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The Trace Odyssey 1. Beatrice Galinon-MelenecЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Trace Odyssey 1 - Beatrice Galinon-Melenec


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in the center:- above the figure, we see that the body/milieu/environment factors are, of course, the senses but also the affective and cognitive dimensions that are immediately activated upon contact (biologically and cognitivo-emotionally);- below the figure, we see the conséquences-traces of these interactions in that they construct the point of view that each human construes reality;

       – on the right:- language is perceived as a “common” feature, socially constructed to serve as a bridge between the representations that an individual construes of reality. Humans express themselves verbally from this “common” feature, whose logical syntax has been acquired/learned. When bodies are in co-presence, they activate traces incorporated in each individual from their previous experience;- at the moment of the encounter, humans are in a specific context whose different dimensions interfere with the possibility or impossibility of exteriorizing incarnated traces. Hence, the idea that there are moments, situations and humans, and non-humans, and their moments and situations (Goffman 1988)44;- the resulting relationship is the conséquence-trace of the opening or closing with respect to the behavioral signes-traces emitted by each one;- the relationship that emerges from the interaction of the embodied traces is complex by nature. Verbal language, which is a common reducer of complexity, cannot account for all aspects of complexity. An observation that Michel de Montaigne summed up is as follows: “If I am urged to say why I loved her, I feel that this can only be expressed by answering “Because it was her; because it was me” (Montaigne 1989, chapter 28 (1580, 1595), author’s translation).

      NOTE.– As is to be discussed in greater detail later in the book, it is the “corps-trace” to “corps-trace” interaction (Galinon-Mélénec 2017) that establishes the nature of the interpersonal relationship, itself being: (a) at the basis of the greater or lesser reception of the content of the syntactically constructed message; and (b) considered as a system of signes-traces whose property is to evolve continuously because it puts living beings in relation with each other, subject to permanent human-milieu exchanges.

      The interrelationship between the corps-trace and the “milieu” (Watsuji 2011), in which it is integrated, is permanent. The interactions are multi-scale and they integrate all the relationships of the corps-trace with the living as with inanimate matter. These interactions are dependent on the organic system in which the trace is integrated, from the level of the cell to the entire organism. In this, the corps-traces are inscribed not only with the conséquences-traces of its socio-individual45 history, but also with the collective traces of evolution. The corps-trace thus appears to us as being at the origin of the semiotic process between a human being and the Real46.

      This highlighting of the body’s role as an operator of the semiotic function is not unique. The body’s role has been recognized by other authors, like Fontanille (2011)47 and Greimas (1993)48. However, despite their analyses of the body in the semiotic process, many authors consider the body as a whole after the analysis of thought and speech, thus constituting an ever-active remnant of Descartes’ cogito ergo sum. Conversely, the terminology corps-trace (with a hyphen) aims to draw attention to how the whole body is affected by its interactions with the human or non-human milieu/environment, the senses becoming a prerequisite for the perception of the trace, as a part of the Real, and for its possible enunciation.

      Figure I.5 illustrates the idea that each individual’s corps-trace not only carries the conséquence-trace of interactions with his or her milieu (Watsuji 2011)49, from birth, but also the conséquences-traces of those who preceded him or her in his or her genealogy50.

      Figure I.5. Permanent evolution of the corps-trace

      Today’s human being is the result of a succession of consequences where we find “the first particles, the atoms, the molecules, the stars, the cells, the organisms, the living beings, to these curious animals that we are [...]. All succeeding one another in the same chain, all are driven by the same movement [...]”. Moreover, our bodies are composed of the elements “that once founded the universe” (Reeves et al. 1996, p. 9, author’s translation).

      At the end of this Introduction, we propose the anthropological definition of a human being interpreted as “Homme-trace” (“Ichnos-Anthropos”). This angle of approach, which constitutes the backdrop of The Trace Odyssey 1, needs to be integrated by the reader otherwise the reader may take “white for black” (Du Bellay 1568)51 and vice versa.

      This definition applies to all humans (see Figure I.6).

      Figure I.6. The anthropological dimension of the Homme-trace paradigm applicable to every individual in the world

       – the “primary traces”, conséquences-traces of the only vital presence in a milieu. In the continuation of The Trace Odyssey 1, we give several examples of the analysis of these primary traces, particularly in the chapter devoted to police investigation;

       – the “secondary traces”, conséquences-traces of an individual’s progress in the creation of tools, with a view to improving responses to their needs and wants. This type of trace corresponds to the evolution of technology. We will see in the continuation of The Trace Odyssey how technological progress is the result of progress in the evolution of the “Homme-trace”, but also how, conversely, it produces changes in a person’s corps-trace, because of its uses. This is illustrated in the chapter devoted to the implementation of the digital society; and

       – the “tertiary traces”, the conséquences-traces of the way in which an individual construes their relations with the world, at the root of the regulatory texts and laws produced by organizations and institutions. This is discussed when we recall (see Figure I.7) that the rules of the game of digital society are, in principle, derived from the need to protect humans endangered by the actions of other humans. This refers, for example, to international negotiations on the protection of personal data, endangered by the poorly controlled flow of pieces of information, for which an unregulated Internet is inappropriate and even dangerous.

      The Trace Odyssey puts forward a representation of the “ecosystem-trace”56 that aims to guide the reader on familiar ground. By drawing the


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