Philosophy as communication theory

There has been comparatively little attention for the fundamental ontology of communication in recent philosophy. Nevertheless, from classical metaphysical accounts of relationality and communal being to the analysis of intersubjectivity in phenomenology and to concrete existence as understood by p...

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Main Author: Johan Siebers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Tartu Press 2020-06-01
Series:Sign Systems Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/sss/article/view/16620
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spelling doaj-1ecf7543607942d99e1521b3b14e5f642021-04-02T14:19:39ZengUniversity of Tartu PressSign Systems Studies1406-42431736-74092020-06-0148110.12697/SSS.2020.48.1.08Philosophy as communication theoryJohan Siebers0Language and Communication Research Cluster, Middlesex University, London There has been comparatively little attention for the fundamental ontology of communication in recent philosophy. Nevertheless, from classical metaphysical accounts of relationality and communal being to the analysis of intersubjectivity in phenomenology and to concrete existence as understood by process philosophy, the communicative structure of the act of being has been, if not explicitly then implicitly, a perennial component of metaphysical reflection. Communication theory can be conceived in such a way that it takes this ontological dimension into account. The ramifications of connecting being to communication in this way are explored in discussion with the conceptualizations of communication in integrationism and biosemiotics. An interpretation of Gabriel Marcel’s existential analysis of “my life” is used to show what philosophy as communication theory (in the strong sense of the notion elaborated here) might look like. https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/sss/article/view/16620philosophy of beingcommunication theoryexistentialismprocess philosophyintegrationismbiosemiotics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johan Siebers
spellingShingle Johan Siebers
Philosophy as communication theory
Sign Systems Studies
philosophy of being
communication theory
existentialism
process philosophy
integrationism
biosemiotics
author_facet Johan Siebers
author_sort Johan Siebers
title Philosophy as communication theory
title_short Philosophy as communication theory
title_full Philosophy as communication theory
title_fullStr Philosophy as communication theory
title_full_unstemmed Philosophy as communication theory
title_sort philosophy as communication theory
publisher University of Tartu Press
series Sign Systems Studies
issn 1406-4243
1736-7409
publishDate 2020-06-01
description There has been comparatively little attention for the fundamental ontology of communication in recent philosophy. Nevertheless, from classical metaphysical accounts of relationality and communal being to the analysis of intersubjectivity in phenomenology and to concrete existence as understood by process philosophy, the communicative structure of the act of being has been, if not explicitly then implicitly, a perennial component of metaphysical reflection. Communication theory can be conceived in such a way that it takes this ontological dimension into account. The ramifications of connecting being to communication in this way are explored in discussion with the conceptualizations of communication in integrationism and biosemiotics. An interpretation of Gabriel Marcel’s existential analysis of “my life” is used to show what philosophy as communication theory (in the strong sense of the notion elaborated here) might look like.
topic philosophy of being
communication theory
existentialism
process philosophy
integrationism
biosemiotics
url https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/sss/article/view/16620
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