A note on Vico and Lotman: Semiotics as a "science of imagination"

Authors

  • Marcel Danesi Victoria College, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1K7

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12697/SSS.2000.28.06

Abstract

The Italian philosopher Giambattista Vico foreshadowed many of the ideas currently being entertained by the modem cognitive and human sciences. By emphasizing the role of the imagination in the production of meaning, Vico showed how truly ingenious the fIrst forms of representation were. His view that these forms were "poetic" is only now being given serious attention, as more and more linguists and psychologists come to realize the role of metaphor in the generation of abstract systems of representation. The Estonian semiotician Yuri Lotman espoused a basically similar view, highlighting the role of the poetic imagination in the generation of the textuality that holds cultures together in meaningful ways. A comparison of these two exceptional thinkers has never been entertained. This note aims to do exactly that. Specifically, it takes a first glimpse at the parallels of thought and method that inhere in the main works of these two ground-breaking thinkers. Such a comparison will establish a theoretical framework to make semiotics a true "science of the imagination". It will show that semiosis and representation are not tied to any innate neural mechanisms, but rather to a creative tendency in the human species to literally "invent itself'.

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Published

2000-12-31

How to Cite

Danesi, M. (2000). A note on Vico and Lotman: Semiotics as a "science of imagination". Sign Systems Studies, 28, 99–115. https://doi.org/10.12697/SSS.2000.28.06

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Section

Articles