Springer
Basic semiosis as code-based control
Stefan Artmann
Three types of semiosis
Marcello Barbieri
Role of utility and inference in the evolution of functional information
Alexei A. Sharov
Sense and self-referentiality in living beings
Arno L. Goudsmit
Uexküll, Peirce, and other affinities between biosemiotics and biolinguistics
Prisca Augustyn
Umwelt transitions
Morten Tønnessen
"Does a glass of white wine taste like a glass of domain Sigalas sSantorini Asirtiko Athiri 2005?"
Jonathan Hope, Pierre-Louis Patoine
The poetics of purpose
Victoria N. Alexander
Exemplifying umweltlehre through one's own life a biography of J. von Uexküll by F. Mildenberger,
Riin Magnus, Kalevi Kull
Do biosemiotics, but don't forget semiosis
Anton Markoš
Language, linguistics
Vol. 13
Kalevi Kull , Ekaterina Velmezova
The Bakhtinian dialogue revisited
Ekaterina Velmezova
Deep congruence between linguistic and biotic growth
Jamin Pelkey
Biology, linguistics, and the semiotic perspective on language
Before Babel
Piera Filippi
Umwelt and language
How useful is état de langue for biosemiotics?
Jui-Pi Chien
Darwin's ethology and the expression of the emotions
Thomas Robert
Language as primary modeling and natural languages
Susan Petrilli, Augusto Ponzio
Darwin's biosemiotics
Deana Neubauer
On biosemiotics and its possible relevance to linguistics
Donald Favareau, Kalevi Kull
Language and biosphere
Anton Markoš, Dan Faltýnek
Biolinguistics and biosemiotics
Winfried Nöth
Biosemiotics, politics and Th.A. Sebeok's move from linguistics to semiotics
Sara Cannizzaro , Paul Cobley
Verbal patterns
Stephen J. Cowley
Biosemiotics of mimicry
Vol. 16
Timo Maran
First excursion
The structure of mimicry
Semiotics of mimicry
Iconicity and mimicry
Second excursion
Different perspectives in mimicry system
Modelling mimicry
Mimicry and semiotic evolution
Third excursion
From abstract mimicry to ecological codes
Conclusions
Introduction
Vol. 18
Felice Cimatti
Life
Scientist because philosopher, philosopher because scientist
The line and the circle
The biological model
From complementarity to semiosis
The origin of language
Attention and consciousness
Breaking the circle
Language and ethics
Aesthetic experience and the problem of the sacred
Conclusion
Theoretical biology on its way to biosemiotics
Vol. 3
Donald Favareau
Laws of symbolic mediation in the dynamics of self and personality
Concepts of molecular biosemiotics
Form, substance and difference
The physics and metaphysics of biosemiotics
Excerpts from the symbolic species
The theory of meaning
The logic of signs
The semiotics of nature
Excerpts from signs, language and behavior
Information and semiosis in living systems
Excerpts from universe of the mind
Excerpts from readers of the book of life
Biosemiotics
The cybersemiotic model of communication
The clever Hans phenomenon from an animal psychologist's point of view
Excerpts from the logos of the bios
Phytosemiotics
Endosemiosis
Signs and codes in immunology
From animal to man
A semiotic perspective on the sciences
A glossary of people, paths and ideas
Vol. 5
Dario Martinelli
Does zoosemiotics have an ethical agenda?
Introduction to zoosemiotics
Ethological zoosemiotics
Anthropological zoosemiotics
The evolution of learning to communicate
Vol. 6
Irene M. Pepperberg
From parsing actions to understanding intentions
Richard W. Byrne
Hominid diversity and "ancestor" myths
Niels Bonde
The natural history of intentionality
Jesper Hoffmeyer
Emerging symbols
Stefan Leijnen
Introduction – searching the missing links
Frederik Stjernfelt, Theresa Schilhab , Terrence W. Deacon
The evolution of semiotic self-control
Frederik Stjernfelt
Semiosis beyond signs
Göran Sonesson
Language as a repository of tacit knowledge
Harry Collins
Levels of immersion and embodiment
Theresa Schilhab
Gender in innovative techno fantasies
Cathrine Hasse
Peirce and Deacon on the meaning and evolution of language
Ahti-Veikko J. Pietarinen
The tripod effect
Peter Gärdenfors, Ingar Brinck, Mathias Osvath
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