Gregory Bateson is famous for his description of the "double bind" that occurs when human (and animal) communication interaction becomes dysfunctional/-/is principal example is the "nip versus bite" opposition t...Gregory Bateson is famous for his description of the "double bind" that occurs when human (and animal) communication interaction becomes dysfunctional/-/is principal example is the "nip versus bite" opposition that he observed when a human and a dog (or two monkies) "play" (nip) and then play turns to "work" (bite).The model is a semiotic failure by not accounting for negation, i.e., "labor" (not-nip) and "leisure" (not-bite). Thus, if there is a double bind, there must be a foundational apposition condition of single-bind (functional communication) in the system, i.e., the possibility of an actual choice, which logically entails a not-choice [potential "new" choice]. The play/work versus leisure/labor distinction by combination goes back at least to Plato, and in modernity to Ernst Cassirer and Karl Buhler, but has its most strategic communicological development in Maurice Merleau-Ponty's tropic logic thesis on Chiasm. The thesis is better known through its application by Roman Jakobson and Claude L6vi-Strauss as a tropic logic of metaphor (attribute--substance quality) and metonymy (part--whole quantity). My analysis illustrates the tropic logic by contrasting a fundamental metaphysical thesis that Being/Having (Play--Work) and Becoming/Doing (Leisure--Labor) must be phenomenological (tropic) as a basis for Semiotics (logic). Thus in Communicology, Play is a "pretend reality" of actual agency, and, Playing is a "pretended action in Play" of symbolic agency.展开更多
文摘Gregory Bateson is famous for his description of the "double bind" that occurs when human (and animal) communication interaction becomes dysfunctional/-/is principal example is the "nip versus bite" opposition that he observed when a human and a dog (or two monkies) "play" (nip) and then play turns to "work" (bite).The model is a semiotic failure by not accounting for negation, i.e., "labor" (not-nip) and "leisure" (not-bite). Thus, if there is a double bind, there must be a foundational apposition condition of single-bind (functional communication) in the system, i.e., the possibility of an actual choice, which logically entails a not-choice [potential "new" choice]. The play/work versus leisure/labor distinction by combination goes back at least to Plato, and in modernity to Ernst Cassirer and Karl Buhler, but has its most strategic communicological development in Maurice Merleau-Ponty's tropic logic thesis on Chiasm. The thesis is better known through its application by Roman Jakobson and Claude L6vi-Strauss as a tropic logic of metaphor (attribute--substance quality) and metonymy (part--whole quantity). My analysis illustrates the tropic logic by contrasting a fundamental metaphysical thesis that Being/Having (Play--Work) and Becoming/Doing (Leisure--Labor) must be phenomenological (tropic) as a basis for Semiotics (logic). Thus in Communicology, Play is a "pretend reality" of actual agency, and, Playing is a "pretended action in Play" of symbolic agency.