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  1. Studies in the philosophy of Charles Sanders Peirce.Philip Paul Wiener & Frederic Harold Young (eds.) - 1952 - Cambridge,: Harvard University Press.
  • Models and metaphors.Max Black - 1962 - Ithaca, N.Y.,: Cornell University Press.
    Author Max Black argues that language should conform to the discovered regularities of experience it is radically mistaken to assume that the conception of language is a mirror of reality.
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  • The relationship between semiotics and mechanical models of explanation in the life sciences.Thure von Uexküll - 1999 - Semiotica 127 (1-4):647-655.
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  • Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature: Thirtieth-Anniversary Edition.Richard Rorty, Michael Williams & David Bromwich - 2008 - Princeton University Press.
    When it first appeared in 1979, Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature hit the philosophical world like a bombshell. In it, Richard Rorty argued that, beginning in the seventeenth century, philosophers developed an unhealthy obsession with the notion of representation: comparing the mind to a mirror that reflects reality. Rorty's book is a powerful critique of this imagery and the tradition of thought that it spawned. Thirty years later, the book remains a must-read and stands as a classic of twentieth-century (...)
  • Pragmatism, categories, and language.Richard Rorty - 1961 - Philosophical Review 70 (2):197-223.
  • Meaning and understanding.Herman Parret & Jacques Bouveresse (eds.) - 1981 - New York: W. de Gruyter.
    Herman Parret and Jacques Bouveresse Introduction. As Rosenberg remarks, " Understanding ... is evidently difficult to understand" (in this volume, p. 29). ...
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  • C. S. Peirce’s phaneroscopy and semiotics.Robert Marty - 1982 - Semiotica 41 (1-4).
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  • How to Do Things with Words: The William James Lectures Delivered in Harvard University in 1955.J. L. Austin - 1962 - Oxford, England: Oxford University Press UK.
    First published in 1962, contains the William James Lectures delivered at Harvard University in 1955. It sets out Austin's conclusions in the field to which he directed his main efforts for at least the last ten years of his life. Starting from an exhaustive examination of his already well- known distinction of performative utterances from statements, Austin here finally abandons that distinction, replacing it by a more general theory of 'illocutionary forces' of utterances which has important bearings on a wide (...)
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  • Peirce’s third trichotomy and two cases of sign path analysis.A. G. Jappy - 1984 - Semiotica 49 (1-2).
  • Tom Sebeok and the external world.John Deely - 2004 - Semiotica 2004 (150):1-21.
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  • Four Ages of Understanding: The first Postmodern Survey of Philosophy from Ancient Times to the Turn of the Twenty-First Century.John Deely - 2001 - University of Toronto Press.
    This book redraws the intellectual map and sets the agenda in philosophy for the next fifty or so years. By making the theory of signs the dominant theme in Four Ages of Understanding, John Deely has produced a history of philosophy that is innovative, original, and complete. The first full-scale demonstration of the centrality of the theory of signs to the history of philosophy, Four Ages of Understanding provides a new vantage point from which to review and reinterpret the development (...)
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  • Icon, index, and symbol.Arthur W. Burks - 1948 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 9 (4):673-689.
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  • Applying Semiotics and Information Theory to Biology: A Critical Comparison. [REVIEW]Gérard Battail - 2009 - Biosemiotics 2 (3):303-320.
    Since the beginning of the XX-th century, it became increasingly evident that information, besides matter and energy, is a major actor in the life processes. Moreover, communication of information has been recognized as differentiating living things from inanimate ones, hence as specific to the life processes. Therefore the sciences of matter and energy, chemistry and physics, do not suffice to deal with life processes. Biology should also rely on sciences of information. A majority of biologists, however, did not change their (...)
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  • Umwelten.Paul Bains - 2001 - Semiotica 2001 (134).
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