06/27/25

Looking at George Mikhailovsky’s Chapter (2024) “Meanings, Their Hierarchy, and Evolution” (Part 3 of 9)

1077 The term, “Frege’s three corners”, is not merely a stylish title.

Each of the three actualities listed in the above figure stand at the corner of a triangle.

1078 Why Frege?

The biosemiotic noumenal overlay, diagrammed in the course of these examinations, reflects the work of modern philosophers writing in the late 1800s and the early 1900s.  For the topic at hand, these include Charles Peirce (1839-1914 AD), Ferdinand de Saussure (1859-1914), Gottlob Frege (1848-1925) and Edmund Husserl (1859-1938).

The first (Peirce) rediscovers the definition of sign as a triadic relation after consulting the writings of Baroque scholastics.  The second (Saussure) technically defines “language” as “two arbitrarily related systems of differences”.  The third (Frege) explores semantics, symbolic logic, the philosophy of language and mind, and distinguishes between “sense” and “reference”.  The fourth (Husserl) formalizes a practice performed out-of-sight by the social sciences of the late-nineteenth century.  Phenomenology offers techniques for identifying what a noumenon must be.

1079 Once again, why Frege?

Oh, because the author calls upon Frege’s triangle, consisting of three corners, corresponding to symbola, referentb and conceptc.

Here is a picture for how those corners fall out.

1080 This figure can be compared to author’s “semantic prism” (Figure 6.1).  The purpose of depicting this triangle as a prism is to show how one referent may have more that one concept and how one symbol can link to more than one concept and referent.

To me, this triangular constellation suggests that multiplicity must be distinguished from spirality.  The triangle spirals through time as indexa,b (specifyinga,b) goes to symbolb,c (exemplarb,c) and symbolb,c (exemplarb,c) goes to iconc,a(interventionalc,a) and so on.

1081 That is to say, multiplicity does not necessarily raise the question of how one sign leads to another.  Spirality does.

But, spirality is not obvious, as the author shows.

1082 It stands right below the surface of his discussion.

If Frege labels the corners of the semantic triangle, then what do the lines between the corners represent?

If each of the corners of Frege’s triangle belongs to a different level, then the lines must transit from one level of an interscope to another.

That is precisely what the sign-relation does.

1083 Here is a picture.

1084 I first consider the corners.

In this figure, the actuality2 for each level is depicted as a dyad.  [Contiguity] occupies the corner.  The two real elements occupy either side of the vertex.  Colors code for level. 

Aristotle’s hylomorphe is exemplar here.  SO equates to matter.  The contiguity is [substance].  SV is like form.  A thing2 is matter [substance] form.  A thing2 belongs to the realm of actuality2.

Rounding each corner corresponds to a thing2, composed like matter [substance] form, with SO [contiguity] SV.  Frege’s terms are substantial, because they label the contiguities.

1085 What about the lines?

An indexa,b is as sign based on indication and pointing.  On the first side, a symbola as substance points to a referentbas substance.  A real initiating (semiotic) event2a indicates information2b.

A symbolb,c is a sign based on habit and convention.  On the second side, a referentb as substance makes a habit of a conceptc as substance.  Information2b symbolizes a goal2c.

An iconc,a is a sign based on imagery or similarity.  On the third side, a conceptc as substance images a symbola as substance.  A goal2c images a real initiating (semiotic) event2a.

1086 Do the lines connect in a true triangle?

No, the lines spiral, in time, in space, and in human cognition.  The triangle never closes.

Instead, the triangle spirals.

1087 Spiral?

As an analogy, imagine our solar system traveling in orbit of the galactic center, along with millions of other stellar entities.  Our planet rotates around the Sun.  The Sun has gone around the galactic center only 18 times.  That is not many orbits.  The Earth is rotating in a local pocket of gravity generated by our Sun.  Yet, our Sun is moving too.  So, the Earth is spiraling through space.

1088 To me, this concept is rather disconcerting.  Or, is it just an image?

I would prefer a moving Earth orbiting a stationary Sun.

Okay, I would really prefer the situation where the Earth is not moving and the Sun is going around it.

After, that is what my world looks like to me.

Similarly, I would rather have a hierarchy rather than a spirality.

With a spirality, one never knows what will happen next.

1089 The previous examination of the constructivist approach (by Alexander Kravchenko) arrives at a claim that pertains to this chapter.  Meanings are the products of the operations of distinction made by a mindful observer in the domain of language.

The author of this chapter of Pathways strives to perform operations of distinction in order to elucidate the evolution of a hierarchy of semiotic beings in our universe.

Yes, hierarchies of semiotic beings manifest as multiple spiralities of the biosemiotic noumenal overlay.

06/26/25

Looking at George Mikhailovsky’s Chapter (2024) “Meanings, Their Hierarchy, and Evolution” (Part 4 of 9)

1090 Section 6.2 is titled, “Hierarchogenesis and Its Stages During the General Evolution of the Universe”.  In this section, the author isolates fifteen beginnings (hierarchogenetic events) in the history of the universe.  The first six are “cosmic”, since they concern the universe to which we belong.  The next six are “substantive”, since they have to do with the stuff of life.  The last three are “questionable”, since they have to do with humans in our current Lebenswelt.

I wonder whether I can coin the word, “spiralogenesis”?

1091 Or maybe, “stageogenesis”?

Each beginning serves as a platform for further spiralogenesis… er… hierarchogenesis.

Plus, the selection of hierarchogenetic events is um… selective.

For example, are the earliest galaxies, which I label “cosmic #6” or C6, “galaxies” in the same fashion as later galaxies?

Or are they the purest form of galaxy, since they are initially composed of unspoiled H and He?

1092 The same goes for early and later stars.

Here is the list of my selection of the author’s cosmic entries.

1093 Now, I want to travel the spiral for C1.

To start, I must wonder, “What is the goal of the universe?”

After all, goal2c corresponds to the exemplar sign-object (SOe) along with the interventional sign-vehicle (SVi).  So, if SVi is the postulated Big Bang (the initiating event where the laws of physics for our particular universe pop out of a pinprick concentrated enough to contain the energy equivalent of the mass of the universe), then SOe has some explaining to do.

Er… I should rather say… someone may need to speculate on the nature of {SOe[conceptc]SVi}2c for the instance when SVi is the current postulation of the Big Bang in astrophysics.

1094 That said, let me consider the interventional sign-relation in Frege’s triangle for this beginning.

1095 I follow the formula for the bottom line.

A perspective-level Big Bang2c (SVi) stands for a content-level sign-object {(SOi)}2a on the basis of (something akin to) what is happening3a operating on the potential of ‘something’ happening’1a (SIi).  Plus, this SOi operates on the basis of imagery and similarity.  The entire sign-relation is an icon.  A message images a meaning.  A symbola pictures a conceptc.

1096 How do I get around the Frege’s corner 2a?

This corner corresponds to a real initiating (semiotic) event2a.  The roles of SOi and SVs differ within that actuality2a.

Hmmm, maybe I need to go back to the interventional sign-relation.

In C1, SVi acts as a universe-manifesting pinprick in an emptiness before the universe.  If this is so, and if SOi is the intention of the expression2a, then SOi is the manifestation of time, space, energy and law2a.

Here is a picture of the interventional sign-relation for C1.

1097 I am still trying to get around the lower-left corner, corresponding to the content-level actuality as a dyad.

As far as the category-based three-level interscope goes, the corner is the content-level actuality2a of a real initiating (semiotic) event2a.

As far as the embedded sign-relations go, the corner is the dyad, {SOi[symbola]SVs.}2a

Frege’s symbola corresponds to the message1 that makes a spoken word2 possible in the normal context of definition3.

1098 Here are my associations.

The real initiating (semiotic) event2a consists of {the manifestation of time, space, energy and law (SOi) [symbola] the first 10-19 seconds of the expansion of the universe (SVs)}2a.

Whew!

06/25/25

Looking at George Mikhailovsky’s Chapter (2024) “Meanings, Their Hierarchy, and Evolution” (Part 5 of 9)

1099 Wait a microsecond!

One-thousand nanoseconds?

Or ten-trillion 10-19 seconds?

1100 Let me look at section 6.3, titled “Potential Meanings During the Abiotic Period of the Evolution of the Universe”.  The C1 spiralogenetic event is discussed a couple of pages into this section.

For the interventional sign-relation, the Big Bang2c (SVi) stands for the manifestation of space, time, energy, natural laws, the fundamental constants, and more2a (SOi) in regards to (a normal context similar to) what is happening3aoperating on the potential of ‘something’ happening1a (SIi).

1101 This is 13 billion years ago.

But, that is not the distinctive feature.  The feature that differs from all other features, in the sense that it captures the attention of the reader (and author) is the time frame: 3.17 x 10-20 seconds.  That is an outstanding feature.  So, to me, it seems that this feature would be a good choice for SVs side of the real initiation (semiotic) event2a.

1102 Let me say that in a different manner.

The content-level thing2a is a real initiating (semiotic) event2a.

The actuality2a is a hylomorphe, somehow re-enacting Aristotle’s hylomorphe of matter [substance] form.

1103 The matter-like element is SOithe manifestation of space, time, energy, natural laws, fundamental constants and so on.

The form-like element is SVsthe first 10-19 seconds of the expansion of the universe.

The substance-like [contiguity] is [symbola] for Frege and [message] for the category-based nested form for the definition of a spoken word.

1104 Here is a snapshot of different ways to depict the same corner.

1105 This raises a question about the word, “symbol”.

For Frege, a symbola is a corner of a semantic triangle.  The other corners are referentb and conceptc.  All three terms apply to the character of spoken words.  Every speech act is a symbola, pointing to a referentb, and representing a conceptc

Frege’s term, symbola, is not the same as Peirce’s use of the same term, symbolb,c, describing a sign-relation whose sign-object is based on habit, routine, convention, law as so on.

1106 The superscripts tell a story.

Frege’s symbola is a contiguity that belongs to the content-level of a three-level interscope.

Peirce’s symbolb,c is a sign-relation that entangles the situation and perspective levels.

1107 Here is a picture, in terms of Frege’s triangle.

1108 So I ask, “What is it about the spoken word that is captured by symbola that is not grasped by symbolb,c?”

Ferdinand de Saussure’s definition of spoken language provides a clue.  Spoken language consists of two arbitrarily related systems of differences, parole and langue.  I prefer to use the French, because an English translation of these words is misleading.  Maybe, “speech” and “cogitation” will suffice.  But, not for me.

1109 What does this imply?

Each parole (spoken word) differs from any other parole, constituting a system of differences. This system of differences must exist by convention, since there is no way for a symbolic order to exist on the qualities of similarity and pointing.  So, the system of differences of symbolas touches base with symbolb,cs (sign-relations), because each symbola (spoken word) is different from any other symbola (spoken word).  This allows the spoken word (symbola) to signify on the basis of habit, convention, law and so on (that is, what defines symbolb,c ).

1110 So, my selection of {SOi [symbola] SVs}2a is similar to a speaking person choosing just the right word (SVs) to label what is being manifested in the interventional sign-relation (SOi).

Yes, [symbola] is like choosing the right word (SVs) to image the message of the interventional sign-object (SOi).

Symbolb,c labels when information2b (SVe) stands for a goal2c (SOe) in regards to a normal context3c and potential1cthat are similar to what makes sense3c operating on the potential of ‘contextualizing the situation1c (SIe).

For other views on the word, “symbol”, see Comments on Robert Berwick and Noam Chomsky’s Book (2016) Why Only Us? (by Razie Mah, available at smashwords and other e-book venues).

06/24/25

Looking at George Mikhailovsky’s Chapter (2024) “Meanings, Their Hierarchy, and Evolution” (Part 6 of 9)

1111 Of course, I must admit that my SVs may not be the right feature to label (symbolawhat is being manifested by the emergence of time, space, energy, mass, and the fundaments of physics (SOi).

Let me put it the other way.  If I simulate the expansion of the universe with time going backwards, then I am simulating a contraction that, after 13 billion years of shrinking, ends up with the entire universe contracting (backwards) into one point, which is called, by the calculating physicists, “the first singularity”.  But, who knows what it is, because “the first singularity is just a label for this theoretical time-limit, which is so incredible, that within 10-19seconds, all the gluons and quarks2b and what they do2b constellates.

1112 The corresponding specifying sign-relation goes like this.  The first 10-19 seconds in the expansion of the universe2a (SVs) stands for gluons and quarks2b (as matter) (SOs) in regards to the universe’s self-governance3boperating on potential courses of action1b (SIs).

Here is a picture.

1113 While it may seem that I have strayed far from the biosemiotic noumenal overlay, I have not.  I am simply going through it using a geometric motif.  The author suggests doing this.  So, I I continue my path around the triangle.

1114 I have already rounded into Frege’s corner 2b, the situation-level actuality2b, called “information2b“.

Here is a list of configurations.

1115 The dyads are notable.  The upper element is like Aristotle’s matter. The contiguity is like [substance].  The lower element is like Aristotle’s form

The author says that before life, “potential meaning” is the thing itself.  From prior examinations, I know that [message] is “potential sign” and [presence] is “potential meaning”.  The first cosmic hierarchogenetic cycle, C1, exemplifies the lesson.

[Message] is the continuity between the manifestation of time, space, energy, laws and physical constants (SOi) and the first 10-19 seconds of the contraction point from a backwards simulation of the expansion of the universe (SVs).

[Presence] marks the contiguity between the appearance the most elementary forms within the expanding pinprick(now moving forwards in time in the simulation, SOs) and what they do (SVe).

1116 Next, information2b (SVe) stands for a goal2c (SOe) with respect to salience3c((1c)) (SIe).

In the exemplar sign-relation of C1, what gluons and quarks do2b (SVe) stands for elementary particle physics2c (SOe) in regards to the universal natural laws3c operating on the potential of these elementary forms1c (SIe).

1117 Here is a picture.

1118 Now, this exemplar sign-relation sounds perfectly circular.  What the thing itself does (SVe) stands for what our model says it does (SOe) in regards to the laws that we program into our simulations3c operating on the data that we have observed and measured1c (SIe).

1119 I mean, like… how does a physicist even observe and measure an elementary particle like a gluon (the glue that holds quarks together)?

It cannot be easy.  It must be so difficult as to require billions of (put in your favorite fiat currency) in order to fund even a small number of experiments.  The apparatus may take years to build.  No, it may take decades.  So, few physicists will be able to replicate the conditions that go into each experiment.  Unless, they spend billions of {put in your favorite fiat currency}.

Well, let me not dwell on that.

06/23/25

Looking at George Mikhailovsky’s Chapter (2024) “Meanings, Their Hierarchy, and Evolution” (Part 7 of 9)

1120 After all, I now face Frege’s corner 2c.

1121 Elementary particle physics (SOe) is like matter.  Hadrons (SVi) appear like form.  The contiguity between them is [meaning], which is like [substance].

With that said, the title of the book, Pathways to the Origin and Evolution of Meanings in the Universe (2024, edited by Alexei Sharov and George Mikhailovsky, the latter being the author of this article) can be reconfigured into the much less extravagant and more academic-sounding title, The Nature of the Exemplar Sign-Object and Its Contiguity with the Interventional Sign-Vehicle.

But, that would result in a completely different book altogether.

Just look at the expanse that this chapter covers.

1122 Rounding the corner 2c, I consider the interventional sign-relation for C2.

The appearance of hadrons2c (SVi) stands for the strong force interactions2a (SOi) in regards to what is happening3aoperating on the potential that a hadron-binding  strong force may happen1a (SIi).

1123 This raises the difficulty posed earlier.  The strong force manifesting2a is a sign-object based on images and similarities.  The interventional sign-relation is an icon.  Whether strong-force interaction is the proper image, the “correct” image, so to speak, depends on the content normal context3a and potential1a, which do not even appear in the purely relational structure of semiotic agency.  They belong to the interventional sign-relation.

In the first part of the chapter (section 6.1), the author emphasizes that one conceptc can connect to a variety of symbolas and a symbola can correspond to a number of referentbs and more than one referentb may go into a conceptc.  I feel that I am running into that multiplicity here, on the second spiral, C2, after the spiral for the Big Bang, C1.

At Frege’s corner 2a, I get the impression that I face a system of differences, where symbola is a substance for one SOiand more than one SVs.

1124 Here is my guess.

1125 After symbola, the specifying sign-relation follows.

Energy conversion to mass2a (SVs) stands for (in a specifying manner) protons and neutrons (the most notable hadrons, SOs) in regards to the self-governance of energy at very high temperatures3b operating on potential courses of natural action1b (SIs).

1126 Does that work for Frege’s triangle?

1127 Hadrons appear as the SVi and they manifest the strong force as SOi.  But, what is the message?

The message has to do with a semiotics of energy converting into mass in the early universe (yes, the time now is much later, at around 10-13 seconds).  This conversion (SVs) stands for the types of hadrons that we commonly encounter: protons and neutrons, plus more (SOs).  The typology is complex, because electrons, which have so little mass that they are charged waves, must be in the mix.

I wonder whether models of self-governance (SIs) within hadrons is fully appreciated.  

I imagine that the potential courses of action (SIs) are modeled from particle collision experiments.

But, this story-line is outside my expertise.

1128 Here is my take for Frege’s corner 2b.

Yes, I am starting to appreciate that the potential meanings of inanimate things are the things themselves.

The specification of protons and neutrons (and electrons and other hadron-related manifestations) is like matter.  The exemplification of what they do is like form.  The contiguity between them is [referentb] for Frege and [presence] for Peirce.

1129 At this moment, I notice that Frege’s [referentb] reminds me of a scientific model overlaying its noumenon and Peirce’s [presence] give me the impression of the thing itself, as what it is [presence] what it does.

06/21/25

Looking at George Mikhailovsky’s Chapter (2024) “Meanings, Their Hierarchy, and Evolution” (Part 8 of 9)

1130 Here is my guess for the exemplar sign-relation that follows in C2. 

What these scientifically familiar subatomic particles do2b (SVe) stands for nuclear physics2c (SOe) in regards to natural laws3c contextualizing second spiral (C2) forms1c (SIe).

1131 Now, approaching Frege’s corner 2c, I wonder, “What is the goal2c of nuclear physics2c (SOe)?”

In addressing this question both hierarchogenesis and spiralogenesis face the same problem.

1132 How does one cross the bridge of [meaning]?

In one way, a perspective-level decision2c comes from within the semiotic agency of the universe itself (in the sign-element of SOe).

In another way, the intervention starts with an actual action2c (SVitriggering the content-level of a new interscope3a((1a)) (SIi)…

1133 …and it ends with an expression of intention2a (SOi) that stands on the threshold of [message].

1134 This harkens back to the author’s picture of a semantic prism (Figure 6.1) where one conceptc may connect to several symbolas.

1135 My choices render the following interventional sign-relation.

The appearance of hydrogen and helium nuclei (SVi) stands for the ability to manifest gravity (due to the nuclear mass) and electromagnetism (due to particles with charge) (SOi) in the normal context of what is happening3a operating on the potential that ‘energy transferring to particles with mass’ happens1a (SIi).

1136 Now, I need to step out of the loop, because I am proceeding into C5 in the author’s Table 6.2.

Yes, the next triangle takes me to the formation of the earliest stars.

06/20/25

Looking at George Mikhailovsky’s Chapter (2024) “Meanings, Their Hierarchy, and Evolution” (Part 9 of 9)

1137 The material that I cover in my portrayal of C1 and C2 using Frege’s triangle goes with section 6.3, titled “Potential Meanings During the Abiotic Period of the Evolution of the Universe”.

Here is a picture.

C4 (is missing because it) covers the genesis of atoms with masses greater than helium.  Technically, C4 follows C5, as written above.  Why?  Atoms with masses greater than helium are produced by nuclear fusion in stars.  The story bifurcates from the cosmic sequence to the substance sequence.  The substance sequence starts with atoms with masses greater than helium and proceeds through the emergence of life.

1138 The Frege triangles for C1 and C2 are easy compared to what follows in section 6.4 (“Evolution of Meanings in Biological Systems”) and 6.5 (“The Evolution of Meanings in Human Societies and the Relationship between Hierarchies of Substance (that is, biology) and Semantics (that is, within our current Lebenswelt)”).

Nevertheless, my exercises demonstrate the utility of Frege’s triangle in the extension of the biosemiotic interscope into all aspects of postmodern inquiry, including into abiotic noumena, the domains of physics and chemistry.

1139 There are many threads to follow in this demonstration.

The first thread is obvious.  Can this be done for all noumena listed in Table 6.2?

The answer is yes.  Once one starts a spiral, other spirals follow, and they diverge, and they coalesce, and who knows what else.

1140 The starting point of the author’s cosmos chain (C1) is obviously the Big Bang.

But, one can say that other starting points can be imagined, hence theories of the multiverse.  The multiverse consists of many universes, each with different energy, space, natural laws and constants.  Physicists can simulate these many “universes”.  Hollywood movie makers can fashion plotlines from the conceptc.  It is all very theatrical, including the name for the start of our own universe, “the first singularity”.

1141 The starting point of the author’s substantial chain (S1) is atoms, made in stellar furnaces because (up to the atomic configuration of iron) fusing atoms releases a tremendous amount of energy, enough to keep a star from falling in on itself from gravity.

Anyone who has cracked a chemistry textbook knows that there is no “first singularity” to be found in this discipline.  One can imagine that each element in the periodic table constitutes its own singularity.  Spirals diverge and coalesce in the most fantastic ways, so there is no telling which molecules are the precursors to life and which are not.

1142 This is where Frege’s terms complement Peirce’s.

Frege’s terms serve as spoken labels.  Labels are used for symbolic operations.  Symbolic operations undergird grammar (that is, language).  So, Frege’s terms point to the somewhat disturbing intimation that speech-alone talk (or a theoretical equivalent) is intercalated into semiotic agency and, by way of bridging, to significance that is outside of semiotic agency (that is, the interventional sign-relation).

Here is a picture.

1143 Peirce’s terms also serve as spoken labels.  These labels apply to the contiguities between real elements in the actualities of all interscopes.  These labels apply to something like [substance], in a contiguity between something like matter and something like form.  To a greater or lesser extent, all dyads in Peirce’s secondness pay tribute to Aristotle’s hylomorphe as an exemplar.

1144 The biosemiotic interscope reifies into the biosemiotic noumenal overlay, including both semiotic agency and the interventional sign-relation.

This chapter presents an impossible challenge.  Spirals (or hierarchies) go back to the first singularity, thirteen billion years ago.  Each spiral brings the inquirer to a new level.  Some spirals write small, others write large, but they all begin … for us … with a clot.  A pen touches paper, then moves to portray a diagram, a purely relational structure, portraying what all living things have in common.

1145 This examination recites all that has gone before.

This examination is a refutation to those who think that modern science knows enough to weave these spirals into a vision of our universe, as well as of us, the images of the one who speaks the universe into being.

1146 I say, “Diagram spirals!”

Perhaps, the author agrees and anticipates that Frege’s triangles will reveal a hierarchy… or is it?… a spirality that portrays meanings and their evolution.

06/19/25

Looking at Lorenzo Magnani’s Chapter (2024) “Anchors of Meaning” (Part 1 of 7)

1147 The text before me is chapter eighteen of Pathways (see point 831 for book details, pages 379-400).  The full chapter title is “Anchors of Meaning: The Intertwining of Signs, Abduction and Cognitive Niches”.  This chapter opens Part IV of Pathways.  The title of Part IV is “Meanings in Humans and Beyond”.  

1148 The author belongs to the Philosophy Section of the Department of Humanities at the University of Pavia, Italy.  He has a scientific affiliation as well, being a member of the Computational Philosophical Laboratory.

1149 The abstract tells a story that mirrors this examination (so far).  Biosemiotics is not only semiotic agency.  Biosemiotics encompasses semiotic agency and the interventional sign relation.  The two are bridged through the contiguities of [conceptc] and [symbola].

Human brains thrive on semiosis.  The brain generates a series of signs (specifying and exemplar) that latch onto an apparently external sign-relation (interventional) with the two contiguities of [conceptc] and [symbola].

1150 Or, should I use the word, “anchors”?

Here is the picture of the [conceptc] and the [symbola] as corners that anchor Frege’s triangle. 

[Conceptc] is the contiguity within the perspective-level actuality2c of a goal2c.

A banner wraps around the interventional sign-relation.

[Symbola] is the contiguity within the content-level actuality2a of a real initiating (semiotic) event2a.

1151 In section 18.1 (“Humans as Ecological Engineers and Chance Selectors”), the real initiating (semiotic) event2aencompasses innately anticipated systems of differences.  For, example, the infant expects to interact with persons.  Each person has his or her own face.  It’s like a system of differences (Saussure’s view) or a symbolic order (Peirce’s approach).

The family is one of the smallest social circles of the Lebenswelt that we evolved in.  Since roles are re-enacted generation after generation within this social circle, one might think that the each person2a images an appropriate role2c.  This happens at first…

…and one sees it when an infant gets separated from its mother.

That tyke is not taking any chances.

1152 The child is born with innate expectations of the smallest social circle (SOe) [and that means] family (SVi).

Does this look like Frege’s corner 2c?

1153 If so, then the interventional sign-relation, which stands outside every agent in the family, yet is the reality in which each agent participates, follows.

Family members2c (SVi) stand for their particular social roles2a (SOi) in regards to (a normal context like) what is happening3a operating on (a possibility like) the potential of ‘something’ happening1a (SIi).

1154 Here is a diagram of the interventional sign-relation for a newborn.

1155 Is this cultural-niche construction?

If so, then who or what is constructing this niche?  Or does the niche construct itself because it exploits an opportunitythat arises from the independent actuality of sign-relations?  Just like a bat exploits acoustics to echo-locate, humans exploit sign-relations to abduct who mommy must be.

Sign-relations are immaterial beings that entangle the material.  The materiality of the family members2c (SVi) signify the manifestation of ‘home’2a (the immaterial manifestation of family belonging, SOi) in regards to the normal context of the birth of an infant3a operating on the potential of ‘a successful birth’1a (SIi).

06/18/25

Looking at Lorenzo Magnani’s Chapter (2024) “Anchors of Meaning” (Part 2 of 7)

1156 Am I getting pulled into the turnings of Frege’s triangle?

Here is a picture of Frege’s corner 2a for this application.

1157 This corner pertains to all the agents in the family and, in an odd sort of way, the family itself as a cultural agent.  The family (as a cultural agent) exploits the potential of triadic relations, in a way that differs from each person of the family.  How so?  To me, it seems roles (such as mother, father and siblings, as well as aunt and uncle) adapt to the family and the conditions at hand, while each person adapts to a role and the conditions at hand.

The contiguity of [symbola] designates one crucial role among a system of differences.  There are various roles in family.  Only one brings the matter of family belonging (SOi) into the form of where mother is (SVs).

1158 This is precisely what Comments on Michael Tomasello’s Arc of Inquiry (1999-2019) (by Razie Mah, available at smashwords and other e-book venues) elaborates, but not in regards to the social circle of family and friends.  Tomasello discusses the social circle of the team.

The family works as an agent (composed of agents).  So does the team.

1159 The next side of Frege’s triangle for a newborn looks like this.

1160 The location of mother2a (SVs) stands for where the infant attains food and safety2b (SOs) in regards to the self-governance of the family2b operating on potential courses of action1b (SIs).

1161 Mom, the person2a (SVs), is specified through the role of the one where the infant attains food and safety2b(SOs).  The materiality of mom and infant are entangled in an immaterial specificative sign. And, this turns out to be exemplar.

1162 Next, the inquirer passes Frege’s corner 2b.  For semiotic agency, this location is information2b.

Here is a picture.

1163 What information2b is the family gathering?

The innate expectations of the infant are satisfied with mom, in a most mammalian sense, (SOs) [referentbwhat the person of mom is doing (SVe).  She is doing far more than providing milk and comfort.  She is participating in the construction of a “cognitive niche”.  Here, “niche” is the potential of ‘something independent of the adapting hominins’.  That ‘something’ is triadic relations.

The person of mother2b is like matter.  What mother does is like form2b.  The substance of information2b is Frege’s [referentb].  Matter [referentb] form.  Mom [isb] what mother does.

1164 Indeed, the family as both social circle and agent corresponds to what scientists label, “niche construction”.  In the Lebenswelt that we evolved in, the agent of family culturally endorses motherly behavior that signifies what mother is supposed to be.

06/17/25

Looking at Lorenzo Magnani’s Chapter (2024) “Anchors of Meaning” (Part 3 of 7)

1165 A newborn’s biosemiotic spiral completes with the exemplar sign.

What mother does2b (SVe) stands for infant and mother bonding2c (SOe) in regards to the natural laws of family3ccontextualizing the potential of ‘human bonding within the most fundamental social circle’2c (SIe).

1166 Then, what happens?

Everyone has observed what happens next.

No infant is satisfied with mother for long.  Mom is crucial, but mom cannot perform the infant’s exploration of the world.  Here, other members of the family come into play, each manifesting roles that add onto (and in the process, transform) the mother-infant bond.  There is no one like mom.  And, within a unique fusion of the material and immaterial, the infant grows.

1167 Personally, I would take the next spiral in the direction of the team.  But, teams come much later.  Surely, there must be a spiral for the other members of the family.  The social circle of intimate friends contains around five people.  So, in terms of the numbers, that might go next. The social circle of the team engages fifteen.  And, that is where Professor Michael Tomasello begins his disquisition.

1168 Here is a picture of the start of the team spiral, which may well express (as various experts will insist) a bit of a jump.

Who goes from infant to team player?

1169 The nuclear family is one of the smallest social circles, numbering around 5.  Intimate friends also make a small social circle, maybe around 5.  Teams are typically three times larger, numbering 15.  Bands are three times larger at 50.  Communities are three times larger at 150.  The human brain size correlates to group sizes of 150.

1170 The topic of social circles is examined in Comments on Clive Gamble, John Gowlett and Robin Dunbar’s Book (2014) Thinking Big, by Razie Mah, available at smashwords and other e-book venues.

1171 Section 18.2 is titled “Semiotic Brains Construct Cognitive Niches”.

The topic of neodarwinism is treated in this examination in points 0710 through 0752.

These points contain a technical definition of the term, “niche”.  A niche is the potential of an actuality independent of the adapting species.  Here, the adapting species are hominins.  The actuality independent of the adapting species is thetriadic relation.  Triadic relations include sign-relations, interscopes, judgments and mediations.

1172 At the end of section 18.2, the author draws upon the works of fellow biosemioticians.  Our phenotype is due to genes that code for a body capable of semiotic agency.  Hominins do semiotic agency like no other creature does semiotic agency.  Our adaptations are both environmental (where the ecology challenges individual and social-circle as semiotic agents) and cultural (where the habits of one social circle challenge individual and other social-circles semiotic agents).

1173 Section 18.3 is titled “Cognitive Niche Construction Expresses an Evolutionary Sense of Purposefulness”.

This is a tricky claim. Adaptations to the environment should yield divergent evolution.  Adaptations to culture should yield convergent evolution, insofar as culture exploits the potential of triadic relations.

The bottom line of human evolution?

All species in the Homo genus adapt to the potential of triadic relations (see The Human Niche, by Razie Mah, available at smashwords and other e-book venues).

1174 If the human niche is the potential of triadic relations, what is the meaning of the term, “cognitive niche”?

Spoken words are so curious.

Human evolution is both divergent (adaptations into an environmental niche) and convergent (adaptations into the niche of triadic relations).

Both engage cognition.

1175 The nature of agent proves crucial.

All living agents (even subagents)3 are normal contexts for semiotic agency2 emerging form (and situating) the possibility of ‘final causality’1.

Here is a picture for non-human agents.  The fundamental nested form for agent occupies the top line.

The lower nested form is derivative.

“This2” in the lower nested form corresponds to “semiotic agency2” in the upper nested form.

1176 I can characterize the agent3 with a complementary normal context3.  The holder of adaptive behaviors3 reminds this inquirer of the darwinism of “neodarwinism”, where natural selection3b brings the actuality of adaptation2b into relation to its niche1b.  A niche1b contains the the capacity to generate adaptive behaviours1b.

1177 A new category-based nested form is born.  The normal context of animal adaptive behaviors3 contextualizes the possibility of ‘being able to generate adaptive adaptive behaviors’1. 

This nested form seems almost redundant, since it takes the actuality of one type of adaptation2 and moves it to the category of firstness as ‘a capacity for the animal to solve challenges’1.

What is it1 to solve an environmental or an ecological challenge?

Is it1 like the way that a slime mold figures out how to get through mazes?  Yes and more.  Since the slime mold does not have a brain, cognition is not part of the picture.  But, for mammals and birds, cognition is in the picture.  Mammals and birds can be remarkably clever.  For these types of animals, cognition powers the capacity to generate adaptive behaviors1.

1178 Here is the comparison again, adjusting for importance of cognition.

1179 Now, I can wrap up the agent versus adaptive behavior comparison for mammals and birds.

The normal context of agent3 brings the actuality of semiotic agency2 into relation with the possibility of ‘final causality’1.

The normal context of animal adaptive behaviors3 brings the dyadic actuality, environmental opportunities and dangers [constructs] semiotic agency2, into relation with the potential of ‘cognition to generate adaptive behaviors’1.

Environmental opportunities and dangers are like matter.

Semiotic agency is like form.

1180 Purposefulness3((1)) covers the normal context3 of adaptive behavior3 and its potential1.  ‘Capacity to generate adaptive behaviors’1 parallels ‘final causality’1.

What2 does purposefulness3((1)) actualize2?

It3((1)) actualizes a dyad, where environmental opportunities and dangers [construct] semiotic agency2.

In the subsidiary nested form, the environment explains animal semiotic agency.