systems includes chapters that use semiotics in some sense for the development of an intelligent system. Finally, the fourth part, Semiotic Systems Implementations, includes chapters whose authors claim to be using semiotic concepts in intelligent systems implementation."
Alexander Riegler (Center Leo Apostel for Interdisciplinary Studies, Belgium)
2.An Embodied Logical Model for Cognition in Artificial Cognition Systems
Guilherme Bittencourt (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil) Jerusa Marchi (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil)
3.Modeling Field Theory of Higher Cognitive Functions
Leonid Perlovsky (Air Force Research Center, USA)
4.Reconstructing Human Intelligence within Computational Sciences
Gerd Doeben-Henisch (University of Applied Sciences Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
5.Stratified Constraint Satissfaction Networks in Synergetic Multi-Agent Simulations of Language Evolution
Alexander Mehler (Bielefeld University, Germany)
6.Language Evolution and Robotics
Paul Vogt (University of Edinburgh, UK and Tilburg University, The Netherlands)
7.Evolutionary Robotics as a Tool to Investigate Spatial Cognition in Artificial and Natural Systems
Michela Ponticorvo (University of Calabria, Italy) Richard Walker (XiWrite s.a.s., Italy) Orazio Miglino (University of Naples "Frederico II", Italy)
8.The Meaningful Body
Willem Haselager (Raboud University, The Netherlands) Maria Gonzalez (UNESP, Brazil)
9.Making Meaning in Computers
Bruce MacLennan (University of Tennessee, USA)
10.Environmental Variability and the Emergence of Meaning
Patrick Grim (State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA)
Trina Kokalis (State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA)
11.Mimetic Minds
Lorenzo Magnani (University of Pavia, Italy)
12. First Steps in Experimental Phenomenology
Roberto Poli (University of Trento, Italy)"
Floyd Merrell (Purdue University)
* * *
Trechos extraídos do Prefácio: ‘Este livro de João Queiroz é, sobretudo, um livro necessário. Dependendo da identidade do leitor, poderá ainda ser didático ou herético, e para outros será apenas lógico. Nem mesmo para os diletos colaboradores de João haverá leitura sem surpresas, pois o caminho percorrido é tão único quanto o próprio autor. [...] Tomados em conjunto, os capítulos deste livro percorrem a distância que vai do pergaminho à idéia nova, desmistificando e atualizando Peirce com vistas a uma grande síntese neurosemiótica. Evidentemente as direções apontadas neste livro estão ainda por serem exploradas, e é nisso mesmo que reside sua força: mais do que prover respostas, este trabalho abre portas para novas perguntas.’
Sidarta Ribeiro (IINN, Natal; Duke University)
[...]
> Joao Queiroz and Floyd Merrell
Abduction: Between subjectivity and objectivity
> Douglas R. Anderson
The esthetic attitude of abduction
> Susan Petrilli
The semiotic universe of abduction: Abduction and learning processes
> Donald J. Cunningham, Ana Baratta, and Amber Esping
Masters of our own meaning
> Virgınia Dazzani
Learning and abduction
> Floyd Merrell
Shouldn’t we be surprised that we are not surprised when we should be surprised?
> Christopher Hookway
Interrogatives and uncontrollable abductions
> Jaime Nubiola
Abduction or the logic of surprise?
> Sami Paavola
Peircean abduction: Instinct or inference?
> Augusto Ponzio
Dialogic gradation in the logic of interpretation: Deduction, induction, abduction
> Lucia Santaella
Abduction: The logic of guessing
> Uwe Wirth
Abductive reasoning in Peirce’s and Davidson’s account of interpretation
> Christiane Chauvire
Peirce, Popper, abduction, and the idea of a logic of discovery
> Phyllis Chiasson
Abduction as an aspect of retroduction
> Giovanni Maddalena
Abduction and metaphysical realism
> Lorenzo Magnani
An abductive theory of scientific reasoning
> Solomon Marcus
Abduction: The double change
> Sandra Rosenthal
Peircean Phaneroscopy: The pervasive role of abduction
> Patricia Turrisi
The abduction in deduction and the deduction in abduction: Remarks on mixed reasonings
> Maria Eunice Quilici Gonzalez and Willem (Pim) Ferdinand Gerardus Haselager
Creativity: Surprise and abductive reasoning
> Artemis Moroni, Jonatas Manzolli, and Fernando J. Von Zuben
Artificial abduction: A cumulative evolutionary process
> Atocha Aliseda
The logic of abduction in the light of Peirce’s pragmatism
> Juan Magarinos de Morentin
Performance of abduction in the interpretation of visual images
> Claudine Tiercelin
Abduction and the semiotics of perception
> Vincent Colapietro
Conjectures concerning an uncertain faculty claimed for humans
> Geert-Jan M. Kruij
Peirce’s late theory of abduction: A comprehensive account
> Nathan Houser
The scent of truth
This Issue is the outcome of the II Workshop on Computational Intelligence and Semiotics, happened in August 2002, at Itaú Cultural, São Paulo, Brasil. The meeting was supported by the State University of Campinas (UNICAMP) and the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo (PUC-SP), and was sponsored by CAPES, FAPESP, and Itaú Cultural. The workshop organization format privileged open discussion and debate from theoretical issues to applied intelligent system software implementations. Researchers from computer science (Tom Ziemke), engineering (Leandro de Castro, Ricardo Gudwin, Ângelo Loula), cognitive science (Pim Haselager, Maria Eunice Gonzalez), neuroscience (Sidarta Ribeiro, Ivan Araújo), philosophy (Andre De Tienne, Joseph Ransdell), computational linguistics (Alexander Mehler), linguistics and semiotics (Winfried Noth, Lucia Santaella, João Queiroz) were invited. (....)
According to Peirce’s pragmatic semiotics, meaning (semiosis) is not an infused concept, but a power to engender interpretants. Semiosis is a triadic, context-sensitive (situated), interpreter-dependent (dialogic), materially extended (embodied and distributed) dynamic process. Although meaning is context-sensitive and materially extended, its locus is not well-captured by the notion of an environment. Inspired by biological concepts, we suggest the locus of meaning to be a niche. Here, we develop a semiotic account of musical meaning that emphasizes the location of musical signs in semiotic niches.
""
p. 1. Introduction: Diagrammatical reasoning and Peircean logic representations
João Queiroz, Frederik Stjernfelt
p. 5. Images, diagrams, and narratives: Charles S. Peirce's epistemological theory of mental diagrams
Markus Arnold
p. 21. The fine structure of Peircean ligatures and lines of identity
Robert W. Burch
p. 69. When is a bunch of marks on paper a diagram? Diagrams as homomorphic representations
Balakrishnan Chandrasekaran
p. 89. Ligatures in Peirce's existential graphs
Frithjof Dau
p. 111. Iconic thought and diagrammatical scripture: Peirce and the Leibnizian tradition
Rossella Fabbrichesi
p. 129. Linear notation for existential graphs
Eric Hammer
p. 141. Peircean Algebraic Logic and Peirce's Reduction Thesis
Joachim Hereth, Reinhard Pöschel
p. 169. Remarks on the iconicity and interpretation of existential graphs
Risto Hilpinen
p. 189. Cognitive conditions of diagrammatic reasoning
Michael H. G. Hoffmann
p. 213. External diagrammatization and iconic brain co-evolution
Lorenzo Magnani
p. 239. Computers as medium for mathematical writing
Morten Misfeldt
p. 259. Peircean diagrams of time
Peter Øhrstrøm
p. 275. Space, complementarity, and “diagrammatic reasoning”
Michael Otte
p. 297. Diagrams, iconicity, and abductive discovery
Sami Paavola
p. 315. Moving pictures of thought II: Graphs, games, and pragmaticism's proof
Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen
p. 333. Peirce's alpha graphs and propositional languages
Sun-Joo Shin
p. 347. Peirce's tutorial on existential graphs
John F. Sowa
p. 395. On operational and optimal iconicity in Peirce's diagrammatology
Frederik Stjernfelt
p. 421. Existential graphs and proofs of pragmaticism
Fernando Zalamea, Jaime Nubiola"
The Commens Papers accepts a broad variety of intellectual products in various formats, including:
Conference papers
Manuscripts made available for comments and criticism before submission for peer review
Reports of original research, such as archival research
Catalogues or other systematic summaries of (parts of) Peirce’s writings
Reports from scientific meetings
Lectures, as text, video, or audio
Posters presented at academic conferences"
Chapter 1. ‘Genes’ and ‘information’ as conceptual
problems;
Chapter 2. The problem of the gene;
Chapter 3. Biosemiotics and information talk in biology;
Chapter 4. Information and semiosis in Peirce’s science
of signs;
Chapter 5. Some other ideas about information
Chapter 6. A semiotic analysis of genes and genetic
information;
Chapter 7. Emergence of semiosis: A general model;
Chapter 8. Levels of semiosis in the genetic information
system;
Chapter 9. Genes, information, and semiosis.
Lafayette de Moraes & João Queiroz
Capítulo 2: O PENSAMENTO ICÔNICO E DIAGRAMÁTICO NA OBRA DE C.S. PEIRCE
Rossella Fabbrichesi
Capítulo 3: DIAGRAMAS: UM FOCO PARA UMA EPISTEMOLOGIA PEIRCEANA
Frederik Stjernfelt
Capítulo 4: GRAFOS, JOGOS E PROVAS DO PRAGMATICISMO
Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen
Capítulo 5: COGNIÇAO E PENSAMENTO DIAGRAMÁTICO
Michael H.G. Hoffmann
Capítulo 6: UMA INTERPRETAÇÃO AOS SISTEMAS ALFA E BETA DOS GRAFOS EXISTENCIAIS DE C.S.PEIRCE
Risto Hilpinen & Joao Queiroz
Capítulo 7: A = B: UMA VISÃO PEIRCEANA
Michael Otte
João Queiroz & Angelo Loula
> Artificial Life: Prospects of a Synthetic Biology
Jon Umerez
> Interdisciplinary Engineering of Intelligent Systems. Some Methodological Issues
Gerd Doeben-Henisch, Ute Bauer-Wersing, Louwrence Erasmus, Ulrich Schrader, and Matthias Wagner
> Is Life Computable?
Anthony Chemero and Michael T. Turvey
> First steps toward a cognitive architecture based on adaptive automata
Joao Eduardo Kogler Junior and Reginaldo Inojosa Filho
> An Emotional-Evolutionary Technique for Low-Level Goal Definition in a Multi-Purpose Artificial Creature
Patrícia de Toro, Ricardo Gudwin, and Mauro Miskulin
> A Memory Model for Cognitive Agents
Guilherme Bittencourt
> Intelligent agents capable of developing memory of their environment
Gul Muhammad Khan, Julian F. Miller, and David M. Halliday
"
account the philosophy of the mind and to be aware of the issues of that field within current philosophic speculations as it is to develop a practical methodology of the technologies of semiotic intelligent systems.
The book is divided into four parts. Section I: Theoretical Issues includes chapters with a more philosophical tone. Section II: Discussions on Semiotic Intelligent Systems includes chapters that still have a philosophical flavor but move beyond philosophical speculations toward some kind of implementation of intelligent systems. Section III: Semiotics in the Development of Intelligent Systems includes chapters that use semiotics in some sense for the development of an intelligent system. Finally, the fourth part, Semiotic Systems Implementations, includes chapters whose authors claim to be using semiotic concepts in intelligent systems implementation."
Alexander Riegler (Center Leo Apostel for Interdisciplinary Studies, Belgium)
2.An Embodied Logical Model for Cognition in Artificial Cognition Systems
Guilherme Bittencourt (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil) Jerusa Marchi (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil)
3.Modeling Field Theory of Higher Cognitive Functions
Leonid Perlovsky (Air Force Research Center, USA)
4.Reconstructing Human Intelligence within Computational Sciences
Gerd Doeben-Henisch (University of Applied Sciences Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
5.Stratified Constraint Satissfaction Networks in Synergetic Multi-Agent Simulations of Language Evolution
Alexander Mehler (Bielefeld University, Germany)
6.Language Evolution and Robotics
Paul Vogt (University of Edinburgh, UK and Tilburg University, The Netherlands)
7.Evolutionary Robotics as a Tool to Investigate Spatial Cognition in Artificial and Natural Systems
Michela Ponticorvo (University of Calabria, Italy) Richard Walker (XiWrite s.a.s., Italy) Orazio Miglino (University of Naples "Frederico II", Italy)
8.The Meaningful Body
Willem Haselager (Raboud University, The Netherlands) Maria Gonzalez (UNESP, Brazil)
9.Making Meaning in Computers
Bruce MacLennan (University of Tennessee, USA)
10.Environmental Variability and the Emergence of Meaning
Patrick Grim (State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA)
Trina Kokalis (State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA)
11.Mimetic Minds
Lorenzo Magnani (University of Pavia, Italy)
12. First Steps in Experimental Phenomenology
Roberto Poli (University of Trento, Italy)"
Floyd Merrell (Purdue University)
* * *
Trechos extraídos do Prefácio: ‘Este livro de João Queiroz é, sobretudo, um livro necessário. Dependendo da identidade do leitor, poderá ainda ser didático ou herético, e para outros será apenas lógico. Nem mesmo para os diletos colaboradores de João haverá leitura sem surpresas, pois o caminho percorrido é tão único quanto o próprio autor. [...] Tomados em conjunto, os capítulos deste livro percorrem a distância que vai do pergaminho à idéia nova, desmistificando e atualizando Peirce com vistas a uma grande síntese neurosemiótica. Evidentemente as direções apontadas neste livro estão ainda por serem exploradas, e é nisso mesmo que reside sua força: mais do que prover respostas, este trabalho abre portas para novas perguntas.’
Sidarta Ribeiro (IINN, Natal; Duke University)
[...]
> Joao Queiroz and Floyd Merrell
Abduction: Between subjectivity and objectivity
> Douglas R. Anderson
The esthetic attitude of abduction
> Susan Petrilli
The semiotic universe of abduction: Abduction and learning processes
> Donald J. Cunningham, Ana Baratta, and Amber Esping
Masters of our own meaning
> Virgınia Dazzani
Learning and abduction
> Floyd Merrell
Shouldn’t we be surprised that we are not surprised when we should be surprised?
> Christopher Hookway
Interrogatives and uncontrollable abductions
> Jaime Nubiola
Abduction or the logic of surprise?
> Sami Paavola
Peircean abduction: Instinct or inference?
> Augusto Ponzio
Dialogic gradation in the logic of interpretation: Deduction, induction, abduction
> Lucia Santaella
Abduction: The logic of guessing
> Uwe Wirth
Abductive reasoning in Peirce’s and Davidson’s account of interpretation
> Christiane Chauvire
Peirce, Popper, abduction, and the idea of a logic of discovery
> Phyllis Chiasson
Abduction as an aspect of retroduction
> Giovanni Maddalena
Abduction and metaphysical realism
> Lorenzo Magnani
An abductive theory of scientific reasoning
> Solomon Marcus
Abduction: The double change
> Sandra Rosenthal
Peircean Phaneroscopy: The pervasive role of abduction
> Patricia Turrisi
The abduction in deduction and the deduction in abduction: Remarks on mixed reasonings
> Maria Eunice Quilici Gonzalez and Willem (Pim) Ferdinand Gerardus Haselager
Creativity: Surprise and abductive reasoning
> Artemis Moroni, Jonatas Manzolli, and Fernando J. Von Zuben
Artificial abduction: A cumulative evolutionary process
> Atocha Aliseda
The logic of abduction in the light of Peirce’s pragmatism
> Juan Magarinos de Morentin
Performance of abduction in the interpretation of visual images
> Claudine Tiercelin
Abduction and the semiotics of perception
> Vincent Colapietro
Conjectures concerning an uncertain faculty claimed for humans
> Geert-Jan M. Kruij
Peirce’s late theory of abduction: A comprehensive account
> Nathan Houser
The scent of truth
This Issue is the outcome of the II Workshop on Computational Intelligence and Semiotics, happened in August 2002, at Itaú Cultural, São Paulo, Brasil. The meeting was supported by the State University of Campinas (UNICAMP) and the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo (PUC-SP), and was sponsored by CAPES, FAPESP, and Itaú Cultural. The workshop organization format privileged open discussion and debate from theoretical issues to applied intelligent system software implementations. Researchers from computer science (Tom Ziemke), engineering (Leandro de Castro, Ricardo Gudwin, Ângelo Loula), cognitive science (Pim Haselager, Maria Eunice Gonzalez), neuroscience (Sidarta Ribeiro, Ivan Araújo), philosophy (Andre De Tienne, Joseph Ransdell), computational linguistics (Alexander Mehler), linguistics and semiotics (Winfried Noth, Lucia Santaella, João Queiroz) were invited. (....)
According to Peirce’s pragmatic semiotics, meaning (semiosis) is not an infused concept, but a power to engender interpretants. Semiosis is a triadic, context-sensitive (situated), interpreter-dependent (dialogic), materially extended (embodied and distributed) dynamic process. Although meaning is context-sensitive and materially extended, its locus is not well-captured by the notion of an environment. Inspired by biological concepts, we suggest the locus of meaning to be a niche. Here, we develop a semiotic account of musical meaning that emphasizes the location of musical signs in semiotic niches.
(........)
(........)
como abstração do referente, cuja implicação imediata é sua “perda”. Para abordar a prosa de Stein, dois grandes tópicos (não excludentes) devem ser melhor explorados: a relação dos experimentos mais radicais com o cubismo analítico; duas das principais propriedades do “fluxo do pensamento”, continuidade
e mudança, e suas consequências.
and modalities of translations with examples involving literature and contemporary dance. We defend a perspective according to which translations involve iconic relationships (analogical mappings) between multi-structured semiotic systems.
such technology is Augmented Reality (AR) that allows the user
to view the surrounding environment with overlap and
composition of virtual objects, creating new ways of computer
interaction. One of the objects for such virtual interactions is the
human body. The human body is also an element that undergoes
real physical changes, a common cultural practice for centuries,
and one of the ways of expression through body modification is
tattoo. Here we describe an AR system for visualization of tattoos
on skin surface, following the body surface deformations. The
system uses a few small markers to obtain a 2D model of skin
surface. Results show that the system is able to overlay an
augmented tattoo on the skin even with distortions and occlusions
of markers.
of various Artificial Life experiments, the study of underlying
representational processes finds little discussion. We have
previously differentiated between symbolic and indexical interpretation and proposed that symbolic interpretation may
act as a shortcut to cognitive traits already acquired. Here we
evaluate conditions of this acquired cognitive trait for the
emergence of different modalities of sign interpretation. Results show that symbolic processes may act as a cognitive shortcut to
a previous acquired cognitive competence even if minimally
functional or initially not available.
Graduação em Dança, UFBA):
“O espetáculo ‘Cinco sobre o mesmo’, ou [5], foi o último trabalho de dança concebido por João Queiroz, e contemplado pelo Prêmio Funarte de dança Klauss Vianna, em 2008. Ele esteve em cartaz, no teatro Vila Velha (Salvador), entre os dias 27 de fevereiro e 8 de março de 2010. A criação, baseada em fragmentos da obra de Gertrude Stein, trata o fenômeno de tradução intersemiótica como uma possibilidade metodológica de invenção em dança. [...]"
resources of Peirce research, adding improvements and new tools and publication possibilities, such as a dynamic
news service, a collaboratively compiled bibliography of Peirce studies, and the publication of working papers.