| |
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| Han-liang Chang |
Is language a primary modeling system? On Juri Lotman's concept of semiosphere |
9-23 |
| Augusto Ponzio |
Modeling, dialogue, and globality: Biosemiotics and semiotics of self. 1. Semiosis, modeling, and dialogism |
25-63 |
| Susan Petrilli |
Modeling, dialogue, and globality: Biosemiotics and semiotics of self. 2. Biosemiotics, semiotics of self, and semioethics |
65-107 |
| Torkild Thellefsen, Christian Jantzen |
What relations are: A case study on conceptual relations, displacement of meaning and knowledge profiling |
109-132 |
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| Frederik Stjernfelt |
The ontology of espionage in reality and fiction: A case study on iconicity |
133-162 |
| Loreta Macianskaite |
Semiotics of guilt in two Lithuanian literary texts |
163-175 |
| Bruno Osimo |
Strange, very strange, like in a dream: Borders and translations in 'Strogij Yunosha' |
177-189 |
| |
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| Timo Maran |
Mimesis as a phenomenon of semiotic communication |
191-215 |
| Jelena Grigorjeva |
Lotman on mimesis |
217-237 |
| |
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| Maria del Mar Llera |
Pragmatic approaches to intercultural ethics: the basis for fostering communication among nationalist groups |
239-260 |
| Dalia Satkauskyte |
The myth of the nation of poets and mass poetry in Lithuania |
261-269 |
| Marcin Brocki |
Semiotics of culture and New Polish Ethnology |
271-279 |
| |
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| Morten Tønnessen |
Umwelt ethics |
281-299 |
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| Myrdene Anderson |
Rothschild's ouroborus |
301-314 |