Ecosemiotic Landscape
The distinction between humans and the natural world is an artefact and more a matter of linguistic communication than a conceptual separation. This Element proposes ecosemiotics as an epistemological tool to better understand the relationship between human and natural processes. Ecosemiotics with its affinity to the humanities, is presented here as the best disciplinary approach for interpreting complex environmental conditions for a broad audience, across a multitude of temporal and spatial scales. It is proposed as an intellectual bridge between divergent sciences to incorporate within a unique framework different paradigms. The ecosemiotic paradigm helps to explain how organisms interact with their external environments using mechanisms common to all living beings that capture external information and matter for internal usage. This paradigm can be applied in all the circumstances where a living being (man, animal, plant, fungi, etc.) performs processes to stay alive.
Product details
February 2021Adobe eBook Reader
9781108877299
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Environmental complexity: an ecosemiotic vision
- 3. Environmental uncertainty: contrasting strategies and species adaptation
- 4. Information theory and meaning
- 5. The role of ecology in the ecosemiotic arena
- 6. Landscape dimension: some relevant characteristics of landscape
- 7. Resources: a general theory
- 8. An ecosemiotic approach to landscape description and interpretation: from zoosemiotics to an eco-field model
- 9. Fundamentals of ecoacoustics: a new quantitative contribution to the ecosemiotic narrative
- 10. Cultural landscapes.