Chiasm of Thought-and-Action
- 1 June 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
- Vol. 11 (3) , 279-294
- https://doi.org/10.1068/d110279
Abstract
How do I know the difference between you and me and how do we share our beliefs in the same? How are we made so obedient and so predictable? As a minimalist approach to these questions I imagine human thought-and-action as a double helix, It is assumed firstly, that man is a semiotic animal, a species whose individuals are kept together and apart by their use of signs; secondly, that every sign within itself combines elements of drastically different ontologies. This invisible world is then captured in a three-dimensional coordinate system whose axes are those of identity, difference, and intentionality. While the resulting map is anchored in fix-points of silence, the real world of socialization and understanding is always in flux. The paper closes with a pastiche on Carl von Linné's Flora Suecica; in the current world of thought-and-action, signifier and signified are assigned the same ordering functions as stamina and pistil once were in the world of plants. How do I draw the invisible lines of the taken-for-granted? How do I project a dematerialized point onto a transparent plane?This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Invisible Maps: A ProspectusGeografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography, 1991
- The Truth in PaintingPublished by University of Chicago Press ,1987