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What is a possible ontological and epistemological framework for a true universal ‘information science'?: The suggestion of a cybersemiotics
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Citations
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References
1997
Year
Epistemological FrameworkCommunicationSystem ThinkingUniversal Information ScienceInformation InfrastructureSocial SciencesPhilosophy Of Computer ScienceLanguage StudiesDynamic SystemsCognitive ScienceLanguage GameInformation SocietyInformation Processing (Psychology)Computer ScienceInformation ManagementPhilosophy (French Literary Studies)Philosophy (Philosophy Of Mind)BiosemioticsPhilosophy Of LanguageEpistemologyPhilosophy Of Mind
The subject of the article is what the paradigmatic framework for a universal information science or informatics should be and what kind of science we can expect it to be. The mechanistic and rationalistic information processing paradigm of cognitive science is the dominating research program in this research area which is heavily dominated by computer science and informatics. It is pointed out that this logical and mechanistic approach is unable to give an understanding of human signification and its basis in the connotations of biological and social relationships. The paper then discusses—on the basis of previous work—the ontological and epistemological problems of the idea of “information science” and constructs an alternative non‐mechanistic view based on the idea of autopoiesis of second order cybernetics and Peirce's concept of chaos and evolution. These ideas are related to the cybersemiotic framework for transdisciplinary research of information and communication which the author has developed in other papers. Cybersemiotics is an integration of second order cybernetics, Peirce's triadic semiosis and Wittgenstein's theory of language game to a non‐Cartesian cognitive science.
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