ABSTRACT

The purpose of this contribution is to explore how a dialectical approach may further Integrational Linguistics into transcending structuralism. The strategy employed is to articulate the biomechanical and macrosocial factors in the communicational infrastructure as neurobiological attractors and social anchors respectively. Hence, the inquiry focuses on the dialectical relation between an individual’s neurobiological structure and her ability to confer signhood onto activity-relevant phenomena in the social environment. This makes it possible to conceive new directions for Integrational Linguistics by rethinking central aspects such as contextuality, indeterminacy, cotemporality, integration, and coordination. Conjectural as these directions may be, I put forward that the dialectical approach provides a promising launchpad for further inquiries into transcending structuralism and beyond.