Yagmur Denizhan & Vefa Karatay

Origins and Phases Yagmur Denizhan & Vefa Karatay Classically, the quest for the origin of a complex and dynamic entity -be it life, mind or semiosis- seems to demand an explanation of how this entity may have spontaneously emerged as a functioning whole without any prior equivalent. Analysing the full-fledged system one can identify its […]

Josh Bacigalupi

Semiosic Agency: Self-regulated Habituation of Ever-novel Signs via Affective Field Josh Bacigalupi At the conclusion of our group’s presentation at last year’s gatherings, we received two questions that this presentation will address: one from Alexei Sharov on the nature of agency and another from Vinicius Romanini on the nature of virtuality. This presentation will endeavor […]

Victoria Alexander

The Creativity of Cells: Aneural Irrational Cognition Victoria Alexander BaluÅ¡ka and Levin’s (2016) review of the literature on aneural cognition in single-celled organisms, plants, and animal tissues is focused on what might be called rational biological processes, using inherited or habituated signal pathways. The authors do not touch upon the extent to which simple organisms […]

Claudio Rodríguez

Vis-à-vis: Signification Does Not Necessitate Any Kind of Backward Causation Claudio Rodríguez The following presentation will argue that no account of signification—be it semantic, semiotic or organic—requires appealing to backward causation. John Deely’s views on the relevance of vis a prospecto and vis a tergo as well as their connection to sign virtuality are ontologically […]

Thorolf Van Walsum

The Signifier’s Objects: A Temporal Phenomenology through Lacan and Uexküll The connection between Biosemiotics and Phenomenology is natural and necessary. Uexküllian thought, since the time of Heidegger, has pollenated profound philosophical insights into the nature of human and non-human worlds, and in return, traditional biosemiotics has held a crucial foothold in phenomenological thought. Without critical […]

Kalevi Kull

The Concept of Umweb: On the Linkages between Umwelten Kalevi Kull Umwelt, the concept introduced by Jakob von Uexküll, has been commonly defined as the subjective world of organism. Once an organism can make distinctions, once it uses signs and can choose, there should also be its umwelt – its world with meanings. On a […]

Yogi Hendlin & Daniel Kamp

Biosemiotic Bottom-Up Emergence in the Key of Teilhard de Chardin Yogi Hendlin & Daniel Kamp What are the cultural implications of understanding how evolutionary biological constraints gives rise to them? (Cobley 2016) Biosemiotic constraints through iterated interactions between individuals lead to a ‘pattern of variety-in-unity’ (Teilhard de Chardin 1961, p. 18). Biosemiotics from an evolutionary […]

Lei Han

Human Umwelten at the Crossroads of Biosemiotics, Biopower, Biopolitics and Self-Technology Lei Han The connection between biosemiotics, biopower and biopolitics has been a subject of debate among scholars, but there is still much scope for further research. With particular recourse to the biosemiotic concept of human Umwelten, this paper investigates this connection and further elaborates […]

Katarzyna Machtyl

Umwelt as a Trans-sign Network, or The Implications of Biosemiotics to Humanities Katarzyna Machtyl The main thesis of the proposed talk is that biosemiotics has significantly changed and reformulated the way humanities-related scholars think about culture. For instance, one can mention here posthumanism, post- / nonanthropocentrism, nonhuman subjects’ studies, ecohumanities and many more. The biosemiotic […]

Isabel Ferreira

The Importance of the Concept of Umwelt in a Changing World Isabel Ferreira In the last decades, humankind has been experiencing the cumulative effects of a profound technological development that has accelerated immensely the dynamics of human social life, that has been reshaping the human sphere of action and interaction, that has hybridised human reality […]