Biosemiotics


Biosemiotics is a field of semiotics and biology that studies the prelinguistic meaning-making, or production and interpretation of signs and codes in the biological realm.
Biosemiotics attempts to integrate the findings of biology and semiotics and proposes a paradigmatic shift in the scientific view of life, in which semiosis is one of its immanent and intrinsic features. The term biosemiotic was first used by Friedrich S. Rothschild in 1962, but Thomas Sebeok and Thure von Uexküll have implemented the term and field. The field, which challenges normative views of biology, is generally divided between theoretical and applied biosemiotics.

Definition

Biosemiotics is biology interpreted as a sign systems study, or, to elaborate, a study of
According to the basic types of semiosis under study, biosemiotics can be divided into
According to the dominant aspect of semiosis under study, the following labels have been used: biopragmatics, biosemantics, and biosyntactics.

History

Apart from Charles Sanders Peirce and Charles W. Morris, early pioneers of biosemiotics were Jakob von Uexküll, Heini Hediger, Giorgio Prodi, Marcel Florkin and Friedrich S. Rothschild ; the founding fathers of the contemporary interdiscipline were Thomas Sebeok and Thure von Uexküll.
In the 1980s a circle of mathematicians active in Theoretical Biology, René Thom, Yannick Kergosien, and Robert Rosen, explored the relations between Semiotics and Biology using such headings as "Nature Semiotics", "Semiophysics", or "Anticipatory Systems" and taking a modeling approach.
The contemporary period include biologists Jesper Hoffmeyer, Kalevi Kull, Claus Emmeche, Terrence Deacon, semioticians Martin Krampen, Marcel Danesi, philosophers Donald Favareau, John Deely, John Collier and complex systems scientists Howard H. Pattee, Michael Conrad, Luis M. Rocha, Cliff Joslyn and León Croizat.
In 2001, an annual international conference for biosemiotic research known as the Gatherings in Biosemiotics was inaugurated, and has taken place every year since.
In 2004, a group of biosemioticians – Marcello Barbieri, Claus Emmeche, Jesper Hoffmeyer, Kalevi Kull, and Anton Markos – decided to establish an international journal of biosemiotics. Under their editorship, the Journal of Biosemiotics was launched by Nova Science Publishers in 2005, and with the same five editors Biosemiotics was launched by Springer in 2008. The book series Biosemiotics is edited by Jesper Hoffmeyer, Kalevi Kull, and Alexei Sharov.
The International Society for Biosemiotic Studies was established in 2005 by Donald Favareau and the five editors listed above. A collective programmatic paper on the basic theses of biosemiotics appeared in 2009.