61.
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Volume >
4 >
Issue: 1/2
Jay L. Lemke
Themes and Texts:
Toward a Poetics of Expressiveness
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62.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
4 >
Issue: 3/4
Thomas C. Daddesio
The Biology and Evolution of Language
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63.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
5 >
Issue: 1
Scott Simpkins
Roland Barthes, The Responsibility of Forms
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64.
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Volume >
5 >
Issue: 1
Peter Salus
Michael Shapiro, The Sense of Grammar
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65.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
6 >
Issue: 2/3
Donald Morton
Naomi Schor, Reading in Detail:
Aesthetics and the Feminine
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66.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
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Issue: 2/3
Claude Gandelman
Surrealism and the Book
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67.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
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Issue: 2/3
Thomas C. Daddesio
The Construction of Reality
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68.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
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Issue: 1/2
Scott Simpkins
Reading the Social Text
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69.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
7 >
Issue: 3
Marlies Kronegger
Heidegger’s Being and Time:
A Reading for Readers
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70.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
8 >
Issue: 1/2
Marlies Kronegger
Inscriptions:
Between phenomenology and structuralism
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71.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
8 >
Issue: 1/2
Patricia Hartz
Symbolic Economies
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72.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
9 >
Issue: 1
Jeffrey V. Nickerson
Review of Mihai Nadin, Mind: Anticipation and Chaos/Antizipation und Chaos
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73.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
9 >
Issue: 1
Alan S. Kaye, Heidi Waltz
The Current State of Language-Origin Studies
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74.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
9 >
Issue: 1
Lev Manovich
Insights and Blind Spots On Pictorial Semiotics
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75.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
9 >
Issue: 2/3
Richard L. Lanigan
On Discourse:
A Phenomenology of Rhetoric and Semiotics
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76.
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The American Journal of Semiotics:
Volume >
9 >
Issue: 4
Timothy Murray
Travel As Metaphor from Montaigne to Rousseau
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77.
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Chiasmi International:
Volume >
11
Paride Broggi
Deleuze:
una vita all’immanenza
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78.
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Chiasmi International:
Volume >
11
Simone Frangi
Silenzio inedito
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79.
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Chiasmi International:
Volume >
11
Mariana Larison
Vers une phénoménologie de la trans-parution
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80.
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Chiasmi International:
Volume >
12
Simone Frangi
Vivant Jusqu’à La Mort (French)
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Vivant jusqu’à la mortCompte-rendu de A. Cavazzini, A. Gualandi (édité par), Logiche del vivente.Evoluzione, sviluppo, cognizione nell’epistemologia francese contemporanea,“Discipline filosofiche” XIX, I, Quodlibet, Macerata 2009Le nouveau recueil d’essais consacrés à une épistémologie pour la discipline philosophique, sous la direction de A. Cavazzini et A. Gualandi, se structure autourd’une idée forte de Bergson, celle d’ « attention à la vie ». Cette idée est utilisée comme instrument herméneutique pour désigner un aspect de la culture philosophique française du XIXè siècle et de l’époque contemporaine en particulier, qui voit dans l’épistémologie de la biologie un lieu de rencontre entre des perspectives hétérogènes, ainsi qu’un moyen de vérifier l’état actuel des sciences de la vie et d’étudier la possibilité d’une philosophie de la biologie prenant en compte et mettant profit les impulsions des avancées scientifiques. Le recueil cherche à rendre compte de la nouveauté du paradigme biologique contemporain, qui vise un degré extrême de synthèse entre les savoirs et les disciplines liées au « champ biologique ». Logiche del vivente parvient donc à rendre compte de la nouvelle approche synthétique du biologique, ouvrant à ce syncrétisme de positions qui contribue à sa définition contemporaine : évolution, développement et cognition, réunis dans une même perspective, sont les instruments d’une réécriture du vocabulaire et des catégories de la réflexion biologique, indépendamment de l’alternative paralysante entre le « mauvais » vitalisme et le mécanisme.Vivant jusqu’à la mortReview of A. Cavazzini, A. Gualandi (edited by), Logiche del vivente.Evoluzione, sviluppo, cognizione nell’epistemologia francese contemporanea,“Discipline filosofiche” XIX, I, Quodlibet, Macerata 2009Edited by A. Cavazzini and A. Gualandi, this new collection of essays devoted to an epistemology for the philosophical discipline is structured around one of Bergson’s powerful ideas, that of “attention to life.” This idea is used as a hermeneutic structure in order to outline an aspect of the French philosophical culture of the 19th century and of the contemporary epoch in particular. What one sees is that the epistemology of biology is a place of encounter between heterogeneous perspective. As well, it is a means to verify the current state of the life sciences and to study the possibility of a philosophy of biology which would take account of the novelty of the contemporary biological paradigm, a paradigm that aims at an extreme degree of synthesis between the sciences and the disciplines connected to the “biological field.” Logiche del vivente therefore manages to take account of the new synthetic approach of biology, opening itself up to a syncretism of positions which contributes to its contemporary definition: evolution, development and cognition, united in one perspective, are instruments of are-writing of the vocabulary and the categories of biological reflection, independently of the paralyzing alternative be “bad” vitalism and mechanism.
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