Parallels, interactions, and illuminations:traversing Chinese and Western theories of the sign

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ding Ersu
Published: University of Toronto Press,
Publisher Address: Toronto Buffalo
Publication Dates: c2010
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Subjects:
Carrier Form: xii, 210 p.: ill. ; 24 cm.
ISBN: 9781442640481 (hbk.)
1442640480 (acid-free paper)
Index Number: H0
CLC: H0
Call Number: H0 /D584
Contents: Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. The Platonic Triad and Its Chinese Counterpart -- 2. Ontological Realism under Fire -- 3. The Return of the Subject(s) -- 4. The Peircean Trichotomy -- 5. The Poetic Logic -- 6. Metaphor and Culture -- 7. Myth Making and Its Socio-Economic Functions
"The first major work in Sino-Western comparative semiotics, Parallels, Interactions, and Illuminations is a trans-disciplinary and intercultural effort that makes intellectual connections not only across such diverse academic fields as epistemology, anthropology, linguistics, sociology, and cultural studies but also between Chinese and Western theories of the sign in the conviction that they can shed light on one another.
In this groundbreaking work, Ersu Ding studies two traditions of semiotic realism, represented by Plato and Husserl in the West and by Mo Zi and Ouyang Jian in China. They share two fundamental assumptions with regard to meaning: that there exist ultimate qualities of things and states of affairs in the extrasemiotic world and that the meanings of words or other types of sign are derivatives of these essentials. A pioneering work that remains extraordinarily accessible, Parallels, Interactions, and Illuminations explores a wide range of issues, including inter-subjective negotiation of meani