Biosemiotics/Attributions

Donald Favareau, (2006) 'The Evolutionary History of Biosemiotics' from the Introduction to Biosemiotics, ed. M. Barbieri, Berlin: Springer, pp.1-67. Permission from the author is issued with the following caveat: The electronic versions of the papers linked to on this page are presented here solely for the use of those scholars wishing an introductory acquaintance with my work. Both copyright issues and proper citation demands that any quotations taken from these works must be sourced from the original publications, which are indicated at the head of these documents, and whose page numbering (often differing from the page numbering appearing on these files) alone is authoritative.


Thomas A. Sebeok, (1995) 'Semiotics and the Biological Sciences: Initial Conditions'. Collegium Budapest/Institute for Advanced Study. Discussion Paper No. 17. November 1995. This paper is published open-access online by Collegium Budapest/Institute for Advanced Study, H-1014 Budapest Szentháromság utca 2. Tel:(36-1) 224 8300 http://www.colbud.hu.


Kalevi Kull, (2001) Jakob von Uexküll: An Introduction, Semiotica 134 (1/4): 1-59. © Semiotica. Article linked with permission from the author.


Kalevi Kull and Jesper Hoffmeyer, (2005) 'Thure von Uexküll 1908-2004', Signs Systems Studies, 33.2. © Sign Systems Studies. Link provided by permission of the authors.


Jesper Hoffmeyer, (2009) ‘Epilogue to Semiotics: Biology is Immature Biosemiotics’, in John Deely and Leonard Sbrocchi (eds.): Semiotics 2008. Proceedings of the 33rd Annual Meeting of the Semiotic Society of America. SSA and Legas Publishing, Ottawa, 927-942. © The Semiotic Society of America. Permission for website publication of a non-edited, non-formatted version of the article granted by the SSA and Legas Publishing.


Jesper Hoffmeyer, (2010) 'Semiotic Freedom: An Emerging Force' in Paul Davies and Niels Hendrik Gregersen (eds.), Information and the Nature of Reality: From Physics to Metaphysics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp.185-204. © Cambridge University Press. Reprinted with permission of Cambridge University Press on Jesper Hoffmeyer's website.


Kalevi Kull, (2009) ‘Biosemiotics: To know, what life knows’, Cybernetics and Human Knowing 16(3/4): 81-88.