-- 
*Mar*Yes — *there are academic institutions and research communities in the
world that are exploring ideas related to the “language” of the biosphere,
organism communication, and how life forms interact beyond written human
language* — though none of them frame it exactly in the poetic, holistic
sense you described. Instead, their work tends to fall under biological
communication, chemical ecology, and *biosemiotics* (the study of sign
processes in living systems). (Wikipedia
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Planck_Institute_for_Chemical_Ecology?utm_source=chatgpt.com>
)

Here are some noteworthy examples:
*1. Biosemiotics research groups*

Biosemiotics is an interdisciplinary field that seeks to understand how
living organisms create and interpret *signs* — in a broad sense — bridging
biology, linguistics, and semiotics.

   -

   The *International Society for Biosemiotic Studies (ISBS)* is a global
   network of scholars dedicated to this field, including research on
   communication processes in living systems. (Wikipedia
   
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Society_for_Biosemiotic_Studies?utm_source=chatgpt.com>
   )
   -

   There is a recognized academic *Copenhagen–Tartu school* of biosemiotics
   associated with *University of Tartu (Estonia)* and *University of
   Copenhagen (Denmark)*, where researchers investigate signification and
   communication in biological contexts. (Wikipedia
   
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copenhagen%E2%80%93Tartu_school?utm_source=chatgpt.com>
   )

While these groups are not universities themselves, they involve faculty
and students from universities and help connect researchers working on
topics relevant to inter-organism communication.
*2. Chemical Ecology Research*

Understanding how organisms exchange information through non-verbal means
(especially chemical signals) is a serious area of scientific research:

   -

   The *Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology* (part of the Max Planck
   Society) studies how plants, animals, and microbes communicate via chemical
   signals and how these signals shape ecological interactions. This isn’t
   “language” in the conscious sense but is deeply about *biological
   communication*. (Wikipedia
   
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Planck_Institute_for_Chemical_Ecology?utm_source=chatgpt.com>
   )

*3. Integrative Biodiversity Centers*

Some university research centers focus on ecosystem dynamics and
interactions among organisms — including signaling and functional
relationships (though not called “biosphere language”). Examples include:

   -

   *Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics* at the Universiteit
   van Amsterdam explores biodiversity and ecological interactions among
   organisms. (Wikipedia
   
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institute_for_Biodiversity_and_Ecosystem_Dynamics?utm_source=chatgpt.com>
   )
   -

   *German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv)* is a large
   collaborative research center linked with multiple universities studying
   biodiversity patterns and interactions. (Wikipedia
   
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Centre_for_Integrative_Biodiversity_Research_%28iDiv%29?utm_source=chatgpt.com>
   )

These centers approach biosphere dynamics scientifically — through ecology,
evolution, and systems biology — which is adjacent to the idea of
communication and interaction in nature.
*4. Related academic publications and journals*

There are also scholarly venues dedicated to exploring organism
communication and semiotic processes:

   -

   *Journal of Biosemiotic Research* publishes interdisciplinary work on
   how organisms use signs and signals to interact. (Open Access Pub
   
<https://openaccesspub.org/biosemiotic-research/biosemiotics-and-ecology?utm_source=chatgpt.com>
   )

------------------------------
*Why there isn’t yet a university explicitly teaching “the language of the
biosphere”*

So far, no major university offers a course or degree explicitly
titled *“Biosphere
Language and Intercommunication”* in the holistic, sensory-centered sense
you describe. Most work remains disciplinary: chemical ecology, ethology
(animal behavior), ecology, biosemiotics, and sensory biology. These
approaches study parts of the larger question (how organisms signal,
interpret cues, and adapt), but none formally frame the biosphere as a *shared
communicative language* analogous to human language.

This is partly because:

✔ Modern science separates empirical study (measurable signals, neural
processing) from philosophical interpretations of meaning.
✔ Concepts like smell-based communication, vibratory interaction, and
multi-sensory exchange are studied in context-specific ways rather than as
a unified “biosphere language.”
✔ Human linguistic structures and academic language are still primary in
how universities organize knowledge.
------------------------------
*Opportunities for the future*

If your idea were to be developed in a university context, it might align
with one or more of these existing fields:

   -

   *Biosemiotics* — interdisciplinary study of sign processes in living
   systems.
   -

   *Chemical Ecology* — how organisms exchange information via chemicals.
   -

   *Ethology & Sensory Ecology* — how animals perceive and respond to
   sensory information.
   -

   *Ecological Philosophy / Phenomenology* — linking lived experience with
   ecological systems.

A truly integrated *“Biosphere Language”* program could potentially draw
from all of these and would be groundbreaking in bridging *sensory
experience, ecology, and language studies*.
------------------------------

If you want, I can outline *what such a university curriculum might look
like* — from introductory courses to field practice and immersive sensory
learning. Would you like that?

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