Thomas Sebeok
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Semiotics/Semeiotics |
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General concepts |
Biosemiotics · Code |
Computational semiotics |
Connotation · Decode |
Denotation · Encode |
Lexical · Modality |
Salience · Sign |
Sign relation · Sign relational complex |
Semiosis · Semiosphere |
Semiotic literary criticism |
Triadic relation |
Umwelt · Value |
Methods |
Commutation test Paradigmatic analysis Syntagmatic analysis |
Semioticians |
Roland Barthes · Marcel Danesi |
Ferdinand de Saussure |
Umberto Eco · Louis Hjelmslev |
Roman Jakobson · Roberta Kevelson |
Charles Peirce · Thomas Sebeok |
Topics of interest |
Aestheticization as propaganda Aestheticization of violence Americanism |
Semiotics of Ideal Beauty |
Thomas Albert Sebeok (born in Budapest, Hungary, on November 9, 1920, died December 21, 2001 in Bloomington, Indiana) was one of the most prolific and wide-ranging of US semioticians. He expanded the purview of semiotics to include non-human signaling and communication systems thus raising some of the issues addressed by philosophy of mind and coining the term "zoosemiotics". He is also the creator of biosemiotics.
Based on his field of competence Sebeok tended to reject the experiments on the putative linguistic abilities of apes, such as those described by David Premack, assuming the existence of a deeper, more universal and more meaningful underlying substrate: the “semiotic function”.
In 1944, he became a naturalized citizen of the United States.