Eero Tarasti, existential semiotics, music, and mind. On the existential and cognitive notions of situation
Ojala, Juha (2023)
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe202401021098
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe202401021098
Tiivistelmä
In recent decades, there has been a shift both in semiotics and in cognitive
science to novel, perhaps more flexible currents of research. This applies
to semiotic and cognitive musicology as well, and raises interest in the conceptual
correlates in the historical shifts, particularly in how the shifts have opened
avenue for addressing both the social and cultural, and the subject’s embodied
mind in the study of signification within a systematic framework. Emblematic of
the paradigmatic shifts, situation emerges as a key notion.
From the current, pragmatist perspective, a comparison of Eero Tarasti’s
existential-semiotic and Mauri Kaipainen’s cognitive notions of situation reveals
striking similarities. For one, situations become meaningful only in their contexts
and through their use, as they are dynamically established in the processes of
being in the world. Besides the evident methodological and topical differences,
fundamental differences are to be found in the attention paid to the epistemic
conditions of subject’s being in the world, and the acknowledged complexity of
the situations, illustrated by the recursive agent/patient-levels by Tarasti.
For the study of musical signification, the pragmatist approach may help reconcile
the differencies, contributing to the necessary groundwork for a theory
that could incorporate complex, iterative levels of narration spanning between
signs as acts, stylistic constraints of musical discourse, social contexts, and epistemes
of culture, while also taking into account the view of mind as embodied,
embedded, enactive, and extended cognition.
science to novel, perhaps more flexible currents of research. This applies
to semiotic and cognitive musicology as well, and raises interest in the conceptual
correlates in the historical shifts, particularly in how the shifts have opened
avenue for addressing both the social and cultural, and the subject’s embodied
mind in the study of signification within a systematic framework. Emblematic of
the paradigmatic shifts, situation emerges as a key notion.
From the current, pragmatist perspective, a comparison of Eero Tarasti’s
existential-semiotic and Mauri Kaipainen’s cognitive notions of situation reveals
striking similarities. For one, situations become meaningful only in their contexts
and through their use, as they are dynamically established in the processes of
being in the world. Besides the evident methodological and topical differences,
fundamental differences are to be found in the attention paid to the epistemic
conditions of subject’s being in the world, and the acknowledged complexity of
the situations, illustrated by the recursive agent/patient-levels by Tarasti.
For the study of musical signification, the pragmatist approach may help reconcile
the differencies, contributing to the necessary groundwork for a theory
that could incorporate complex, iterative levels of narration spanning between
signs as acts, stylistic constraints of musical discourse, social contexts, and epistemes
of culture, while also taking into account the view of mind as embodied,
embedded, enactive, and extended cognition.