ABSTRACT

There is an affinity between cybernetics and biosemiotics as to the object of study, the methodology, even to such an extent as to deduct cybernetic qualities of systems from those of biosemiotics. Structuralism studies systems, as does biosemiotics, such as religion, science and other societal structures. The major example, just as in biosemiotics, is language. Linguists said that language has the structure of a system. Biosemiotics tries to overcome the split between natural sciences and the arts by applying methods of the latter to the former. The structure of central nervous system (CNS) stimulations with their temporal and spatial dimensions is a symbolic medium that enables one to interpret the structures of reality with their temporal and spatial dimensions. The origin of the mental is in the interpretation of the structures. The one-sidedness of structuralism is determined by the limitations of the scientific-mathematical methodology.