06134nam 2200745 a 450 991078988640332120230725032516.01-283-40025-197866134002533-11-025343-710.1515/9783110253436(CKB)2670000000138738(EBL)827310(OCoLC)769343081(SSID)ssj0000576121(PQKBManifestationID)11408634(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000576121(PQKBWorkID)10553682(PQKB)11179434(MiAaPQ)EBC827310(DE-B1597)123429(OCoLC)774104040(OCoLC)979745316(DE-B1597)9783110253436(Au-PeEL)EBL827310(CaPaEBR)ebr10521682(CaONFJC)MIL340025(EXLCZ)99267000000013873820110917d2011 uy 0engurun#---|u||utxtccrReadings in zoosemiotics[electronic resource] /edited by Timo Maran, Dario Martinelli, Aleksei TurovskiBoston De Gruyter Moutonc20111 online resource (448 p.)Semiotics, communication and cognition,1867-0873 ;8Description based upon print version of record.3-11-025320-8 3-11-025342-9 Includes bibliographical references and index.Front matter --Contents --Readings in Zoosemiotics /Maran, Timo / Martinelli, Dario / Turovski, Aleksei --Prehistory --Introduction /Maran, Timo / Martinelli, Dario / Turovski, Aleksei --Of Ideas /Locke, John --Of the Reason of Animals /Hume, David --General Principles of Expression /Darwin, Charles --Essentials in Zoosemiotics --Introduction /Maran, Timo / Martinelli, Dario / Turovski, Aleksei --The Theory of Meaning /Uexküll, Jakob von --Zoosemiotics: At the Intersection of Nature and Culture /Sebeok, Thomas A. --"Talking" with Animals: Zoosemiotics Explained /Sebeok, Thomas A. --The Word 'Zoosemiotics' /Sebeok, Thomas A. --Chapters from Animal Communication Studies --Introduction /Maran, Timo / Martinelli, Dario / Turovski, Aleksei --The Study of Animal Communication: An Overview /Wenner, Adrian M. --The Animal's Expression /Hediger, Heini --Decoding the Language of the Bee /Frisch, Karl von --Meaning, Reference, and Intentionality in the Natural Vocalizations of Monk /Seyfarth, Robert M. / Cheney, Dorothy L. --Intentional Communication and Social Play: How and Why Animals Negotiate and Agree to Play /Bekoff, Marc / Allen, Colin --Prefigurements of Art /Sebeok, Thomas A. --Theoretical and Metatheoretical Perspectives --Introduction /Maran, Timo / Martinelli, Dario / Turovski, Aleksei --The Logical Analysis of Animal Communication /Marler, Peter --Animal Communication and the Study of Cognition /Smith, W. John --Problems in Cetacean and Other Mammalian Communication /Bateson, Gregory --Metalogue: What is an Instinct? /Bateson, Gregory --Human(itie)s, Animals and Contemporary Zoosemiotics --Introduction /Maran, Timo / Martinelli, Dario / Turovski, Aleksei --Is Man Language? /Griffin, Donald R. --The Animal in the Study of Humanity /Ingold, Tim --The Biosemiotics and Phylogenesis of Culture /Lestel, Dominique --Biotranslation: Translation between Umwelten /Kull, Kalevi / Torop, Peeter --IndexThe book is the first annotated reader to focus specifically on the discipline of zoosemiotics. Zoosemiotics can be defined today as the study of signification, communication and representation within and across animal species. The name for the field was proposed in 1963 by the American semiotician Thomas A. Sebeok. He also established the framework for the paradigm by finding and tightening connections to predecessors, describing terminology, developing methodology and setting directions for possible future studies. The volume includes a wide selection of original texts accompanied by editorial introductions. An extensive opening introduction discusses the place of zoosemiotics among other sciences as well as its inner dimensions; the understanding of the concept of communication in zoosemiotics, the heritage of biologist Jakob v. Uexküll; contemporary developments in zoosemiotics and other issues. Chapter introductions discuss the background of the authors and selected texts, as well as other relevant texts. The selected texts cover a wide range of topics, such as semiotic constitution of nature, cognitive capabilities of animals, typology of animal expression and many other issues. The roots of zoosemiotics can be traced back to the works of David Hume and John Locke. Great emphasis is placed on the heritage of Thomas A. Sebeok, and a total of four of his essays are included. The Reader also includes influential studies in animal communication (honey bee dance language, vervet monkey alarm calls) as well as theory elaborations by Gregory Bateson and others. The reader concludes with a section dedicated to contemporary research. Readings in Zoosemiotics is intended as a primary source of information about zoosemiotics, and also provides additional readings for students of cognitive ethology and animal communication studies.Semiotics, communication and cognition ;8.Animal communicationHuman-animal communicationBiologySemioticsCommunication.Semiotics.Animal communication.Human-animal communication.BiologySemiotics.591.59WT 3700rvkMaran Timo1975-937022Martinelli Dario886728Turovski Aleksei1571358MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910789886403321Readings in zoosemiotics3845743UNINA