Clothes and shoes were important to me because I was a little girl. I like to choose my costume at school and find the correct color Keds and sandals. This is really passion. Even now, years have passed, I have always been the same shopping addicts and fanatic fanatics here. After studying semiotics, in short, it is a way to interpret symbols in everyday activities and discover deeper meanings. It is a very cute fact. This is the choice of the statement I am doing every time.
As a discourse, "enlightenment" (sentence) is not a unit of symbolic symbol, but a symbolic symbol makes it possible to give meaning, and thus a specific, repeatable, Communication to communicate. In this way, discourse consists of a series of symbols (relations between symbols that convey meaning) between objects, themes, and sentences. The term "discourse formation" (French: formation discourse) conceptually explains ordinary communication (written and verbal), such as informal conversation, that produces such discourse. As a philosopher, Michelle Foucault applies discourse formation to the analysis of broad knowledge such as political economy and natural history.
C. S. Peirce uses the term semiotics as a synonym for logic. This is the name of "formal, symbolic doctrine". In the case of Peirce, the semiotic theory consists of a ternary structure that expresses the interdependence between three elements in terms. The most important aspect of Peirce 's semiotics is the three - term relationship of symbol - interpretation - object. Peirce stated that the signature is "to some extent or to some extent someone". This signature creates another sign in the head of "someone" and the sign of the other sign is the first sign. Explain it. Interpretation is not a person; on the contrary, it is somewhat similar to the meaning of Saussure, the psychological concept depicted in someone's mind. An object is an external reality of what a symbol represents, or a symbol.
"University of Chicago: Media Theory: Keywords" University of Chicago, 2004. http://csmt.uchicago.edu/glossary2004/navigation.htm (accessed in January 2007)