Apologies - I just found out I’d sent this to the old Peirce list rather than 
the new one. My apologies for the problem. Apple Mail appears to autosuggest 
based upon what emails you have archived. Sometimes this leads to the old list 
getting picked up. Unfortunately Mail’s UI also doesn’t display the full email 
unless you click on it. So unless I click on the Peirce-L name I occasionally 
get the wrong email. When I’m posting regularly I always remember. When I’m 
posting infrequently (as has of late been the case) then I can forget. Once 
again my apologies again.

On Wed, Sep 9, 2015 at 12:03 PM, Clark Goble <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

On Sep 8, 2015, at 1:36 PM, Helmut Raulien <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Stephen,
you wrote: "The axiomatic principles of cognition (Peirce’s categories) will 
establish how mind-bodies define the things that matter."
Again, I think that we have different concepts of the term "know" or 
"cognition". In my understanding, cognition does not appear in the three 
categories from the start, but is a matter of subcategories. I agree, that 
everything underlies the three categories possibility/quality, 
actuality/relation, representation/continuity. Secondness has two modes, and 
thirdness has three modes. These modes, or subcategories, again have submodes, 
or subcategories as before. I think, that knowledge is a matter of eg. 
thirdness of thirdness of thirdness, or something like that. 

It seems to me Peirce adopts a position where things are more mind-like or more 
matter-like as a matter of degree rather than kind. I’m not sure it relates 
directly to the categories beyond the idea of consciousness seems tied to 
firstness in certain ways. Yet the categories are always at play in an 
irreducible way.

At times Peirce appears to see the more mind-like as what is less constrained. 
So evolution is leading to the development of substance as a kind of 
permanence. Up to that time there is more “swerve” and that swerve, when seen 
from the inside, is likely traditional phenomenal mind. 

This ontology of Peirce is probably the most controversial aspect of his 
thought but it does lead to all sorts of interesting considerations. An analogy 
someone else brought up recently was Richard Feynman’s QED really being 
thinking what it must be like to be an electron. In this conception there’s 
always an inside and outside and Peirce isn’t quite so divorced from Kant as 
people assume. Yet in taking this inner view we don’t have the thing in itself 
in quite the same fashion. If only because Peirce lets firstness create a sign. 
Indeed remembering our experience of a phenomena is always a sign (thirdness) 
in response to firstness. 

That may be what you mean by modes or subcategories though. (Forgive me - 
haven’t yet caught up on my reading of the list)



On Sep 8, 2015, at 12:18 PM, Stephen Jarosek <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

                Bees are conscious in accordance with the same principles that 
we are conscious. This is one important aspect of the axiomatic framework that 
I base my thinking on. That is to say, Peirce’s categories apply to 
allorganisms, even cells. 

Pierce says bees have mind. I’m not sure he means by that they are conscious in 
any strong way. It seems a matter of degree for Peirce. 

Thought is not necessarily connected with a brain. It appears in the work of 
bees, of crystals, and throughout the purely physical world; and one can no 
more deny that it is really there, than that the colors, the shapes, etc., of 
objects are really there. Consistently adhere to that unwarrantable denial, and 
you will be driven to some form of idealistic nominalism akin to Fichte’s. Not 
only is thought in the organic world, but it develops there. But as there 
cannot be a General without Instances embodying it, so there cannot be thought 
without Signs. We must here give “Sign” a very wide sense, no doubt, but not 
too wide a sense to come within our definition. Admitting that connected Signs 
must have a Quasi-mind, it may further be declared that there can be no 
isolated sign. Moreover, signs require at least two Quasi-minds; a 
Quasi-utterer and a Quasi-interpreter; and although these two are at one (i.e., 
are one mind) in the sign itself, they must nevertheless be distinct. In the 
Sign they are, so to say, welded. Accordingly, it is not merely a fact of human 
Psychology, but a necessity of Logic, that every logical evolution of thought 
should be dialogic. You may say that all this is loose talk; and I admit that, 
as it stands, it has a large infusion of arbitrariness. It might be filled out 
with argument so as to remove the greater part of this fault; but in the first 
place, such an expansion would require a volume - and an uninviting one; and in 
the second place, what I have been saying is only to be applied to a slight 
determination of our system of diagrammatization, which it will only slightly 
affect; so that, should it be incorrect, the utmost certain effect will be a 
danger that our system may not represent every variety of non-human thought. 
(“Prolegomena to an Apology for Pragmaticism CP 4.551)

Whenever you have signs, even physical signs, you have a quasi-mind. So of 
course thirdness applies to them the same as it does us. The question of 
feeling or firstness seems a bit more tricky.

As I recall to the degree he talks about consciousness it’s the inner aspect of 
the “swerve” or chaos. In other places he says we have consciousness to the 
degree we have self-control.  I think this aspect of his ontology is among the 
most controversial of his views. I think one can adopt most of his system 
without adopting this particular thread. (Which I think comes out of the 
remnant of Kant’s “in-itself” that survives no external thing-in-itself)

…whatever is First is ipso facto sentient. If I make atoms swerve - as I do - I 
make them swerve but very very little, because I conceive they are not 
absolutely dead. And by that I do not mean exactly that I hold them to be 
physically such as the materialists hold them to be, only with a small dose of 
sentiency superadded. For that, I grant, would be feeble enough. But what I 
mean is, that all there is, is First, Feelings; Second, Efforts; Third, Habits 
- all of which are more familiar to us on their psychical side than on their 
physical side; and that dead matter would be merely the final result of the 
complete induration of habit reducing the free play of feeling and the brute 
irrationality of effort to complete death (CP 6.201)

What further is needed to clear the sign of its mental associations is 
furnished by generalizations too facile to arrest attention here, since nothing 
but feeling is exclusively mental. But while I say this, it must not be 
inferred that I regard consciousness as a mere “epiphenomenon”; though I 
heartily grant that the hypothesis that it is so has done good service to 
science. To my apprehension, consciousness may be defined as that congeries of 
non-relative predicates, varying greatly in quality and in intensity, which are 
symptomatic of the interaction of the outer world,— the world of those causes 
that are exceedingly compulsive upon the modes of consciousness, with general 
disturbance sometimes amounting to shock, and are acted upon only slightly, and 
only by a special kind of effort, muscular effort,— and of the inner world, 
apparently derived from the outer, and amenable to direct effort of various 
kinds with feeble reactions, the interaction of these two worlds chiefly 
consisting of a direct action of the outer world upon the inner and an indirect 
action of the inner world upon the outer through the operation of habits. If 
this be a correct account of consciousness, i.e., of the congeries of feelings, 
it seems to me that it exercises a real function in self-control, since without 
it, or at least without that of which it is symptomatic, the resolves and 
exercises of the inner world could not affect the real determinations and 
habits of the outer world. I say that these belong to the outer world because 
they are not mere fantasies but are real agencies. (Pierce, Pragmatism EP 
2.418-419)

As I said this is controversial. At the time it put Peirce quite at odds with 
the mechanistic determinacy that was taken for granted in physics. Today we 
allow chance or swerve, yet it seems a kind of deterministic probability that 
still is at odds with Peirce’s notion of control.

It would seem that Peirce would allow sentiency to even an electron in some 
degree yet it seems the ability to control ones behavior and form habits that 
makes for the degree of consciousness.
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