On the partiality of self-reference
(1990) p.47-64- Abstract
- It is argued that all forms of self-reference or autonomy are linguistic
phenomena (under a general complementaristic conception of language). Autonomies do not naturally occur in non linguistic domains, like classical physics with its mechanistic modellings. However, in quantum physics, where language is beginning to enter the physical domain, as exemplified in Bohr´s notion of complementarity, self-referential phenomena are recognized. And in biology, with its genetic language and higher cerebral languages, self-reference problems abound, from self-reproduction to innospection.
It is argued in terms of the linguistic complementarity, which obtains for all forms of language, that every consistent form of self-reference... (More) - It is argued that all forms of self-reference or autonomy are linguistic
phenomena (under a general complementaristic conception of language). Autonomies do not naturally occur in non linguistic domains, like classical physics with its mechanistic modellings. However, in quantum physics, where language is beginning to enter the physical domain, as exemplified in Bohr´s notion of complementarity, self-referential phenomena are recognized. And in biology, with its genetic language and higher cerebral languages, self-reference problems abound, from self-reproduction to innospection.
It is argued in terms of the linguistic complementarity, which obtains for all forms of language, that every consistent form of self-reference must be panial. Attempts at objectifying this partiality are made, in particular with the aid of two forms of the recursion theorem. Levels of partiality are discussed in terms of autology and autolinguistics. In particular, partialities of self-referential sentences such as those of Gödel, Rosser and Henkin are discussed. Viral self-reproduclion in bacteria is seen as a
natural level of partiality in epigenesis. Phenomena of self-repair are referred to, and it is suggested that the level of partiality of DNA self-repair, which has been observed in genetics, does illuminate a basic difference, with respect to self-reference. between on the one hand genetic language, and on the other, "planning language" (natural language, formal language, programming language). (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1745036
- author
- Löfgren, Lars LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 1990
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- host publication
- Self-steering and cognition in complex systems : toward a new cybernetics
- editor
- Heylighen, F. ; Rosseel, E. and Demeyere, F.
- pages
- 47 - 64
- publisher
- Gordon and Breach Science Publishers
- ISBN
- 2-88124-729-6
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- befb25a8-8746-4180-85ad-b916a24424aa (old id 1745036)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 11:17:43
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:03:54
@inbook{befb25a8-8746-4180-85ad-b916a24424aa, abstract = {{It is argued that all forms of self-reference or autonomy are linguistic<br/><br> phenomena (under a general complementaristic conception of language). Autonomies do not naturally occur in non linguistic domains, like classical physics with its mechanistic modellings. However, in quantum physics, where language is beginning to enter the physical domain, as exemplified in Bohr´s notion of complementarity, self-referential phenomena are recognized. And in biology, with its genetic language and higher cerebral languages, self-reference problems abound, from self-reproduction to innospection.<br/><br> It is argued in terms of the linguistic complementarity, which obtains for all forms of language, that every consistent form of self-reference must be panial. Attempts at objectifying this partiality are made, in particular with the aid of two forms of the recursion theorem. Levels of partiality are discussed in terms of autology and autolinguistics. In particular, partialities of self-referential sentences such as those of Gödel, Rosser and Henkin are discussed. Viral self-reproduclion in bacteria is seen as a<br/><br> natural level of partiality in epigenesis. Phenomena of self-repair are referred to, and it is suggested that the level of partiality of DNA self-repair, which has been observed in genetics, does illuminate a basic difference, with respect to self-reference. between on the one hand genetic language, and on the other, "planning language" (natural language, formal language, programming language).}}, author = {{Löfgren, Lars}}, booktitle = {{Self-steering and cognition in complex systems : toward a new cybernetics}}, editor = {{Heylighen, F. and Rosseel, E. and Demeyere, F.}}, isbn = {{2-88124-729-6}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{47--64}}, publisher = {{Gordon and Breach Science Publishers}}, title = {{On the partiality of self-reference}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/5740241/1745065.pdf}}, year = {{1990}}, }