This is the third volume in Floyd Merrell's trilogy on semiotics
focusing on Peirce's categories of Firstness, Secondness, and
Thirdness. In this book the author argues that there are
passageways linking the social sciences with the physical sciences,
and signs with life processes. This is not a study of the semiotics
of life, but rather of semiosis as a living process. Merrell
attempts to articulate the links between thought that is rooted in
that which can be quantified and thought that resists
quantification, namely that of the consciousness. As he writes in
his preface, he is intent on fusing the customary distinctions
between life and non-life, mind and matter, self and other,
appearance (fiction) and "reality," ... to reveal the everything
that is is a sign.' In order to accomplish this goal, Peirce's
terciary concept of the sign is crucial.
Merrell begins by asking What are signs that they may take on
life-like processes, and what is life that it may know the sign
processes that brought it - themselves - into existence?' In order
to answer this question he examines semiotic theory, philosophical
discourse, the life sciences, the mathematical sciences, and
literary theory. He offers an original reading of Peirce's thought
along with that of Prigogine and of many others. Following Sebeok,
Merrell reminds us that any and all investigation of nature and of
the nature of signs and life must ultimately be semiotic in
nature.'
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