From Biosphere to Semiosphere to Social Lifeworlds. Biology as an Understanding Social Science

The change could not be more radical. Biology, as a classical natural science, has celebrated numerous successes. Examining its subject matter from a reductionistic, materialistic point of view has led to exceptional knowledge and given rise to dozens of sub-disciplines. Unfortunately, by pursuing s...

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Main Author: Günther Witzany
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: tripleC 2008-07-01
Series:tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/22
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spelling doaj-c43f5026304249cea2cb175436642bd32020-11-24T23:53:27ZengtripleCtripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique1726-670X1726-670X2008-07-0132517410.31269/triplec.v3i2.2222From Biosphere to Semiosphere to Social Lifeworlds. Biology as an Understanding Social ScienceGünther Witzany0telos – Philosophische PraxisThe change could not be more radical. Biology, as a classical natural science, has celebrated numerous successes. Examining its subject matter from a reductionistic, materialistic point of view has led to exceptional knowledge and given rise to dozens of sub-disciplines. Unfortunately, by pursuing such detail, satisfactory answers to central questions – What is life? How did it originate and how do we view ourselves as living beings? – have been lost in a universe of analytical units. Yet not entirely! A transdisciplinary network is evolving: it goes beyond reductionistic biology, beyond vitalism or a rekindled (metaphysical) enchantment of nature. It is increasingly able to provide better answers to these questions than firmly established, traditional, mechanistic biology: (1.) a semiotics that transcends Peirce, James and Morris to serve as a basis for the interpretation of sign processes in biosemiotics (Kull 2005), (2.) developmental biologists, embryologists and epigeneticists who have turned the paradigm “DNA-RNA-Protein-everything else” (Arthur Kornberg) on its head and who try to understand protein bodies as context-dependent interpreters of the genetic text, (3.) a philosophy that reconstructs biology as an understanding social science which describes the rule-governed sign-mediated interactions of cell individuals to mega-populations in their lifeworlds.https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/22pragmatic turnrule-governed sign-mediated interactionsMitweltsymbiogenesisglobal symbiotic interdependence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Günther Witzany
spellingShingle Günther Witzany
From Biosphere to Semiosphere to Social Lifeworlds. Biology as an Understanding Social Science
tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique
pragmatic turn
rule-governed sign-mediated interactions
Mitwelt
symbiogenesis
global symbiotic interdependence
author_facet Günther Witzany
author_sort Günther Witzany
title From Biosphere to Semiosphere to Social Lifeworlds. Biology as an Understanding Social Science
title_short From Biosphere to Semiosphere to Social Lifeworlds. Biology as an Understanding Social Science
title_full From Biosphere to Semiosphere to Social Lifeworlds. Biology as an Understanding Social Science
title_fullStr From Biosphere to Semiosphere to Social Lifeworlds. Biology as an Understanding Social Science
title_full_unstemmed From Biosphere to Semiosphere to Social Lifeworlds. Biology as an Understanding Social Science
title_sort from biosphere to semiosphere to social lifeworlds. biology as an understanding social science
publisher tripleC
series tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique
issn 1726-670X
1726-670X
publishDate 2008-07-01
description The change could not be more radical. Biology, as a classical natural science, has celebrated numerous successes. Examining its subject matter from a reductionistic, materialistic point of view has led to exceptional knowledge and given rise to dozens of sub-disciplines. Unfortunately, by pursuing such detail, satisfactory answers to central questions – What is life? How did it originate and how do we view ourselves as living beings? – have been lost in a universe of analytical units. Yet not entirely! A transdisciplinary network is evolving: it goes beyond reductionistic biology, beyond vitalism or a rekindled (metaphysical) enchantment of nature. It is increasingly able to provide better answers to these questions than firmly established, traditional, mechanistic biology: (1.) a semiotics that transcends Peirce, James and Morris to serve as a basis for the interpretation of sign processes in biosemiotics (Kull 2005), (2.) developmental biologists, embryologists and epigeneticists who have turned the paradigm “DNA-RNA-Protein-everything else” (Arthur Kornberg) on its head and who try to understand protein bodies as context-dependent interpreters of the genetic text, (3.) a philosophy that reconstructs biology as an understanding social science which describes the rule-governed sign-mediated interactions of cell individuals to mega-populations in their lifeworlds.
topic pragmatic turn
rule-governed sign-mediated interactions
Mitwelt
symbiogenesis
global symbiotic interdependence
url https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/22
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