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The semiotics of nature
code-duality
pp. 583-628
Abstract
A prolific science writer and journalist, as well as a working university professor and molecular biologist, Jesper Hoffmeyer was born in Copenghagen, Denmark on Februrary 21, 1942. "Born during the second world war in occupied Denmark and to a family with strong anticlerical and moderate leftist persuasions," recounts Hoffmeyer, "I was destined to develop a materialistic, and indeed a positivistic, understanding of our world. To fight irrationalism in all its disguises was an inherent value in my upbringing and in choosing to become a biochemist, I faithfully continued along this path. …But over time, it gradually occurred to me that some of the central tenets of such materialistic self-confidence were perhaps less secure than had been previously assumed" (2009: 292).
Publication details
Published in:
Favareau Donald (2009) Essential readings in biosemiotics: anthology and commentary. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 583-628
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4020-9650-1_19
Full citation:
Favareau Donald (2009) The semiotics of nature: code-duality, In: Essential readings in biosemiotics, Dordrecht, Springer, 583–628.