Thus, if I kick a dog or a snake, the dog and the snake will react according to their dog-ness or snake-ness, from their internal circuit—from within. Pier Luigi Luisi, Essays on Life Sciences with Related Science Fiction Stories, Newcastle upon Tyne, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2020, p 51 This claim,…
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Can a Sign Be Used Autonomously? (Semiology of Autopoiesis VIII)
To be a sense-maker is, in other words, to be actively sensitive to dangerous or beneficial trends in the ongoing coupling with the world. Sense-making thus combines, in nuce and for all forms of life, what for complex minds, like those of animals, can be differentiated into action, perception, and…
Continue ReadingWon’t be fooled again? Ezekiel Di Paolo and Enactive Autopoiesis: Semiology of Autopoiesis (VII)
I have distinguished between strict and loose definitions of the concept of autopoiesis. These definitions can overlap, in the sense that one might share conditions with another. They can also be inconsistent, internally and with each other, when they involve contradictory conditions. A looser definition has more conditions, but these…
Continue ReadingLanguage and Social Systems: Semiology of Autopoiesis (VI)
Can a closed social system that uses a common language be autopoietic? If words, grammar and meanings evolve outside the boundary of a system, can the system be autonomous when it employs them? There is a simple preliminary answer to these questions. A closed system can be autonomous and autopoietic…
Continue ReadingModes of Explanation: Semiology of Autopoiesis (V)
Across my first three posts on autopoiesis I have contrasted strict and looser definitions of the concept. The stricter definitions are more logically consistent; they hold together rigorously. The looser definitions apply to increased real and imaginary cases; they have greater extension. It would be a mistake, though, to think…
Continue ReadingClaire Colebrook on Time and Autopoiesis: Semiology of Autopoiesis (IV)
The three concepts of autopoiesis, equilibrium and homeostasis function in all these domains: neuroscience, cognitive science, philosophy of mind, social theory and future studies. These concepts all presuppose a certain understanding of time, and suggest – as I state in the title to this essay – that the organism has…
Continue ReadingAutopoiesis and Time: Deleuze’s Timed Logic (V)/Semiology of Autopoiesis (III)
We can think of autopoiesis as resistance to the imposition of external time. The autonomy of an autopoietic process implies independence from transformational pressures by times outside the process. Autopoiesis should block external time from supplanting the internal time of the process. It could be objected that everything is resistant…
Continue ReadingSemiology of Autopoiesis (II)
Selections of the Sign: Unity Maturana and Varela’s Autopoiesis: the Organization of the Living begins with a sentence indebted to George Spencer-Brown and his form of distinction where ‘distinction is perfect continence’. In their version, this becomes ‘A universe comes into being when a space is severed into two. A…
Continue ReadingSemiology of Autopoiesis (I)
What is the difference between conceptual analysis and semiology? An idea like autopoiesis can be analysed as a concept. We can study its description of self-making and autonomous organisations and life-forms for consistency, contradictions, meaning, references, through its cases and examples, its history, its implications and assumptions, and its values.…
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