
Contents
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§10.1 Overview §10.1 Overview
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§10.2 The Project §10.2 The Project
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§10.3 Infosigns Are Always Articulate and Often Productive §10.3 Infosigns Are Always Articulate and Often Productive
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§10.4 Equivocal Infosigns §10.4 Equivocal Infosigns
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§10.5 Infosign Systems and Families §10.5 Infosign Systems and Families
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§10.6 Variants and Invariants; Embedded Infosign Families §10.6 Variants and Invariants; Embedded Infosign Families
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§10.7 A Taxonomy of Infosign Variables §10.7 A Taxonomy of Infosign Variables
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§10.7.1 Absolute reflexives: “selfsigns” §10.7.1 Absolute reflexives: “selfsigns”
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§10.7.2 Relative reflexives §10.7.2 Relative reflexives
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§10.7.3 Isosigns §10.7.3 Isosigns
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§10.7.4 Names §10.7.4 Names
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§10.7.5 Roaming names §10.7.5 Roaming names
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§10.7.6 A summary example §10.7.6 A summary example
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§10.8 How a Language Is Put Together §10.8 How a Language Is Put Together
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10 An Anatomy of Signs
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Published:September 2017
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Abstract
Informational signs (infosigns) are signs of complete states of affairs and are, as such, members of infosign systems or families. They are always articulate, containing variant and invariant aspects, and their families are often productive, containing variables drawn from nondenumerable classes. Every sign in an infosign family can be derived from any other by a substitution of arguments for its variable or variables. Without yet offering a definition of “infosign,” many kinds of examples are given. Variable elements of infosigns correspond to their signified elements by a variety of kinds of mapping rules. “Absolute-” and “relative-reflexive” infosign elements, “isosign” elements, “names,” and “roaming names” are described. The sign that is a gas gauge reading exemplifies elements of all of these types at once.
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