@article{Anderson_2000, title={Sharing G. Evelyn Hutchinson’s fabricational noise}, volume={28}, url={https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/sss/article/view/SSS.2000.28.21}, DOI={10.12697/SSS.2000.28.21}, abstractNote={<p>One of the seminal constructs in 20th-century biosemiotics is G. Evelyn Hutchinson’s ’niche’. This notion opened up and unpacked cartesian space and time to recognize self-organizing roles in open, dynamical systems — in n-dimensional hyperspace. Perhaps equally valuable to biosemiotics is Hutchinson’s inclusive approach to inquiry and his willingness to venture into abductive territory, which have reaped rewards for a range of disciplines beyond biology, from art to anthropology. Hutchinson assumed the fertility of inquiry flowing from open, far-from-equilibrium systems to be characterized by ’fabricational noise’, following Seilacher, or ’order out of chaos’, following Prigogine. Serendipitous ’noise’ can self-organize into information at other levels, as does the ’noise’ of Hutchinson’s contributions themselves.</p>}, journal={Sign Systems Studies}, author={Anderson, Myrdene}, year={2000}, month={Dec.}, pages={388–396} }