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Wolfgang Wildgen
Universität Bremen
  1.  42
    Natural ontologies and semantic roles in sentences.Wolfgang Wildgen - 2001 - Axiomathes 12 (3-4):171-193.
  2. Introduction.Barend van Heusden & Wolfgang Wildgen - 2009 - In Wolfgang Wildgen & Barend van Heusden (eds.), Metarepresentation, self-organization and art. New York: Peter Lang.
     
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  3. Movie physics or dynamic patterns as the skeleton of movies.Wolfgang Wildgen - 2016 - In Janina Wildfeuer & John A. Bateman (eds.), Film Text Analysis: New Perspectives on the Analysis of Filmic Meaning. Routledge.
     
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  4.  44
    Metarepresentation, self-organization and art.Wolfgang Wildgen & Barend van Heusden (eds.) - 2009 - New York: Peter Lang.
    This book is about the interrelationship between nature, semiosis, metarepresentation and (self-)consciousness, and the role played by metarepresentation in ...
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  5. Meta-representation, self-organization and self-reference in the visual arts.Wolfgang Wildgen - 2009 - In Wolfgang Wildgen & Barend van Heusden (eds.), Metarepresentation, self-organization and art. New York: Peter Lang.
     
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  6. Sculpture, Diagram, and Language in the Artwork of Joseph Beuys.Wolfgang Wildgen - 2015 - In Peer F. Bundgaard & Frederik Stjernfelt (eds.), Investigations Into the Phenomenology and the Ontology of the Work of Art: What are Artworks and How Do We Experience Them? Cham: Springer Verlag.
    Abstract The artwork of Joseph Beuys was provocative in his time. Although he was very successful on the international art scene and on the art market, the larger The public is still bewildered by his Fat Chair or his installations and his performances. The article shows the evolution of his artwork from classical materials (stone, steel) to soft materials (animals, products of animals) and further to his concept of “social sculpture” and to programmatic diagrams (with words and graphics). A special (...)
     
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  7.  59
    Semiotic hypercycles driving the evolution of language.Wolfgang Wildgen - 2008 - Axiomathes 18 (1):91-116.
    The evolution of human symbolic capacity must have been very rapid even in some intermediate stage (e.g. the proto-symbolic behavior of Homo erectus). Such a rapid process requires a runaway model. The type of very selective and hyperbolically growing self-organization called “hypercyle” by Eigen and Schuster could explain the rapidity and depth of the evolutionary process, whereas traditional runaway models of sexual selection seem to be rather implausible in the case of symbolic evolution. We assume two levels: at the first (...)
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