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(2013) Origins of mind, Dordrecht, Springer.

Mnemo-psychography

the origin of mind and the problem of biological memory storage

Frank Scalambrino

pp. 327-339

The internal logic of a semiotic view of life suggests memory is the origin of mind. Interpreting the meaning of "sign" by way of Charles S. Peirce, the object of this chapter is to provide a response to the biosemiotic problem of the origin of mind in respect to both its general and specific formulations, i.e., as evolutionary emergence and as human environmental experience. As such, I hope for this chapter to express the biosemiotic view of mind and function heuristically for future research regarding memory and mind. "Mnemo-psychography" means that the mind writes itself out of memory. In regard to biosemiotics, the thesis of mnemo-psychography suggests that the mind originates out of interaction between the environment and the biological capacity for memory. By providing a biosemiotic reading of the results of contemporary memory research, specifically the work of Eric Kandel, Daniel Schacter, and Miguel Nicolelis et al., I argue for the thesis of mnemo-psychography, over a biosemiotic version of identity theory, as the solution to the problem of the origin of mind.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-5419-5_17

Full citation:

Scalambrino, F. (2013)., Mnemo-psychography: the origin of mind and the problem of biological memory storage, in L. Swan (ed.), Origins of mind, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 327-339.

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