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Interpretant is a term used by Charles Peirce to denote one of the three most important parts of a sign or semiosis. According to him, the sign is irreducibly triadic, its components are a sign (or sign vehicle), object, and interpreter. The interpretant should not be...
An interpreter is a person involved in the process of interpretation, creating meanings from some text, discourse, or another semiotic phenomenon. The interpreter should not be confused with what Charles Peirce calls an interpreter. In The Problem of Christianity,...
Intrasemiotic refers to a process belonging to or arising within the same semiotic system (sign system). For comparison, intersemiotics examines the relationship between two different sign systems. When one saxophonist responds to another during improvisation, it is...
Intersubjectivity refers to the conditions under which two or more different subjects or individuals relate to each other. If the subjective refers to an internal or private area, and the objective to an external or public sphere, the intersubjective means first and...
Intratextuality is a critical term used to explore the relationship between the parts and the whole in texts, including issues of unity (and disunity), the relationship between digressions and their surroundings, interactions between disparate parts of texts (such as...
A completely and truly free course on Semiology (Semiotics). Learn about the meaning of signs, how and why did the field emerged. What is the relationship between the street signs and the signs that we use every day - words.