The semiotics of models
Abstract
The paper sheds light on the concept of model in ordinary
language and in scientific discourse from the perspective of C. S.
Peirce’s semiotics. It proposes a general Peircean framework for the
definition of models of all kinds, including mental models. A survey of
definitions of scientific models that have been influential in the
philosophy of science and of the typologies proposed in this context is
given. The author criticizes the heterogeneity of the criteria applied
in these typologies and the lack of a semiotic foundation in typological
distinctions between formal, symbolic, theoretical, metaphorical, and
iconic models, among others. The paper argues that the application of
Peirce’s subdivision of signs into the trichotomies of the sign itself,
its object, and its interpretant can offer a deeper understanding of the
nature of models. Semiotic topics in the focus of the paper are (1) the
distinction between models as signs and (mental) models as the
interpretants of signs; (2) models considered as a type (or legisign)
and models considered as tokens (or replicas) of a type; (3) the
iconicity of models, including diagrammatic and metaphorical icons; (4)
the contribution of indices and symbols to the informativity of models;
and (5) the rhetorical qualities of models in scientific discourse. The
paper argues in conclusion that informative models are hybrid signs in
which a diagram incorporates indices and symbols in a rhetorically
efficient way.
Keywords
model; diagram; metaphor; icon; legisign; type; token; C. S. Peirce
Full Text:
PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.12697/SSS.2018.46.1.01
SIGN SYSTEMS STUDIES. ISSN 1406-4243 (print), 1736-7409 (online). E-mail: sss@ut.ee. Postal address: Sign Systems Studies, Dept. of Semiotics, University of Tartu, Jakobi St. 2, 51014 Tartu, Estonia