Biosemiotics’ greatest potential contribution to biology

Author:

Sherman Jeremy1

Affiliation:

1. Independent Scholar , Berkeley , CA , USA

Abstract

Abstract Encouraging biologists to factor semiotics into their research is likely to fall on deaf ears because they already factor it in through an accepted life science methodological standard here called Abstract Parallel Engineering (APE). Biosemiotics’ most significant contribution to biology – a contribution that biologists would come to depend upon – would be a more rigorous alternative methodology to APE through a proof-of-concept explanation for how semiotics – here defined as beings making functional interpretive effort – can emerge within nothing but physical phenomena. It would explain organisms’ most basic agency – their struggle for existence – ergodynamically (i.e., an emergent change in likely physical work) that results in work (effort) that works (functions) to keep a chemical system working (a being) in semiotic response to their workspace (interpretation).

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Reference23 articles.

1. Ashby, W. Ross. 1962. Principles of the self-organizing system. In Heinz Von Foerster & George W. Zopf Jr. (eds.), Principles of self-organization: Transactions of the University of Illinois Symposium, 255–278. London: Pergamon Press.

2. Chalmer, David. 2007. The hard problem of consciousness. In Max Velmans & Susan Schneider (eds.), The blackwell companion to consciousness, 225–235. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.

3. Darwin, Charles. 1971 [1859]. On the origin of species by means of natural selection, or the Preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life. London: J. M. Dent & Sons.

4. Deacon, Terrence. 1976. Semiotics and cybernetics: The relevance of C. S. Peirce. In System and Structure Study Group (ed.), Sanity and signification: Essays in communication and exchange, 48. Bellingham, WA: Fairhaven College Press.

5. Deacon, Terrence. 1997. Symbolic species: The co-evolution of language and the brain. New York, NY: Norton.

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