Results for 'Paul Cobley'

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  1.  9
    Realism for the 21st Century: A John Deely Reader.Paul Cobley (ed.) - 2009 - University of Scranton Press.
    _Realism for the 21st Century_ is a collection of thirty essays from John Deely—a major figure in contemporary semiotics and an authority on scholastic realism and the works of Charles Sanders Peirce. The volume tracks Deely’s development as a pragmatic realist, featuring his early essays on our relation to the world after Darwinism; crucial articles on logic, semiotics, and objectivity; overviews of philosophy after modernity; and a new essay on “purely objective reality.”.
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  2.  48
    The Cultural Implications of Biosemiotics.Paul Cobley - 2010 - Biosemiotics 3 (2):225-244.
    This article focuses on the cultural implications of biosemiotics, considering the extent to which biosemiotics constitutes an “epistemological break” with modern modes of conceptualizing the world. To some extent, the article offers a series of footnotes to points made in the work of Jesper Hoffmeyer. However, it is argued that the move towards ‘agency’ represented in biosemiotics needs to be approached with caution in light of problems of translation between the humanities and the sciences. Notwithstanding these problems, biosemiotics is found (...)
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  3.  63
    Introduction: What is sociosemiotics?Paul Cobley & Anti Randviir - 2009 - Semiotica 2009 (173):1-39.
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  4.  36
    Scaffolding Development and the Human Condition.Paul Cobley & Frederik Stjernfelt - 2015 - Biosemiotics 8 (2):291-304.
    This paper addresses the concept of semiotic scaffolding by considering it in light of questions arising from the contemporary challenge to the humanities. This challenge comes from a mixture of scientistic demands, opportunism on the part of Western governments in thrall to neo-liberalism, along with crass economic utilitarianism. In this paper we attempt to outline what a theory of semiotic scaffolding may offer to an understanding of the humanities’ contemporary role, as well as what the humanities might offer to the (...)
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  5.  17
    Narratiivsete žanrite analüüs. Kokkuvõte.Paul Cobley - 2001 - Sign Systems Studies 29 (2):502-502.
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  6.  9
    Objectivity and Immanence in Genre Theory.Paul Cobley & Garin Dowd - 2006 - In Garin Dowd, Lesley Stevenson & Jeremy Strong (eds.), Genre Matters. Intellect. pp. 41--53.
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  7. The drama Hollywood puzzle film. Re-viewing vantage point.Paul Cobley - 2014 - In Warren Buckland (ed.), Hollywood puzzle films. New York: Routledge.
     
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  8.  21
    The communicative wheel: Symptom, signal, and model in multimodal communication.Per Durst-Andersen & Paul Cobley - 2018 - Semiotica 2018 (225):77-102.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Semiotica Jahrgang: 2018 Heft: 225 Seiten: 77-102.
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  9.  17
    Peirce’s diagrammatic reasoning and the cinema: Image, diagram, and narrative in The Shape of Water.Paul Cobley & Yunhee Lee - 2020 - Semiotica 2020 (236-237):29-46.
    This article aims to examine the relationship between image and narrative by means of Peirce’s first trichotomy of qualisign-sinsign-legisign or, for the purposes of the current argument, image-diagram-metaphor. It is argued that narrative, as an extended metaphor, can be examined in three modes: in the image; schematically, in the imagination; and allegorically or in a thought experiment, through hypothetic interpretation. The article outlines two kinds of diagrammatic reasoning emphasized by Peirce: corollarial deduction in which the image is ‘literally seen’ and (...)
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  10.  14
    Introduction.Tim Ireland & Paul Cobley - 2022 - Biosemiotics 15 (2):187-192.
  11.  45
    John Deely, from the Point of View of Biosemiotics.Paul Cobley, Donald Favareau & Kalevi Kull - 2017 - Biosemiotics 10 (1):1-4.
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  12.  12
    Preface.Paul Cobley - 2009 - Semiotica 2009 (173).
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  13.  25
    “I’ll Show You Differences”: Skills, Creativity and Meaning.Johan Siebers & Paul Cobley - 2024 - Social Epistemology 38 (1):28-37.
    This article arises out of critical contemplation of ‘skills’ in relation to Higher Education pedagogy as it relates to the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. As the emphasis on skills dominates more and more of the discourse about pedagogy in Higher Education, the article aims to make some critical comments about the reductionist approach to education that easily becomes part of skills discourse. In addition to criticising instrumentalist deployment of ‘skills’ in Higher Education policy, the article also considers the supposedly (...)
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  14.  23
    Codes and coding: Sebeok's zoosemiotics and the dismantling of the fixed-code fallacy.Paul Cobley - 2014 - Semiotica 2014 (198):33-45.
    The concept of code has a long and varied history across the sciences, the social sciences, and the humanities. In the interdisciplinary field of biosemiotics it has been foundational through the idea of code duality (Hoffmeyer and Emmeche 1991); yet it has not been free from controversy and questions of definition (see, for example, Barbieri 2010). One reason why code has been so central to modern semiotics is not simply a matter of the linguistic heritage of semiology and the work (...)
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  15.  52
    Analysing narrative genres.Paul Cobley - 2001 - Sign Systems Studies 29 (2):479-502.
    There can be little doubt that human consciousness is now suffused with narrative. In the West, narrative is the focus of a number of lucrative industries and narratives proliferate as never before. The importance of popular genres in current narrative is an index of the demise of authorship in the face of new media and has necessitated the renewal of the term "genre" in narrative analysis over the last hundred years or so. However. this article attempts to make clear that (...)
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  16.  14
    Farewell to brass tacks.Paul Cobley - 2003 - Semiotica 2003 (147).
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  17.  20
    Identikits.Paul Cobley - 2003 - Semiotica 2003 (146).
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  18.  38
    Motivation and Interest.Paul Cobley - 2010 - American Journal of Semiotics 26 (1-4):3-15.
    In place of an abstract. Jeff Bernard was not afraid of complexity. The last essay of his that I read and published was ‘10 theses on perception in terms of work. A Rossi-Landian/Wittgensteinian point of view’, a title which promised thinking of some considerable sophistication — and delivered with dividends. It was accompanied by a figure in a pdf file that my co-editor and me struggled to understand until well after a few readings and close re-readings of the essay. Away (...)
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  19.  21
    Marketing the glocal in narratives of national identity.Paul Cobley - 2004 - Semiotica 2004 (150):197-225.
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  20.  36
    Semiotics, Closure and Technologies of Narrative Communication.Paul Cobley - 2002 - Semiotics:259-287.
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  21.  10
    Seeking other routes.Paul Cobley - 2008 - Semiotica 2008 (169):249-252.
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  22.  34
    Time, Feeling and Abduction.Paul Cobley - 2008 - Semiotics:858-868.
  23.  36
    The semiotics of paranoia: The thriller, abduction, and the self.Paul Cobley - 2004 - Semiotica 2004 (148).
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  24.  19
    Vistas for organized global semiotics.Paul Cobley & Kristian Bankov - 2016 - Semiotica 2016 (211):9-18.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Semiotica Heft: Ahead of print.
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  25.  13
    Ethical food packaging and designed encounters with distant and exotic others.David Machin & Paul Cobley - 2020 - Semiotica 2020 (232):251-271.
    There has been criticism of how Fair-Trade products represent workers in remote parts of the world where packaging offers an encounter with distant others which romanticizes and homogenizes them as a pre-modern form of ethnicity. Such workers are shown as always engaged in authentic, simple, honest decontextualized manual labor. And they are depicted as highly appreciative of, and empowered by, the act of ethical shopping. This paper shows that a close social semiotic analysis of Fair-Trade packaging reveals a different set (...)
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  26.  95
    How Can the Study of the Humanities Inform the Study of Biosemiotics?Donald Favareau, Kalevi Kull, Gerald Ostdiek, Timo Maran, Louise Westling, Paul Cobley, Frederik Stjernfelt, Myrdene Anderson, Morten Tønnessen & Wendy Wheeler - 2017 - Biosemiotics 10 (1):9-31.
    This essay – a collection of contributions from 10 scholars working in the field of biosemiotics and the humanities – considers nature in culture. It frames this by asking the question ‘Why does biosemiotics need the humanities?’. Each author writes from the background of their own disciplinary perspective in order to throw light upon their interdisciplinary engagement with biosemiotics. We start with Donald Favareau, whose originary disciplinary home is ethnomethodology and linguistics, and then move on to Paul Cobley’s (...)
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  27.  23
    Introduction to Biosemiotics. [REVIEW]Paul Cobley - 2008 - American Journal of Semiotics 24 (1-3):201-204.
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  28.  40
    Paul Cobley , Realism for the Twenty-First Century: A John Deely Reader. [REVIEW]Tobin Nellhaus - 2011 - Journal of Critical Realism 10 (1):136-138.
    Reviews a collection of John Deely's articles. Deely is interested in the relationship between semiotics on the one hand, and the realism of Thomas Aquinas and John Poinsot on the other.
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  29.  21
    Paul Cobley (ed.): The Routledge Companion to Semiotics. [REVIEW]Massimo Leone - 2010 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 23 (4):519-523.
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  30. Realism for the 21st Century: a John Deely Reader. Edited by Paul Cobley.Patrick Madigan - 2010 - Heythrop Journal 51 (6):1078-1079.
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  31.  24
    The Pyrrhonian Modes.Paul Woodruff - 2010 - In Richard Bett (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Scepticism. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 208.
  32. Descartes’s Anti-Transparency and the Need for Radical Doubt.Elliot Samuel Paul - 2018 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 5 (41):1083-1129.
    Descartes is widely portrayed as the arch proponent of “the epistemological transparency of thought” (or simply, “Transparency”). The most promising version of this view—Transparency-through-Introspection—says that introspecting (i.e., inwardly attending to) a thought guarantees certain knowledge of that thought. But Descartes rejects this view and provides numerous counterexamples to it. I argue that, instead, Descartes’s theory of self-knowledge is just an application of his general theory of knowledge. According to his general theory, certain knowledge is acquired only through clear and distinct (...)
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  33. Matter and Consciousness.Paul M. Churchland - 1985 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
    In _Matter and Consciousness_, Paul Churchland presents a concise and contemporary overview of the philosophical issues surrounding the mind and explains the main theories and philosophical positions that have been proposed to solve them. Making the case for the relevance of theoretical and experimental results in neuroscience, cognitive science, and artificial intelligence for the philosophy of mind, Churchland reviews current developments in the cognitive sciences and offers a clear and accessible account of the connections to philosophy of mind. For (...)
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  34. Models of Decision-Making: Simplifying Choices.Paul Weirich - 2014 - Cambridge University Press.
    The options in a decision problem generally have outcomes with common features. Putting aside the common features simplifies deliberations, but the simplification requires a philosophical justification that this book provides.
     
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  35. The Work of the Imagination.Paul L. Harris - 2000 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    This book demonstrates how children's imagination makes a continuing contribution to their cognitive and emotional development.
  36. Thomas Reid and the common sense school.Paul Wood - 2015 - In Aaron Garrett & James Anthony Harris (eds.), Scottish Philosophy in the Eighteenth Century, Volume I: Morals, Politics, Art, Religion. Oxford University Press.
     
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  37. Sociosemiotics.A. Randviir & P. Cobley - forthcoming - Semiotics.
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  38.  9
    Die Unsicherheit unserer Wirklichkeit: ein Gespräch über den Konstruktivismus.Paul Watzlawick & Franz Kreuzer - 1989 - München: Piper. Edited by Franz Kreuzer.
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  39. Some Critical Remarks on Definitions and on Philosophical and Logical Ideals.Paul Weingartner - 1996 - In Piergiorgio Odifreddi (ed.), Kreiseliana: About and Around Georg Kreisel. A K Peters. pp. 417--438.
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  40. Postscript : on writing the history of Scottish philosophy in the Age of Enlightenment.Paul Wood - 2015 - In Aaron Garrett & James Anthony Harris (eds.), Scottish Philosophy in the Eighteenth Century, Volume I: Morals, Politics, Art, Religion. Oxford University Press.
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  41. Saussure: Theory of the sign.P. Cobley - 2006 - In Keith Brown (ed.), Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics. Elsevier. pp. 2.
     
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  42. Philosophy of mathematics: selected readings.Paul Benacerraf & Hilary Putnam (eds.) - 1983 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    The twentieth century has witnessed an unprecedented 'crisis in the foundations of mathematics', featuring a world-famous paradox (Russell's Paradox), a challenge to 'classical' mathematics from a world-famous mathematician (the 'mathematical intuitionism' of Brouwer), a new foundational school (Hilbert's Formalism), and the profound incompleteness results of Kurt Gödel. In the same period, the cross-fertilization of mathematics and philosophy resulted in a new sort of 'mathematical philosophy', associated most notably (but in different ways) with Bertrand Russell, W. V. Quine, and Gödel himself, (...)
  43. Cross-cultural encounters: the co-production of science and literature in mid-Victorian periodicals.Paul White - 2002 - In Roger Luckhurst & Josephine McDonagh (eds.), Transactions and encounters: science and culture in the nineteenth century. New York: Distributed exclusively in the USA by Palgrave. pp. 75--95.
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  44. Aspects of the Concept of Potentiality in Chemistry.Paul Needham & Robin Hendry - 2018 - In Kristina Engelhard & Michael Quante (eds.), Handbook of Potentiality. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 375-400.
  45. How you talk is how you think; how you think is how you understand.Paul Webb - 2019 - In Jan Visser & Muriel Visser (eds.), Seeking Understanding: The Lifelong Pursuit to Build the Scientific Mind. Boston: Brill | Sense.
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  46.  4
    Montesquieu 250 Jahre "Geist der Gesetze": Beiträge aus politischer Wissenschaft, Jurisprudenz und Romanistik.Paul-Ludwig Weinacht (ed.) - 1999 - Baden-Baden: Nomos.
    Zusammenfassungen der Referate in französischer Sprache.
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  47.  14
    Rational Choice Using Imprecise Probabilities and Utilities.Paul Weirich - 2021 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    An agent often does not have precise probabilities or utilities to guide resolution of a decision problem. I advance a principle of rationality for making decisions in such cases. To begin, I represent the doxastic and conative state of an agent with a set of pairs of a probability assignment and a utility assignment. Then I support a decision principle that allows any act that maximizes expected utility according to some pair of assignments in the set. Assuming that computation of (...)
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  48.  6
    Mathematische und naturwissenschaftliche Modelle in der Philosophie Schellings und Hegels.Paul Ziche - 1996 - Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt: Frommann-Holzboog.
    Schelling und Hegel benutzen in ihren philosophischen Texten mathematische und naturwissenschaftliche Modelle wie Unendlichkeit oder Gleichgewicht. Die Strukturen dieser Begriffe liefern einen Massstab fur den Vergleich der Positionen Schellings und Hegels, der fur Schellings Identitatsphilosophie und Hegels erste Jenaer Schriften durchgefuhrt wird. Als wichtigstes Resultat kann eine grundlegende Differenz zwischen beiden Positionen bereits um 1801 nachgewiesen und gezeigt werden, dass diese auf einer unterschiedlichen Auffassung der Rolle des Absoluten beruht.
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  49.  7
    Why Did Protagoras Use Poetry in Education?Paul Woodruff - 2016 - In Olof Pettersson & Vigdis Songe-Møller (eds.), Plato’s Protagoras: Essays on the Confrontation of Philosophy and Sophistry. Cham: Springer.
    Like Plato, Protagoras held that young children learn virtue from fine examples in poetry. Unlike Plato, Protagoras taught adults by correcting the diction of poets. In this paper I ask what his standard of correctness might be, and what benefit he intended his students to take from exercises in correction. If his standard of correctness is truth, then he may intend his students to learn by questioning the content of poems; that would be suggestive of Plato’s program in Republic III. (...)
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  50.  18
    Representing War: Form and Ideology in First World War Narratives.Ann P. Linder & Evelyn Cobley - 1995 - Substance 24 (3):126.
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