Stolen joke:
At first, I thought I was one of the founders of modern semiology, but I'm not Saussure.
Stolen joke:
At first, I thought I was one of the founders of modern semiology, but I'm not Saussure.
Introduction to Signs
Sign Relations, Triadic Relations, Relation Theory • Discussion 11
• https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2023/09/12/sign-relations-triadic-relations-relation-theory-discussion-11/
Re: Michael Shapiro • Redefining Arbitrariness in Language
• https://languagelore.net/
• https://languagelore.net/2023/04/03/redefi-ning-arbitrariness-in-language/
<QUOTE MS:>
The matter of arbitrariness in language is primarily associated with the work of the Swiss linguist, Ferdinand de Saussure (1857–1913), whose book of lectures, Cours de linguistique Générale, is widely recognized to have laid the foundations of European structural linguistics in the twentieth century. One of Saussure's most quoted positions points out that the meaning of words is arbitrary, in that, for instance, the word “arbre” in French and its equivalent “tree” in English have nothing to do “naturally” with the object they signify. Any other sequence of sounds could in theory designate the same object. These are just the words French and English happen to have inherited from their history.
</QUOTE>
My Comment —
I prefer to think of the word “arbitrary” as reminding us how every aspect of a sign's functioning is relative to an arbiter, a judge, an interpreter. That brings semiology more into harmony with Peirce's semiotics — if only Saussure had realized how it embeds all dyadic sign relations within the fold of triadic sign relations!
#Peirce #Semiotics #Saussure #Semiology #Symbols #Symbolism
#SignRelation #TriadicRelation #RelationTheory #Arbitrarity
Je me demande s'il existe des travaux sur l'utilisation de la catégorie « auteur » — ou encore de la catégorie « entreprise » ou « professionnel libéral » — comme moyen d'empouvoirement des traducteurices.
Et s'il n'y en a pas, si quelqu'un cherche un sujet de thèse en socio ou en sémio, je pose ça là.
#Traduction #Traducteur #Empowerment #Auteur #Author #Business #Sociology #Semiology
I'll always be talking about Peircean semiotics here.
Up until 15 or 20 years ago folks observed the distinction between #Peirce's #Semiotics or #Semeiotics and #Saussure's #Semiology, but then some European schools decided the latter term was not sexy enough and they switched. More confusion than fusion ensued. Today we have as much pop semiotics as pop psychology, which is a good when it draws people into the fold but less good when it leaves the field spindled and mutilated.