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Article
“Animal Symbolicum” in the Natural and Cultural Semiospheres
Author(s)
Leonid Tchertov
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DOI:10.17265/2159-5313/2019.01.004
Affiliation(s)
Art School, St. Petersburg, Russia
ABSTRACT
The
human as an “animal symbolicum” (by Ernst Cassirer) is a unique being included
simultaneously in two semiospheres. One of them is the
semiosphere of conventional signs and symbols created by himself in culture.
The other semiosphere of natural signals and indexes is available to the human
as an animal together with other living beings. Both these semiospheres
described correspondingly by Y. Lotman and E. Hoffmeyer, are the subjects of
anthroposemiotics and biosemiotics, semiotics of culture, and semiotics of
nature. Their interaction is a subject of human ecosemiotics. Both external
communicative processes among people and the internal mental activity of
individuals contain together natural and cultural semiotic components that
interact and counteract with each other. In these processes, the natural
signal-indexical codes can be transformed and supplemented by cultural
conventions (if, for example, natural expressive movements are subordinated to
cultural norms of gesticulation) or modified from pure cognitive means to means
of communication―as the codes mediating transmission of perceptual images by
depictions. Natural codes can compete with systems of cultural signs on the
force of influence on people (as in various fashion systems) or in accordance
with them participate in the creation of complex heterogeneous texts (as in
arts).
KEYWORDS
semiospheres of culture and of nature, signal-indexical, sign levels of semiosis, codes, and arts
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