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Newsletter 9:1 - April 2025
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Dear Gary Richmond


Internationally, the thought of Charles S. Peirce continues to stimulate
significant work and discussion. Dedicated to promoting Peirce’s work and
thought, the Charles S. Peirce Society is pleased to update you on its
efforts, on new publications relating to Peirce and to pragmatism, and on
other news relating to Peirce. We are grateful for your support and for
being a part of such a wonderful and expansive community of inquirers.

Yours truly,

The Charles S. Peirce Society Executive Committee


*I.                        **Spotlight on the Peirce Society President*

Many of us know Cornelis “Kees” de Waal through his tenure as general
editor of the *Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society*, the
longest-running journal devoted to American philosophy, which he joined as
associate editor in 2006, as well as through his prolific scholarship,
including *Charles S. Peirce: A Guide for the Perplexed* (Bloomsbury,
2013), *Introducing Pragmatism: A Tool for Rethinking Philosophy* (Routledge,
2022), and most recently, the *Oxford Handbook of Charles S. Peirce* (Oxford
University Press, 2024). Yet his path to becoming a leading figure in
Peirce studies began not in philosophy, but in economics, at Erasmus
University Rotterdam. Captivated by the dynamics of markets but
disillusioned with conventional economic modeling, he turned first to the
history of economics—especially the work of Joseph Schumpeter—before
shifting to sociology. He eventually found an intellectual home in the
philosophy of science and philosophical anthropology, drawing from thinkers
such as Helmut Plessner and Arnold Gehlen. His master’s thesis on G. H.
Mead explored how socio-economic order emerges from the interactions of
market participants; a portion of it was later published by Wadsworth as *On
Mead*.

Following graduation, Kees became economics editor for *Ingenieurskrant*, a
leading Dutch glossy magazine on engineering and technology, covering both
industry developments and government policy. In parallel, he began doctoral
work in economics, expanding on his earlier research. A falling out with
his advisor and a growing interest in Peirce, partly inspired by a summer
course at Oxford, caused him to reach out to Doede Nauta at University of
Twente with the idea of writing a dissertation on Peirce. Nauta suggested
that he contact Susan Haack, and in 1992 he moved to the University of
Miami to study Peirce under Haack’s guidance—just as she herself had newly
relocated to the U.S. In 1997, he successfully defended his dissertation, *The
Quest for Reality: Charles S. Peirce and the Empiricists*.

In 1998, Kees joined the Peirce Edition Project at Indiana University,
where he contributed as an editor to the chronological edition of the *Writings
of Charles S. Peirce*, assisting with both the editorial work and the
complex task of organizing and dating Peirce’s vast unpublished
manuscripts. As a member of the IU Philosophy Department, he designed an MA
program in American philosophy with a special emphasis on Peirce—later
expanded into a broader curriculum. In 2011, Kees left the Peirce Edition
Project to focus his attention on his own research and the editing of
the *Transactions
of the Charles S. Peirce Society.* Apart from his studies on Peirce,
especially Peirce’s realism and his critique of nominalism, his main areas
of research have been pragmatism and scientific inquiry. He is currently
working on a book that develops a Peirce-inspired theory of truth,
explicitly connecting it with 20th-century, mostly continental thinkers.

A pillar of Peirce scholarship, Kees’s current tenure as President of the
Charles S. Peirce Society is richly deserved. We hope many of you will be
able to join us, in person or online, for his presidential address at our
annual general meeting in March 2026.



*II.                     **2025-2026 Peirce Essay Prize*

Once again our Society is holding an essay contest to help promote and
highlight work by junior scholars. The 2024-2025 Peirce Essay Prize offers
a $1,000 cash prize plus up to $1,000 for travel to the Society’s annual
meeting to present the winning essay, as well as its publication
(subjective to editorial revision) in the *Transactions of the Charles
S. Peirce Society*. We anticipate holding our 2026 annual general meeting
at the 53rdmeeting of the Society for the Advancement of American
Philosophy, to be held in Las Vegas, NV, in March 2026.

The essay can be on any topic related to Peirce’s work and we consider
submissions only from graduate students and those who are no more than
seven years out from the year they earned their last graduate degree,
or ten years for those who have given birth or have had childcare
responsibilities (past winners of the contest are ineligible). The list of
previous winners can be found here
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.

The submission deadline is *September 31, 2025*. Because the
winning essay may be published in the *Transactions*, the length
of contest submissions should be about the length of an average journal
article.  The maximum acceptable length is 10,000 words, including
notes. The presentation of the winning submission at the annual meeting
cannot exceed 30 minutes reading time. Go here
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for
more information.


*III.                  **Call for Proposals: Peirce Society Sessions at the
2026 Central and Pacific APA Meetings*

Members of the Charles S. Peirce Society are invited to submit proposals
for Peirce Society sessions at the 2026 Central APA Meeting, to be held
February 18-21 in Chicago, and at the 2026 Pacific APA Meeting, to be held
online in April 2026. Session proposals should include the name(s) of the
organizer and the names and emails of the speakers and a 200-300 word
synopsis of the session topic and organization. *The organizers and
participants must be current members of the Society (see membership options
below)*. Email [email protected].

The deadline for submitting proposals for sessions at the 2026 Central
Division meeting is June 31st and the deadline for submitting proposals for
sessions at the 2026 Pacific Division meeting is August 31st. Limited
financial support for travel is available (see funding requests below and
inquire for more details).


*IV.                  **Ivo Ibri and Jaime Nubiola 2025 Herbert Schneider
Awardees*

Two past-presidents and fellows of the Charles S. Peirce Society, Professor
Ivo Ibri of the *Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo *and Professor
Jaime Nubiola of the *University of Navarra in Spain, *were both honored
with the Herbert Schneider Prize on March 15, 2025, at the 52nd annual SAAP
meeting.

This distinction recognizes Professor Ibri’s and Professor Nubiola’s
outstanding careers and their significant contribution to the research,
dissemination and understanding of classical and contemporary American
Philosophy. They join a list of distinguished scholars such as Joseph Blau,
Justus Buchler, Max H. Fisch, Charles Hartshorne, John J. McDermott, Beth
J. Singer, Sandra B. Rosenthal, Charlene Haddock Seigfried, Hilary Putnam,
Ruth Anna Putnam, Richard Bernstein and Vincent Colapietro.




*V.                     In Memoriam: Robert Stern and Sandra Rosenthal
Sandra B. Rosenthal (1936–2024)*

The philosophical community mourns the loss of Sandra B. Rosenthal, Provost
Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Loyola University New Orleans, who
passed away at the age of 87. A towering figure in classical Pragmatism,
Rosenthal’s scholarship revitalized the study of Charles S. Peirce, John
Dewey, and C. I. Lewis, while forging bold connections between Pragmatism,
phenomenology, and applied ethics. Her prolific career, spanning over a
dozen books and 200 articles, cemented her legacy as a central architect of
Pragmatism’s 20th-century revival.

Rosenthal’s work was marked by speculative depth and a commitment to
philosophy’s real-world relevance. In *Speculative Pragmatism* (1986), she
challenged rigid divisions between metaphysics and practice, while *Charles
Peirce’s Pragmatic Pluralism* (1994) reframed Peirce’s thought as a
dynamic, open-ended system. Her collaborations, notably *Pragmatism and
Phenomenology* (1980) with Patrick L. Bourgeois, bridged continental and
American traditions, revealing shared concerns with lived experience and
interpretive flexibility. Later, *Rethinking Business Ethics* (1999) with
Rogene A. Buchholz demonstrated Pragmatism’s transformative potential in
corporate ethics.

As president of the Metaphysical Society of America (1996) and a
longstanding member of the board of directors of the Charles S. Peirce
Foundation, as well as a renowned educator at Loyola, Rosenthal shaped
generations of scholars. Her seminars blended rigorous analysis with
warmth, embodying the Pragmatist ethos that knowledge grows through
dialogue. Colleagues recall her generosity in mentoring junior philosophers
and her unwavering curiosity—traits that fueled her unfinished explorations
into time, ontology, and Peircean semiotics.

Rosenthal’s voice endures not only in her writings but in the ongoing
conversations she inspired. To study Pragmatism today is to encounter her
insistence that philosophy must be both daring and grounded, a call to
think pluralistically, act ethically, and remain open to the unfinished
nature of truth.

It is indeed an enormous loss to everyone who lived with her and deeply
admired her not only as an outstanding scholar but also by her exceptional
generosity and sense of human communion.

*-Ivo Ibri (Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo)*

*Robert Stern (1962-2024)*

University of Sheffield Professor Emeritus Robert (Bob) Stern was a noted
scholar of Kantian and post-Kantian thought, and in particular of Hegel, as
well as a range of other figures and movements, including Danish
philosopher Knud Ejler Løgstrup and Charles Sanders Peirce.

Bob traced his interest in Peirce to his long-time University of Sheffield
colleague, Christopher Hookway, who also died in 2024. As Bob tells it in
his 2023 article, “To Inquire Hopefully: Hookway, Peirce, and the Role of
Hope in Rational Inquiry,” he first met Chris when the latter was still at
the University of Birmingham. The two having struck up a conversation after
a talk Bob gave there, Chris sent Bob a copy of his 1992 study of Peirce.
Bob describes having found Chris’s account of Peirce too Kantian and
insufficiently Hegelian, a finding that ultimately led Bob to publish a
series of articles on Hegel and Peirce and to devote three decades of
lively debate to trying to persuade Chris of the view.

One outgrowth of this conversation was Bob’s Leverhulme Trust-funded
project, *Idealism and Pragmatism: Convergence or Contestation*, which
spawned a series of international workshops, a special issue of the *British
Journal for the History of Philosophy* and a Routledge collection on the
topic, among other outputs.

Thanks to Bob and Chris’s fruitful, years-long friendly disagreement, it is
no exaggeration to say that everyone who passed through Sheffield’s
philosophy department from the mid-90s to the early 2020s knew something
about both Hegel and Peirce, a claim that cannot be made for most
philosophy departments. Further, thanks to Bob’s provocation and support,
dozens of philosophers worldwide have disseminated their answer to the
question of the relationship between idealism and pragmatism.

The fecundity and influence of Bob’s curiosity owes a great deal to the
generosity with which he conducted philosophical debate. He was a lively
debater, who sat at the ready with a twinkle in his eye at any philosophy
talk he attended ready to raise a surgically insightful question in the Q&A
(this by way of contrast with Chris, who, as Bob notes in his 2023 chapter,
often waited until after the Q&A to ask his questions). But, while Bob
loved debate, he was never combative or unkind. Discussing philosophy with
Bob never felt like a battle; instead, it felt like play – serious play but
joyful and convivial.

When he wasn’t doing philosophy, Bob brought this spirit of serious, joyful
play to all that he did – from tempting colleagues to eccentric side
adventures during conference travel to founding the Sheffield Department of
Philosophy’s annual “Philosophy Rocks” event at which philosophy students,
post-grads, staff, visitors and their families would share musical
performances before breaking bread and raising a glass.

Bob died August 21, 2024 of brain cancer.

*-Shannon Dea (University of Regina)*

*References*

Stern, Robert (2023) “To Inquire Hopefully: Hookway, Peirce, and the Role
of Hope in Rational Inquiry” in Talisse, Herbert and Reyes Cárdenas,
eds. *Pragmatic
Reason: Christopher Hookway and the American Philosophical Tradition*.
Routledge.

Hookway, Christopher (1992) *Peirce*. Routledge.


*VI.                  **Opportunities for Peirceans! *

*Study Semiotics in Bologna! *

The Master’s Degree in Semiotics at the University of Bologna stands as a
cornerstone in the field of semiotic studies, continuing the rich
intellectual tradition established by Umberto Eco. Beginning in the 2025-26
academic year, the University of Bologna will offer a Master’s Degree in
Semiotics *entirely in English*. This innovative development marks a unique
offering within Europe, further enhancing the program’s accessibility and
international appeal. For more information click here
<https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=f714a26eeb&e=860edf35dc>
.


*Call for papers for the 3rd Congress of the Latin American Peirce Society!*

The Latin American Peirce Society is pleased to announce its 3rd Congress.

This congress seeks to bring together researchers, students and enthusiasts
of Peirce's work from all over Latin America and the world. The thematic
areas are broad and include semiotics, philosophy of science, metaphysics,
pragmatism and ethics. Participation options include: *Communications*:
Presentation of an original research in oral communication format; *Panel*:
Proposals for thematic panels with the participation of a maximum of 3 or 4
speakers, who will address a specific theme from different perspectives.

*Submission of abstracts*: Deadline: May 31th, 2025. Length: 500 words,
maximum. Format: WORD©, PDF©. Include: Title of the
communication/roundtable, name of the author(s), institutional affiliation
and 5 keywords. Send to: [email protected]  Write ABSTRACT 2025 in the
subject of the message.

*Additional information*: The conference will be held in Universidad de
Valparaíso, Edificio CIAE, 1931 Blanco
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St.,
Valparaíso, Chile, September 24-26, 2025. For any questions, please contact
us by email: [email protected] .



*VII.                  Have you been keeping up with the Transactions?*

*Volume 60, Number 3: *

John Marvin, "A Neglected God for the Reality of Argument"

Sami Pihlström, "On William James' Implicit Shopenhauerianism"

Joseph Gamache, "Pragmaticizing the American Personalists"

Joshua M. Hall, "Trading on Shifting Grounds: Risse and Wollner's *On Trade
Justice*"

Shunji Ukai, "On the Religious Deposit in Dewey's Empirical Method"

Matthew C. Cotter, "*The Disputed Legacy of Sidney Hook* by Gary Bullert
(Review)"

Jaime Nubiola,  "*Susan Haack: Premio Internacional de Cultura Jurídica
2020 *(Review)"

*Forthcoming Issue (60.4):*

*Nathan Haydon, “Modernizing Peirce’s Existential Graphs.”*

Recent work has provided a categorical foundation for Peirce's graphical
syntax and inference rules and at the same time affirms a number of
Peirce's insights and claims about the graphs. These insights include the
important role teridentity plays in generalizing from binary to n-ary
relations, as well as Peirce's intuitions about 'lines of identity.' This
essay describes these recent developments and begins to situate them with
respect to Peirce's philosophical writings on the graphs. Key contributions
include a renewed emphasis on the s*croll *or 'double cut' and a return to
Peirce's early algebraic work in 'Note B.' The result is a dramatic new
perspective on the graphs.


*Scott Metzger, “The Greatest Discrepancy in the Peirce-Welby
Correspondence.”*

Metzger addresses what Peirce has called the “greatest discrepancy” between
his trichotomy of interpretants and Victoria Welby’s three orders of
signification. This discrepancy concerns the difference between Peirce’s
dynamical interpretant (as the actual effect a sign produces) and Welby’s
notion of meaning (as involving the intention of the sign-user). Metzger
argues that, as Peirce understood it, the root of their disagreement stems
from their different views about the aim of semiotics more generally. Welby
limits her study of signs to language, whereas Peirce is interested in
applying Semeiotic to the science of reasoning. He concludes by suggesting
that Peirce and Welby ought to form an enterprise, as each seems to add
what the other lacks: Peirce complements Welby’s theory by generalizing the
sign, and Welby complements Peirce’s theory by further developing the
speculative rhetoric of the sign.

*Etienne Raduly, “A Spirit of Synthesis: Charles Morris, Morton White, and
the Crisis of Pragmatism.”*

Building on Robert Talisse’s interpretation of a “crisis” in mid-century
pragmatism Raduly examines the overlooked contributions of Charles Morris
and Morton White. Against the metaphilosophical overreach of Deweyan
pragmatism, Morris and White advanced a distinct effort toward
philosophical synthesis: unifying diverse traditions on a pragmatist basis
while rejecting doctrinal reductionism or triumphalism along with any
hierarchy of vocabularies. By challenging embedded dualisms, Morris and
White’s approach widens the scope of pragmatism while fostering a freer yet
more rigorous relationship with their intellectual lineage. By challenging
the “eclipse” narrative, Raduly highlights continuities within the
pragmatist tradition, positioning Morris and White as early representatives
of a neopragmatist current, with significant resonances in contemporary
trends following its “revival” in the 1980s.

*Devon Schiller, “Inquiry Road: A Pragmatic Model for Scientific Methods
and the Temporalities of this Epistemology.”*

Reflecting upon *Pragmatic Reason: Christopher Hookway and the American
Philosophical Tradition*, Schiller embarks on a single “inquiry road”
through the intellectual landscape formed by this edited volume: To what
extent, and in what ways, is a pragmatic model of scientific methods
characterized by its temporalities? And how is temporality necessary and
significant for the methods of the sciences, their utility, and value?
Schiller models *the road of inquiry*—to apply the metaphor first
introduced by Peirce and further utilized by Hookway—across five modes:
affect, belief, community, doubt, and hope. Ultimately, Schiller
observes, the inquiry of Peirce, as interpreted by Hookway, affords for the
unifying modelling of our scientific methodologies based on neither stages
nor phases of linear time, but on modes of lived temporality.

*Shunji Ukai, book review of Pragmatism and Historical Representation, by
Serge Grigoriev.*

*VIII.               New Books relating to Peirce*

Grigoriev, Serge. 2025. *Pragmatism and Historical Representation*. 1st ed.
Cambridge University Press.

Lacková, L̕udmila (2025). Language of life: a Peircean approach to living
organisms. New York: Peter Lang.

Brioschi, M.R. (2024). *La forma della relazione: logica, metafisica ed
etica in Charles S. Peirce *(The Form of Relation: Logic, Metaphysics and
Ethics in Charles S. Peirce), Rubbettino.

Maddalena, G., Ferrucci, F., Bella, and  M., Santarelli, M. (2024). *Gestures:
Approaches, Uses, and Developments.* (1st ed.). Walter de Gruyter GmbH.

Bernardi della Rosa, S. (2025). *Peirce on Habits: Developing a Pragmatist
Ontology*, Lexington Books.

*Recent Translations of Peirce's writings: *

Peirce, C. S., Renato Rodrigues Kinouchi, Max Rogério Vicentini and
Cassiano Terra Rodrigues (2023). *Acaso, probabilidade e indução: escritos
selecionados,* Associação Filosófica Scientiae Studia.

Peirce, C. S, Lucia Santaella and Cassiano Terra Rodrigues (2023). *Escritos
Da Série Cognitiva*. Editora Unicamp






*IX.            New Articles relating to Peirce Special Issues: Among the
Disciplines: Polymathemic Peirce, Noema, V.1, N.15 (2024):*

Zalamea, Fernando, “Peirce Polymath”

Forster, Fabienne and Michael Hampe, “Classes as Clusters: Peirce on
evolution and biology”

Monti, Rocco, “Semiotics and Epistemology of Vagueness: A transdisciplinary
look starting from Charles S. Peirce”

Varetto, Nicolò, “About that sign that is like man: The philosophical
semiotics of C. S. Peirce and the transdisciplinarity of knowledge”

Cambria, Florinda, “Here, among the disciplines. The living opportunity and
transdisciplinary laboratory”

*Rodrigues, C. T., and Flórez, J. A. (2025). Presentation: Dossier: Peirce
and logic. Cognitio: Philosophy Magazine, 26(1), e70165:*

Borges, P. & Franco, J. R. “Signos coletivos e generalidade na tricotomia
do objeto dinâmico na semiótica de Charles S. Peirce.”

Salatiel, J. R. “Lógica trivalorada e paraconsistência em Peirce.”

Cunha, I. F. da, Melo, E. S., & Arenhart, J. R. B. “Peirce e a lógica do
mentiroso.”

Horta, J. “Modelos científicos: condições transcendentais do pensamento
diagramático de Peirce.”

Schmidt, J. A. “Peirce and modal logic: delta existential graphs and
pragmaticism.”

Hugueth, Angie. “Topos de grafos existenciais sobre superfícies de Riemann.”

*Other Articles: *

Barbieri, M. (2025). Do Codes Need Interpretation? *Biosemiotics*.

Bellucci, Francesco. (2025). "What is a Sign? Peirce on Signs and
Propositions". *The Review of Metaphysics*, Volume 78, Number 3 (Issue No,
311), pp. 467-490.

Bender, Miriam (2025). Working Chance: Peirce's Semiotic Contrasted With
Benner's Intuition and Illustrated Through a Semiosis of a Novel Event in
the Context of Nursing. *Nursing Inquiry* 32 (1):e12693.

Berger, Jesse R. A. 2025. "Can Madhyamaka Support Final Causation?
‘Groundless Teleology’ in Mahāyāna Buddhism, C.S. Peirce, and Chaos Theory"
*Religions* 16, no. 2: 144.

Candiotto, Laura (2025). The problem of sentience. *Phenomenology and the
Cognitive Sciences* 24 (1):191-211.

Cárdenas, Paniel Reyes, and Jorge Alejandro Flórez. "Mathematical
Creativity: A Peircean Abductive Proposal." *BRAIN. Broad Research in
Artificial Intelligence and Neuroscience* 16, no. 1 (2025): 352-365.

dos Santos Rocha, Patricia, and Antonio Sergio da Costa Nunes. "A
Desconstrução do sujeito na era informacional: OBJECTIONS FROM EDMUND
HUSSERL AND CHARLES SANDERS PEIRCE." *Revista NUFEN: Phenomenology and
Interdisciplinarity* 17, no. 1 (2025).

Driggers, Kenneth (2024). Peirce On Truth: To Deflate or Destroy? *Philosophy
of Education* 80 (1):98-102.

Garrison, Jim (2024). Potentiality and Actuality in Peirce and Dewey. *European
Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy* 16 (2).

Legg, Catherine (2024). Sellars and Peirce on Truth and the End of Inquiry.
In Carl Sachs, *Interpreting Sellars: Critical Essays*. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.

Legg, Catherine, and André Sant’Anna. "Pragmatic realism: towards a
reconciliation of enactivism and realism." *Phenomenology and the cognitive
sciences* 24, no. 1 (2025): 213-230.

Nöth, Winfried & Santaella, Lucia (2025). Filosofia peirciana do mais que
humano, seus precursores e seus herdeiros. *Cognitio* 26 (1):e70334.

Pietarinen, A.-V., & Shumilina, V. (2025). Synechism 2.0: Contours of a new
theory of continuity in bioengineering. *BioSystems*, *250*, 105410-.

Pietarinen, Ahti-Veikko and Snellman, Lauri. "The semiotic roots of
worldviews: logic, epistemology, and contemporary comparisons" *Semiotica*,
vol. 2024, no. 261, 2024, pp. 1-24.

Rodríguez Higuera, Claudio (2024). Charles Peirce’s Philosophy and the
Intersection Between Biosemiotics and the Philosophy of Biology. *Biological
Theory* 19 (2):94-104.

Salis, Pietro (2025). Minima Trivialia Bypassed. *Philosophia* 52
(5):1289-1300.

Shumilina, Vera (2024). Abduction in Animal Minds. *Kriterion – Journal of
Philosophy* 38 (1-2):21-39.

Solari, H. G. & Natiello, Mario (2024). Science, dualities and the
phenomenological map. *Foundations of Science* 29 (2):377-404.

Švantner, Martin. "Jazz Semiosis: Possibilities of Applying Peirce in Music
Theory." *Part I Time and Space in Literary Genres*: 199.

Trimarchi, Nat (2024). Peirce's Suspended Second, and Art's 'Ethical
Phenomenology'. *Cosmos and History* 20 (2):318-399.

Volodymyr Ratnikov. (2025). CHARLES SANDERS PEIRCE AND THE PLACE OF CHAOS
IN THE NEW WORLD ORDER. *Filozofia i Nauka*, *13*, 9–26.

Zhang, Yanxiang (2024). C. S. Peirce on Jeremy Bentham: “A shallow
logician” confined to analysis of “lower motives”. *Theoria 90* (3):264-280.


*X.                     **Membership and Support for Junior Scholars*

A reminder to all subscribers that the Charles S. Peirce Society is able to
provide limited financial support for scholarly endeavors, and we
particularly favor funding requests from junior scholars (graduate students
and those holding PhDs for fewer than 10 years) and from those from
traditionally disadvantaged backgrounds. Only members of the Society are
able to secure funding. Click here
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for more information.

Membership to the Charles S. Peirce Society is available for free for
graduate students; otherwise, membership to the Society is secured either
through an individual subscription to the *Transactions of the Charles S.
Peirce Society* (automatic membership with *Transactions *subscription) or
through payment of direct dues. Go here
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for more information.



*XI.                  **News to Share? Please Email the Peirce Society! *

All subscribers to this newsletter are invited to share any news they have
with us, whether it be a special publication, a Call for Papers, or a
tragic loss of a fellow Peircean. Please email [email protected] and
let us know.
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