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Mimesis and Metaphor: The biosemiotic generation of meaning in Cassirer and Uexküll
Author(s) -
Andreas Weber
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
sign systems studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.17
H-Index - 7
eISSN - 1736-7409
pISSN - 1406-4243
DOI - 10.12697/sss.2004.32.1-2.13
Subject(s) - semiotics , biosemiotics , presupposition , metaphor , embodied cognition , philosophy , meaning (existential) , epistemology , semiotics of culture , trace (psycholinguistics) , sociology , linguistics
In this paper I pursue the influences of Jakob von Uexküll’s biosemiotics on the anthropology of Ernst Cassirer. I propose that Cassirer in his Philosophy of the Symbolic Forms has written a cultural semiotics which in certain core ideas is grounded on biosemiotic presuppositions, some explicit (as the “emotive basic ground” of experience), some more implicit. I try to trace the connecting lines to a biosemiotic approach with the goal of formulating a comprehensive semiotic anthropology which understands man as embodied being and culture as a phenomenon of general semioses.

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