From Talking Heads to Communicating Bodies: Cybersemiotics and Total Communication

Current linguistics is biased towards considering as object of scientific study only verbal language, i.e., ordinary language whose basic entities are words, sentences, and texts. By having this focus, the crucial non-verbal semiotic contributions from acts of bodily communication are left out of co...

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Main Author: Ole Nedergaard Thomsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2010-03-01
Series:Entropy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/12/3/390/
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spelling doaj-82b726db5fd64321a6bd0a5206c834ce2020-11-24T21:01:09ZengMDPI AGEntropy1099-43002010-03-0112339041910.3390/e12030390From Talking Heads to Communicating Bodies: Cybersemiotics and Total CommunicationOle Nedergaard ThomsenCurrent linguistics is biased towards considering as object of scientific study only verbal language, i.e., ordinary language whose basic entities are words, sentences, and texts. By having this focus, the crucial non-verbal semiotic contributions from acts of bodily communication are left out of consideration. On the face of it, this is a strange situation, because, phenomenologically, when observing a communicating dyad, what appears to the senses is a multimodal semiotic display–the interactants produce acts of total communication, the linguistic part of which has in fact to be disentangled from the integral semiotic behavior. That a human being should in the first place be conceptualized as a ‘talking head’, rather than a ‘communicating body’, stems from at least four historically interrelated fountains: ancient Greek philosophy with its emphasis on logos as meaning both rational mind and verbal language/speech as well as with its rejection of rhetoric (including body language); Cartesian dualistic rationalism where the body was the animal, mechanistic part of a human being, unworthy for the Geisteswissenschaften; Saussure’s formal structuralism with its defocusing of the individual’s performance, parole, and its high focus on societal langue; and Chomskyan linguistics with its neglect of actual, also bodily, performance, and its total focus on an ideal mental grammatical computational competence. With the recent philosophy (‘in the flesh’) of the ‘embodied mind’, time has now come for integrating the (linguistic) head with the (other part of the communicating) body and seeing communication as total communication of the whole body. This means that the communicating mind is no longer restricted to its ‘rational’ aspects but has to be conceived full-scale as integrating also all kinds of ‘irrational’ factors, like emotions and motivations. Another, no less important, implication of the above is that an individual’s ‘language faculty’ is to be understood rather as a faculty of total communication–verbal and non-verbal semiotic behavior is an integrated, multi-modal whole of total communication performed by whole human organisms. Cybersemiotics offers itself here as the meta-theoretical, transdisciplinary framework within which this new paradigm of total communication can be developed. http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/12/3/390/CybersemioticsPeircean(bio-) semioticsautopoiesiscyberneticsfunctional linguisticsbiolinguisticspragmaticsInterPragmaticsverbal communicationbodily communicationgesturetotal communicationcommunicative competence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ole Nedergaard Thomsen
spellingShingle Ole Nedergaard Thomsen
From Talking Heads to Communicating Bodies: Cybersemiotics and Total Communication
Entropy
Cybersemiotics
Peircean(bio-) semiotics
autopoiesis
cybernetics
functional linguistics
biolinguistics
pragmatics
InterPragmatics
verbal communication
bodily communication
gesture
total communication
communicative competence
author_facet Ole Nedergaard Thomsen
author_sort Ole Nedergaard Thomsen
title From Talking Heads to Communicating Bodies: Cybersemiotics and Total Communication
title_short From Talking Heads to Communicating Bodies: Cybersemiotics and Total Communication
title_full From Talking Heads to Communicating Bodies: Cybersemiotics and Total Communication
title_fullStr From Talking Heads to Communicating Bodies: Cybersemiotics and Total Communication
title_full_unstemmed From Talking Heads to Communicating Bodies: Cybersemiotics and Total Communication
title_sort from talking heads to communicating bodies: cybersemiotics and total communication
publisher MDPI AG
series Entropy
issn 1099-4300
publishDate 2010-03-01
description Current linguistics is biased towards considering as object of scientific study only verbal language, i.e., ordinary language whose basic entities are words, sentences, and texts. By having this focus, the crucial non-verbal semiotic contributions from acts of bodily communication are left out of consideration. On the face of it, this is a strange situation, because, phenomenologically, when observing a communicating dyad, what appears to the senses is a multimodal semiotic display–the interactants produce acts of total communication, the linguistic part of which has in fact to be disentangled from the integral semiotic behavior. That a human being should in the first place be conceptualized as a ‘talking head’, rather than a ‘communicating body’, stems from at least four historically interrelated fountains: ancient Greek philosophy with its emphasis on logos as meaning both rational mind and verbal language/speech as well as with its rejection of rhetoric (including body language); Cartesian dualistic rationalism where the body was the animal, mechanistic part of a human being, unworthy for the Geisteswissenschaften; Saussure’s formal structuralism with its defocusing of the individual’s performance, parole, and its high focus on societal langue; and Chomskyan linguistics with its neglect of actual, also bodily, performance, and its total focus on an ideal mental grammatical computational competence. With the recent philosophy (‘in the flesh’) of the ‘embodied mind’, time has now come for integrating the (linguistic) head with the (other part of the communicating) body and seeing communication as total communication of the whole body. This means that the communicating mind is no longer restricted to its ‘rational’ aspects but has to be conceived full-scale as integrating also all kinds of ‘irrational’ factors, like emotions and motivations. Another, no less important, implication of the above is that an individual’s ‘language faculty’ is to be understood rather as a faculty of total communication–verbal and non-verbal semiotic behavior is an integrated, multi-modal whole of total communication performed by whole human organisms. Cybersemiotics offers itself here as the meta-theoretical, transdisciplinary framework within which this new paradigm of total communication can be developed.
topic Cybersemiotics
Peircean(bio-) semiotics
autopoiesis
cybernetics
functional linguistics
biolinguistics
pragmatics
InterPragmatics
verbal communication
bodily communication
gesture
total communication
communicative competence
url http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/12/3/390/
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