Sorry, Jerry, I don't agree. It's not the words; it's the format that counts. 
People think, not so much in words, but in images and diagrams ....

Edwina
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jerry Rhee 
  To: Edwina Taborsky 
  Cc: John Collier ; Benjamin Udell ; Peirce-L 
  Sent: Sunday, February 12, 2017 1:25 PM
  Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Nominalism vs. Realism -


  Dear list: 



  If words are only birds, then: 



  “CP 5.189 is NOT a syllogism!” 



  “CP 5.189 is not *the* pragmatic maxim, nor even *a* pragmatic maxim in the 
same sense, so it is certainly not *the best* pragmatic maxim.” 



  5.6 The limits of my language mean the limits of my world. ~Tractatus 



  Best, Jerry R



  On Sun, Feb 12, 2017 at 8:16 AM, Edwina Taborsky <[email protected]> wrote:

    Very nice comments, John. I fully agree: 'words are birds' - and some of 
the focus on this list on 'this word' having 'just that meaning' has been, in 
my view, unfruitful...because it ignores what's going on within that semiosic 
action.

    Edwina
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: John Collier 
      To: Benjamin Udell ; [email protected] 
      Sent: Saturday, February 11, 2017 8:40 PM
      Subject: RE: [PEIRCE-L] Nominalism vs. Realism -


      Interesting, Ben. How words change in meaning and connotation. Although 
mist of the negative references are to the medical use, some of them certainly 
apply to a sort of (Francis) Baconian science. Thanks for posting this.



      As I said, I was referring to the method, not the word. As my Tai Chi 
master was fond of saying, “Words are birds”, and he changed the meanings for 
basic movements just to help us focus on what really mattered.



      Interesting that some of the definitions have the modern meaning of both 
evidence and meanings being grounded in the senses, but still have negative 
connotations. I suppose that the rise of positivism in the late 1800s was 
somewhat instrumental in (slowly) changing attitudes. Full blown logical 
empiricism arises only with verificationism, which I think was the biggest 
error ever made by otherwise sensible philosophers. We are still suffering the 
consequences. I hasten to add that, although he was sometimes read that way 
(perhaps, for example, by Rescher and Putnam) Peirce was no verificationist. We 
see remnants in opposition views to logical positivism that try to reduce 
things to social phenomena, which I see as making precisely the same error.



      I am no empiricist in this modern sense, the one I contrasted with 
rationalism originally in this thread.



      John Collier

      Emeritus Professor and Senior Research Associate

      Philosophy, University of KwaZulu-Natal

      http://web.ncf.ca/collier



      From: Benjamin Udell [mailto:[email protected]] 
      Sent: Saturday, 11 February 2017 10:35 PM
      To: [email protected]
      Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Nominalism vs. Realism -



      Even in the days of the Century Dictionary (late 19th to early 20th 
Century), "empiric" and "empirical" had rather negative connotations. See the 
definitions of "empiric," "empirical," and related terms that I compiled at a 
website some years ago:

      http://peircematters.blogspot.com/#empir 

      So empiricists in the modern sense would not have been fond of calling 
themselves "empiricists" way back when.

      Best, Ben

      On 2/11/2017 2:06 PM, John Collier wrote:

        The reference is to the method, not the word. There is an historical 
continuity between the Medieval empiricists like Roger Bacon, and Galen’s 
followers (he died about 299 AD (who go back to Arabic predecessors, perhaps 
influenced by Galen – medical usage, of course, but he seemed to extend it in 
his views of the natural world)  and the later ones who came to called The 
British Empiricists, though not by that name at that time. On source puts the 
general use of the modern accepted sense at 1796, well after the British 
Empiricists.

        Typical definition: 

          empiricist 
          ɛmˈpɪrɪsɪst/ 
          PHILOSOPHY 
          noun 
          1. 
          a person who supports the theory that all knowledge is based on 
experience derived from the senses. 
          "most scientists are empiricists by nature" 
          adjective 
          1. 
          relating to or characteristic of the theory that all knowledge is 
based on experience derived from the senses. 
          "his radically empiricist view of science as a direct engagement with 
the world"

        The term in its present form originated in 1660-70; some say about 
1700. If you think that words determine thoughts, than there was no empiricism 
except in medicine before these dates.

        Aristotle had some things I common with empiricists, but his 
requirement for a rationalist/ essentialist middle term undermined that because 
it required the active nour. The Medieval ones gave that up. But so did many of 
the stoics, who were therefore empiricists.

        The term goes back to the Greeks, not that I think that some magic 
connects terms to ideas:

          Etymology 
          The English term empirical derives from the Greek word ἐμπειρία, 
empeiria, which is cognate with and translates to the Latin experientia, from 
which are derived the word experience and the related experiment. The term was 
used by the Empiric school of ancient Greek medical practitioners, who rejected 
the three doctrines of the Dogmatic school, preferring to rely on the 
observation of "phenomena".[5]

        NB the restriction to medicine here, similar to the early restriction 
of semiotics to medicine.

        Peirce relevance: Peirce is usually included among those who tried to 
combine elements of empiricism and rationalism, though for my money he doesn’t 
fit either camp very well

        In any case, the recent attempts on this list to try to tie empiricism 
to the use of the word are pretty poor examples of scholarship.

        John Collier 
        Emeritus Professor and Senior Research Associate Philosophy, University 
of KwaZulu-Natal http://web.ncf.ca/collier

        > -----Original Message----- 
        > From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
        > Sent: Saturday, 11 February 2017 5:58 PM 
        > To: Jerry LR Chandler <[email protected]> 
        > Cc: Edwina Taborsky <[email protected]>; John Collier 
        > <[email protected]>; Peirce-L <[email protected]> 
        > Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Nominalism vs. Realism -



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