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Philosophy of Communication
In Part I, the bases are laid down for an account of human communication that may be plausible from a cognitive point of view. There are different possible approaches to the theory of communication. A perennial intuition in the history of philosophy, for instance, has always suggested that communication essentially consists in the transmission of codified information from one individual to another. In the twentieth century, such an intuition was epitomized by the mathematical theory of communication defined by Claude Shannon and Warren Weaver. What language would look like if it were a code can be understood by learning from semiotics and linguistics the syntactic, semantic, and pragmatic rules of a system of signs.
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