It is argued that at a sufficiently deep level the conventional quantitative approach to the study of nature faces difficult problems, and that biological processes should be seen as more fundamental, in a way that can be elaborated on the basis of Peircean semiotics and Yardley's Circular Theory. In such a world-view, Wheeler's observer-participation and emergent law arise naturally, rather than having to be imposed artificially. This points the way to a deeper understanding of nature, where meaning has a fundamental role to play that is invisible to quantitative science.
Comments: 9 pages. Based on talk at ACIB '11 conference. To appear in "Integral Biomathics: Tracing the Road to Reality", Proceedings of iBioMath 2011, Paris and ACIB '11, Stirling UK, P. L. Simeonov, L. S. Smith, A. C. Ehresmann (Eds.), Springer-Verlag, 2012. v2: new subsection added; v3: URLs included in references; v4: Circular Theory and other concepts elaborated
Subjects: General Physics (physics.gen-ph)
Cite as: arXiv:1108.4860v4 [physics.gen-ph]