Semiological Investigations, or Topics Pertaining to the General Theory of Signs : Reprint of the original Latin text Tentamina semiologica, si ve quaedam generalem theoriam signorum spectantia (1789).
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam/Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
1991.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- SEMIOLOGICALINVESTIGATIONS, ORTOPICS PERTAINING TO THE GENERAL THEORY OF SIGNS; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of contents; Translator's Introduction; Note on the translation; Acknowledgments; Notes; Bibliography; Biographical Sketch; Notes; Preface; Contents; Semiological Investigations orTopics Pertaining to the General Theory of Signs; 1. Definitions; 2. Natural Signs; 3. Their Necessary Conditions; 4. Why terms especially deserve to be considered; 5. Grounds for distinguishing necessary and possible terms; Corollaries; 6. Intuitive and symbolic knowledge.
- 7. The material and formal components of signs8. Primitive and derived signs; 9. The number of elements; 10. Relative aptitudes of sense objects to be signs; 11. How terms further clear and distinct knowledge; 12. The improving of derived signs; 13. The system of signs; 14. An example from the Arabic number system; 15. Derived, hypothetically necessary signs and when primitive signs are manifestly arbitrary; 16. Necessary elements in derived signs; 17. Material elements, more closely considered; 18. Formal elements of the sign, more closely considered.
- 19. What the derivational laws demand20. Why languages do not contain systems of signs; 21. Dangers of a universal characteristic as developed by Leibniz, Becher, Toennies, Kalmar, and others; 22. Perfection of hieroglyphic or iconic signs; 23. The subjective perfection of signs; 24. How one is to consider the brevity of the sign without prejudicing its objective perfection; 25. The twofold use of essential signs; 26. Discovery with the aid of a calculus; 27. B) The sign at which we ultimately arrive.
- 28. The idea of a calculus more universal than an algebra constructed in accordance with such a model. 29. How hieroglyphic signs aid invention; 30. Perfection of hieroglyphic or iconic signs recounted in preceding paragraph reduces to the perfection of essential signs; 31. Parallelism more closely considered; 32. The special use of hieroglyphic metaphorical signs; 33. B) Synecdochical signs; Appendix; Notes.