King, J. K. (2019). A trace of emergence: Human social behavior as a sign of microbial metabolismThe International Journal of Interdisciplinary Cultural Studies, 14(1), 57-79. doi:10.18848/2327-008X/CGP/v14i01/57-79.

King, J. K. (2013). Death or the powers: The future of the human experience. The International Journal of Humanities Education, 11(3), 1-17.

King, J. K. (2011). Ticket to ride the ancient celestial railroad: Natural law, worldview knowledge, “evolutionary love”, and Ockham’s razor. Presented October 29, 2011, at the 36th Annual Meeting of the Semiotic Society of America, Pittsburgh, USA. Published in “The Semiotics of ???”: Proceedings of the 36th Annual Meeting of the Semiotic Society of America, 27-30 October 2011. eds. Karen Haworth, Jason Hogue, Leonard G. Sbrocchi, 2012 LEGAS and Semiotic Society of America, 137-155. 

King, J.K. (2011). Unraveling mountainway ceremonials: Is Navajo eschatological ritual another semiotic pattern of ancient invisible magic veiling a complex systems-based information science?  International Journal of the Humanities, 8(12): 45-80. 

King, J. K. (2009). Evolution backward in time: Crystals, polyhedra and observer-participancy in the cosmological models of Peirce, ancient Egypt and early China. Presented October 17, 2009, at the 34th Annual Meeting of the Semiotic Society of America, Cincinnati, USA. Published in Semiotics 2009 The Semiotics of Time, eds. Karen Haworth, Jason Hogue, Leonard G. Sbrocchi, 2010 LEGAS and Semiotic Society of America, 58-76.

King, J. K. (2009). Cosmological patterns in ancient Egypt and China: The way to unify the universe through knowledge, mind, energy, and the beneficence of the elements. International Journal of the Humanities, 7(2), 151-165.  

The above paper was a finalist for the Award for International Excellence.

King, J.K. (2008).  Cosmic semiophysics in ancient architectual vision:  The mountain temples at Deir el Bahari, the Dead Sea temple scroll, and the Hagia Sophia.  International Journal of the Humanities. 6(4): 17-26.  

King, J. K. (2008). The order of the harmonious whole: Peirce’s guess, Peregrinus’ magnet, and Pharaoh’s path. Presented at the 33rd Annual Meeting of the Semiotic Society of America, Houston, October 18, 2008; Published 2009. Semiotics 2008 eds. John Deely and Leonard G. Sbrocchi, 179-190 (New York, Ontario: Legas and Semiotic Society of America).

King, J. K. (2007). Self-portrait in the Pharaoh’s mirror: A reflection of ancient Egyptian knowledge in Teilhard de Chardin’s evolutionary biophysics. Presented at the 32nd Annual Meeting of the Semiotic Society of America, New Orleans, October 4-7, 2007; Published 2009. Semiotics 2006/2007 eds. Terry J. Prewitt and Wendy Morgan, 101-115(New York, Ontario: Legas and Semiotic Society of America).

King, J. K. (2007).  From history’s dustbin: A semiotics of evolvability discovered within man and his mountain of transformation. International Journal of the Humanities, 5(5), 113-126.  

King, J. K. (2006).  Man the misinterpretant:  Will he discover the universal secret of sexuality encoded within him? International Journal of the Humanities, 4(9), 1-15.  

King, J. K. (2006).  Biosemiotics in ancient Egyptian texts: The key unlocking the universal secret of sexuality and the birth of the limitless.  Presented at the Second International Congress of Young Egyptologists in Lisbon, Portugal on Oct. 25, 2006.  Published in ACTAS 2009 Proceedings. International Congress for Young Egyptologists, Lisboa 2006. Erotismo e Sexualidade no Antigo Egipto (Erotica, Erotism and Sexuality in Ancient Egypt) eds. Luis Manuel de Araujo and Jose das Candeas Sales. CD-ROM 2009: 281-298.   

King, J. K. (2005). Biosemiotics in ancient Egyptian texts: The key to long-lost signs found in myth, religion, psychology, art and literature. International Journal of the Humanities, 3(7), 189-203.   

ARTICLES

King, J.K. (2005). The marriage of religion and science.

King, J.K. (2006). Secret science declassified: The Isis thesis.

King, J.K. (2007). A perspective: Horizontal gene transfer:  No dice-just a virus as Alpha and Omega. Was Einstein right?