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Informationen zum Autor Paul Kockelman is a linguistic anthropologist, with a strong area focus in Latin America, who is broadly interested in the relation between meaning, value, and information. His scholarship, developed in more than 25 articles, has focused on a broad set of interrelated topics concerning language, culture and mind. Methodologically, he draws on his empirical research to analyze relations among grammatical categories, discourse patterns, social relations, and cultural values as they unfold in both face-to-face and more mediated forms of interaction. His research has been sustained by extensive linguistic and ethnographic fieldwork, primarily among speakers of Q'eqchi'-Maya living in the cloud forests of highland Guatemala, and now more and more among scientists and engineers working on and with a variety of information technologies. Klappentext This books offers a naturalistic and critical theory of signs, minds, and meaning-in-the-world. Zusammenfassung This books offers a naturalistic and critical theory of signs, minds, and meaning-in-the-world. Inhaltsverzeichnis Figures Tables 1. Semiotic Ontologies 1. Signs, Minds, and Meaning-in-the-World 2. Ontology, Interaction, and Infrastructure 2. Biosemiosis, Technocognition, and Sociogenesis 1. Relations between Relations 2. Significance and Selection 3. Communication between Conspecifics 4. The Organization of Cognitive Processes 5. Framing 6. Artificial and Natural Selection, Sieving and Serendipity 7. Lawn-Mowers and Logic Gates 8. Relations between Relations Revisited 9. Networks of Interconnected Envorganisms 10. The Evolution and Epidemiology of Culture 3. Enclosing and Disclosing Worlds 1. The Neo-Organon 2. Semiotic Processes, Social Theories, and Obviated Ontologies 3. Social Statuses, Material Substances, and Mental States 4. Relatively Emblematic Indices 5. Semiotic Agents and Generalized Others 6. From Performativity to Transformativity 4. Residence in the World 1. From Being-in-the-World to Meaning-in-the-World 2. Heeding Affordances 3. Wielding Instruments 4. Undertaking Actions 5. Inhabiting Roles 6. Fulfilling Identities 7. From Acting Under a Description to Comporting Within an Interpretation 5. Representations of the World 1. Intentionality Reframed 2. Cognitive Representations 3. Discursive Practices 4. From Theory of Mind to the Interpretation of Signs 5. Intentionality and Emblemeticity 6. Selfhood, Affect, and Value 1. I Err Therefore I am 2. From Subjectivity to Selfhood 3. From Cognition to Affect 4. Maps, Terrains, and Travelers 5. From Meaning to Value ...