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  1. Semiocide as Negation: Review of Michael Marder’s Dump Philosophy. [REVIEW]Yogi Hale Hendlin - 2024 - Biosemiotics 17 (1):233-255.
    This review admires Michael Marder’s inquiry as a parallel for which biosemiotics can find points of conceptual resonance, even as methodological differences remain. By looking at the dump of ungrounded semiosis – the semiotics of dislocating referents from objects, and its effects – we can better do the work of applying biosemiotics not just towards the wonders of living relations, but also to the manifold ways in which industrial civilization is haphazardly yet systematically destroying the possibility for spontaneous yet contextualized (...)
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  • Why do birds have wings? A biosemiotic argument for the primacy of naturogenic sporting sites.Margrethe Voll Storaas & Sigmund Loland - forthcoming - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport:1-17.
    Where sporting games may be said to epitomize our species’ unique agential capacity for playful movement, sports played in nature differ from their equivalent played indoors in that they envelop the human agent within the living physical environment from which our agency originates. In this paper, we draw attention to how sporting sites differ according to origin by pursuing a biosemiotic line of reasoning. Here, the story of a meaningful human life begins with the eukaryotic cell, even though the human (...)
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