Diagrammatology: An Investigation on the Borderlines of Phenomenology, Ontology, and Semiotics

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Springer Science & Business Media, Jun 20, 2007 - Philosophy - 508 pages

Diagrammatology investigates the role of diagrams for thought and knowledge. Based on the general doctrine of diagrams in Charles Peirce's mature work, Diagrammatology claims diagrams to constitute a centerpiece of epistemology. The book reflects Peirce's work on the issue in Husserl's contemporanous doctrine of "categorial intuition" and charts the many unnoticed similarities between Peircean semiotics and early Husserlian phenomenology. Diagrams, on a Peircean account, allow for observation and experimentation with ideal structures and objects and thus furnish the access to the synthetic a priori of the regional and formal ontology of the Husserlian tradition.

The second part of the book focuses on three regional branches of semiotics: biosemiotics, picture analysis, and the theory of literature. Based on diagrammatology, these domains appear as accessible for a diagrammatological approach which leaves the traditional relativism and culturalism of semiotics behind and hence constitutes a realist semiotics.

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Contents

Lets Stick Together
3
The Physiology of Arguments Peirces Extreme Realism
23
How to Learn More
49
Moving Pictures of Thought
89
Everything is Transformed
117
Categories Diagrams Schemata
141
Mereology
161
Diagrammatical Reasoning and the Synthetic A Priori
175
The Signifying Body
257
Christ Levitating and the Vanishing Square
275
Small Outline of a Theory of the Sketch
321
Who is Michael WoLing PtahHotep Jerolomon?
327
Five Types of Schematic Iconicity in the Literary Text
345
The Man Who Knew Too Much
365
Perspective
383
Notes
425

Biosemiotics as Material and Formal Ontology
197
A Natural Symphony?
225
Man the Abstract Animal
241

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Page 9 - The principle of continuity is the idea of fallibilism objectified. For fallibilism is the doctrine that our knowledge is never absolute but always swims, as it were, in a continuum of uncertainty and of indeterminacy.
Page ii - Editor: JAAKKO HINTIKKA, Boston University, USA Editors: DIRK VAN DALEN, University of Utrecht, The Netherlands...

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