Abstract

Abstract This essay seeks to consider the theoretical work of Harlene Anderson and Harold Goolishian from the standpoint of existential and semiotic phenomenology—what Richard Lanigan (1992) has come to call, in his most recent work, “communicology.” The essay then suggests another set of possibilities for the Collaborative Language System concept of therapeutic dialogue, one which might have additional productive implications for the future of this approach and which might help therapists better understand the semiotic conditions that accompany a client into the context of a professional therapeutic situation.

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