Jon S, Gary R, List,

I'd like to ask a couple of questions about the two positions you describe with 
respect to the nature of a sign:


GR: Some argue, with considerable textual support from Peirce, that sign 
(representamen), object, and interpretant are but correlates within a triadic 
semiotic relation, others that the triadic relation itself is the Sign: that 
is, that one could argue that the Sign is not simply the representamen or the 
representamen plus its object, that the Sign is the whole triadic relation of 
representamen, object, and interpretant ensemble.


JAS: As you and other List members are well aware, I am in the former camp and 
quite vociferously reject the latter position. As I see it, it is an even 
bigger terminological mistake than using "instant" colloquially instead of 
carefully distinguishing it from "moment," because it is even more conducive of 
conceptual confusion. The triadic relation is "representing" or (more 
generally) "mediating," while "sign" designates its first corollate--that which 
represents the object for the interpretant, or (more generally) that which 
mediates between the object and the interpretant.


Let's consider a pattern of inquiry involving abductive, deductive and 
inductive arguments. If we take the premisses of an argument to be the sign and 
the conclusion to be the interpretant, what is the sign as the cycle continues 
from initial hypotheses to the deduction of possible tests and predicted 
consequences to induction from actual experiments that help to confirm or 
disconfirm the competing hypotheses? At each stage, don't the conclusions of a 
given argument carry forward and serve as premisses in the next stage of 
inquiry?


First, given the fact that, at each stage, the interpretant has three parts:  
an immediate, a dynamical and a final interpretant. Don't the three parts of 
the interpretant serve as a sign at the next stage?


Second, do you think that only the conclusion is carried forward to serve as a 
premiss in the next argument in the inquiry. Or, is the entirety of the 
previous argument--conclusion and premisses--carried forward?

Note that I am not advocating for one position or the other in this debate. I 
am open to the competing interpretative hypotheses and want to understand the 
pros and cons of different approaches w/r/t reading Peirce.

--Jeff

________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of 
Jon Alan Schmidt <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, July 19, 2025 5:13 PM
To: Peirce-L <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Semiosic Ontology (was Spencer-Brown's concept of 
'reentry')

List:

JAS: As I see it, this is a refinement of Peirce's objective idealism--instead 
of a substance ontology in which "matter is effete mind, inveterate habits 
becoming physical laws" (CP 6.25, EP 1:293, 1891), it is a process ontology in 
which discrete things and their dyadic reactions are degenerate outcomes of 
continuous and triadic semiosis.

To elaborate on this a bit more, every triadic relation involves dyadic 
relations between different pairs of its three correlates; a genuine triadic 
relation is not reducible to those dyadic relations, while a degenerate triadic 
relation is so reducible. The three correlates of the genuine triadic relation 
of representing or (more generally) mediating are the sign (S), its dynamical 
object (Od), and its final interpretant (If); and it involves, but is not 
reducible to, the dyadic S-Od and S-If relations. That is why there are 
trichotomies for classifying signs according to them in Peirce's various 
taxonomies--icon/index/symbol for S-Od, and rheme/dicisign/argument (or 
seme/pheme/delome) for S-If.

On the other hand, an individual event of semiosis happens when a dynamical 
object determines a sign token to determine a dynamical interpretant (Id)--an 
actual sign produces an actual effect. This is a degenerate triadic relation, 
reducible to those two dyadic relations. Peirce's later taxonomies include 
another trichotomy for classifying signs according to the S-Id 
relation--presented/urged/submitted (or suggestive/imperative/indicative), 
corresponding to the sign's "manner of appeal" (CP 8.338, SS 34-5, 1904 Oct 12; 
EP 2:490, 1908 Dec 25). My working hypothesis is that any dyadic reaction 
between discrete things can be conceived as an occurrence of such an event of 
semiosis.

For example, when a moving billiard ball collides with a stationary billiard 
ball, that impact is a sign token, the previous momentum of the first ball is 
its dynamical object, and the subsequent momentum of the two balls is its 
dynamical interpretant. The sign token is an index because the S-Od relation is 
an existential connection, and an urged imperative because the S-Id relation is 
compulsive. It is also a dicisign or pheme because the S-If relation is 
isomorphic to that of a conditional proposition with antecedent and 
consequent--the collision is governed by a physical law. In Peirce's words ...

CSP: Any dynamic action--say, the attraction by one particle of another--is in 
itself dyadic. ... However, the dyadic action is not the whole action; and the 
whole action is, in a way, triadic. ... That whatever action is brute, 
unintelligent, and unconcerned with the result of it is purely dyadic is either 
demonstrable or is too evident to be demonstrable. But in case that dyadic 
action is merely a member of a triadic action, then so far from its furnishing 
the least shade of presumption that all the action in the physical universe is 
dyadic, on the contrary, the entire and triadic action justifies a guess that 
there may be other and more marked examples in the universe of the triadic 
pattern. (CP 6.330-2, 1907)

Regards,

Jon

On Fri, Jul 18, 2025 at 9:04 PM Jon Alan Schmidt 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Gary R., List:

GR: It seems to me that all signs have an immediate interpretant (the capacity 
to mean something), a sign may have a dynamical interpretent (if, say, someone 
actually finds and reads the message in a bottle), and that the final 
interpretant is its meaning "in the long run" by an unlimited community over 
unlimited time (so only asymptotically approachable).  Another way to say this 
is that a sign must have the capacity to generate an interpretant to be a sign 
at all.

Yes, this is very well said. My only mild reservation is that it again seems to 
be looking at semiosis from the bottom-up (not top-down) perspective, but it is 
mitigated by our agreement that doing so is merely "an analytical contrivance 
in speculative grammar."

GR: I have always found the last quote you offered, well, profound: "The very 
entelechy of being lies in being representable. ... This appears mystical and 
mysterious simply because we insist on remaining blind to what is plain, that 
there can be no reality which has not the life of a symbol" (EP 2:324, NEM 
4:262, 1901).

I have found it increasingly profound myself in recent years, because it 
expresses the fundamental ontological upshot of semiosic synechism. Quine 
famously stated, "To be is to be the value of a bound variable"; but I suggest 
instead that to be is to be the possible dynamical object of a sign--whatever 
is, in any of the three Universes of Experience, is capable of being 
represented, and therefore itself of the nature of a sign. As I see it, this is 
a refinement of Peirce's objective idealism--instead of a substance ontology in 
which "matter is effete mind, inveterate habits becoming physical laws" (CP 
6.25, EP 1:293, 1891), it is a process ontology in which discrete things and 
their dyadic reactions are degenerate outcomes of continuous and triadic 
semiosis.

I am still trying to work out the full implications in my own mind and would 
welcome further discussion accordingly, which is why I started another new 
thread.

Regards,

Jon Alan Schmidt - Olathe, Kansas, USA
Structural Engineer, Synechist Philosopher, Lutheran Christian
www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt<http://www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt> / 
twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt<http://twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt>
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