BODY { font-family:Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:12px;
}Gary R - thanks; that's a great quotation. And yes, it  does bring
in his 'objective idealism' which is NOT equivalent to 'idealism'.
Agreed - without the reality of generals, a theory is nominalistic -
it can't be otherwise, for it is reduced to only two modal
categories: Firstness and Secondness. 

        That's a vital comment - that ". . . reality means a certain kind of
non-dependence upon thought, and so is a cognitionary character
 Essentially, to me that means that reality doesn't depend upon what
you or I may think of it but is itself, an operation of a general
Mind. And most certainly, universals as generals do not, per se, in
themselves, 'exist'. Instead, these generals  'exist'...within
instantiations. "Matter is..mind hidebound with habits' 6.158
  BUT - we can certainly have semiosic Signs [that triad] without
generals. Just think of a rhematic indexical sinsign [a spontaneous
cry] operative only in Secondness and Firstness. 
 Edwiina
 On Mon 16/10/17  2:38 PM , Gary Richmond gary.richm...@gmail.com
sent:
 Jon S, Edwina, list,
 This remains a thorny issue, apparently. I personally have found the
quotation below useful in thinking about the distinction Peirce makes
between 'reality' and 'existence' and, by extension, the difference
between realism and nominalism. In his late work Peirce held any
theory which did not accept real generals and real possibles to be
nominalistic. 
 In this passage the first sentence, which makes reality
"non-dependent on thought" and of a "cognitionary character," has led
some commentators to suggest that the passage also points to Peirce's
"objective idealism." 
 ". . . reality means a certain kind of non-dependence upon thought,
and so is a cognitionary character, while existence means reaction
with the environment, and so is a dynamic character; and accordingly
the two meanings, he [the pragmatist] would say, are clearly not the
same. Individualists are apt to fall into the almost incredible
misunderstanding that all other men are individualists, too -- even
the scholastic realists, who, they suppose, thought that "universals
exist." [But] can any such person believe that the great doctors of
that time believed that generals exist? They certainly did not so
opine. . . Hence, before we treat of the evidences of pragmaticism,
it will be needful to weigh the pros and cons of scholastic realism.
For pragmaticism could hardly have entered a head that was not
already convinced that there are real generals" (CP 5.503).
 Well, whether that quotation proves useful or not, I think that it's
probably unlikely that this issue will be resolved in this thread, and
that it may be indeed be a good time for Gary F to commence posting
material from Lowell 2.
 Best, 
 Gary R
 Gary RichmondPhilosophy and Critical ThinkingCommunication Studies
LaGuardia College of the City University of New York718 482-5690
 On Mon, Oct 16, 2017 at 1:48 PM, Jon Alan Schmidt  wrote:
 Edwina, List:
 Your response seems rather uncharitable; I honestly have neither the
time nor the inclination to revisit the argument right now.
  That said, I offer my sincere thanks for clarifying how you
distinguish reality and existence, as well as your careful limitation
of "things" to the latter.  I would simply question the notion that
anything can exist while having no generality whatsoever.
 And we explicitly agreed a few months ago to use the term Sign to
designate the triad of Immediate Object, Representamen, and Immediate
Interpretant.
 Regards, 
 Jon
 On Mon, Oct 16, 2017 at 12:21 PM, Edwina Taborsky  wrote:
        Jon - that's a specious attempt to revisit this argument - i.e.,
your saying that 'some people might not have heard this debate
before'. Well, tough, frankly it's not worth hearing about - and -
I'm not going to revisit it with you.

        I disagree that existence is a subset of reality, for that implies
that both have the same qualities. An existence/ entity can exist
within only the mode of Secondness and thus, have no generality in
it, but reality requires generality.  I disagree that 'some THING'
can be real yet not exist'. If it's a 'thing' then it exists. Reality
is Thirdness, or generality and is not a thing. 

        And we've been over your rejection of the Sign as a triad of
Object-Representamen-Interpretant and your confining of the term
'Sign' to refer only to the mediate Representamen. Again, read 4.551
to its end.

        There is no positive point in continuing this discussion since it's
been done to exhaustion before.

        Edwina 
 On Mon 16/10/17  1:02 PM , Jon Alan Schmidt jonalanschm...@gmail.com
[3] sent:
 Edwina, List:
 I know that we have been over this ground before, and I am not
interested in repeating our past discussions, but there may be some
following along now who were not on the List back then.
 Especially late in his life, Peirce carefully distinguished reality
from existence, treating the latter as a subset of the former. 
Everything that exists is real, but something can be real yet not
exist--and this is precisely the case with all generals in themselves
(not their instantiations), as well as some possibilities that have
not been (and may never be) actualized. 
 Likewise, anything that is general is (by definition) not
particular.  If all Signs are particulars, then (by definition) no
Signs are generals.
 Regards,
 Jon 
 On Mon, Oct 16, 2017 at 11:27 AM, Edwina Taborsky  wrote:
        Jon - we've been over these terms before. Read 4.551 and you'll see
the triad - and it's elsewhere as well.

        You know perfectly well that by Sign [capital S] I refer to the
triad of Object-Representamen-Interpretant. The Representamen is
general when in a mode of Thirdness.

        But you know all of that anyway. 

        Edwina 
 On Mon 16/10/17 12:22 PM , Jon Alan Schmidt jonalanschm...@gmail.com
sent:
 Edwina, List:
 I think that it would be helpful if you could clarify exactly how
you distinguish reality from existence in your statements below.
 I am also wondering where in Peirce's writings you find the view
that every Sign is "a triadic particular...existent in space and
time."  On my reading, that would preclude any Sign from being truly
general.
 Regards,
Jon Alan Schmidt - Olathe, Kansas, USAProfessional Engineer, Amateur
Philosopher, Lutheran Laymanwww.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt [4] -
twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt [5]  
 On Mon, Oct 16, 2017 at 8:50 AM, Edwina Taborsky  wrote:
        Gary, list:

        I presume you are being sarcastic.

         I have always accepted the reality of generals and have posted this
view frequently. What is Thirdness????? My point, also posted
frequently,  is that these generals, as real, are only 'existential'
within 'material' instances, i.e., Signs, which are a triadic
particular...existent in space and time, whether as a concept/word or
a material entity [bacterium]. I don't see that Reality/Generals have
any existence 'per se' outside of their articulation within
Signs...and this view has been stated often enough by me - and of
course, by Peirce. 

        So, sarcasm aside - we await your next posting.

        Edwina

        On Mon 16/10/17  9:21 AM , g...@gnusystems.ca sent:
        Edwina, List, 
         It’s good to see that you now accept the reality of generals, as
your previous post appeared to reject it. That said, we need to focus
on logical issues rather than metaphysical ones, as we dig deeper into
Peirce’s Lowell lectures. For Lowell 2 especially, which is all
about “necessary reasoning” and the logic of mathematics, we’ll
need to clarify those issues. I’m ready to start posting from Lowell
2 tomorrow, unless others need more time to digest Lowell 1 before we
move ahead.  
        As you are no doubt aware, CP 4.551 is a paragraph from “
Prolegomena to an Apology for Pragmaticism” (1906), which was his
last and most complete public statement on Existential Graphs and
their relation to his pragmaticism. In order to understand that
context, and its place in Peirce’s whole system, I think we need to
follow the development of EGs, starting with his first presentation of
them to an audience, namely Lowell 2. Thanks to the SPIN project, we
now have a chance to follow that development step by step. Peirce
regarded this as the best way of resolving the logical issues we have
been discussing in this thread. As someone with zero formal training
in formal logic, I’m really looking forward to this as a way into
deeper understanding of Peirce’s whole philosophy. 
        Gary f.
        From: Edwina Taborsky [mailto:tabor...@primus.ca] 
 Sent: 16-Oct-17 08:24
 To: peirce-l@list.iupui.edu; Jeffrey Brian Downard 
 Subject: Re: Re: RE: RE: [PEIRCE-L] Lowell Lecture 1: overview

        Jeff, list

        "Thought is not necessarily connected with a brain. It appears in
the work of bees, of crystals, and throughout the purely physical
world"....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"...4.551  

        Peirce was not a materialist, nor am I am materialist. I am not
saying that there is nothing 'real' outside of the material world. I
am saying that 'reality' - understood as 'a General' only 'exists'
within 'instances embodying it'.  This means that
Mind/thought/reason...which is a General, functions within Signs, and
Signs are triadic instances [see his explanation in the rest of
4.551]... A triadic Sign is a 'material' unit, in that it exists in
time and space, even if it is existent only as a word rather than a
bacterium.   

        Re your first two points - since deduction, induction, abduction,
can be valid in themselves as a format, I presume you are talking
about the true/false nature of their premises....and since the debate
seems to be on the Nature of Truth - then this issue, the truth/false
nature of the premises is relevant. Taking that use of the terms into
account [truth/false nature of the premises] , I agree with your
outline of these three forms of argument..  

        And I also agree with your other two points.

        I don't see that my position, which rests on 4.551 and other similar
outlines by Peirce, rejects or is any different from his analysis. 

        Edwina  
 -----------------------------
 PEIRCE-L subscribers: Click on "Reply List" or "Reply All" to REPLY
ON PEIRCE-L to this message. PEIRCE-L posts should go to
peirce-L@list.iupui.edu [6] . To UNSUBSCRIBE, send a message not to
PEIRCE-L but to l...@list.iupui.edu [7] with the line "UNSubscribe
PEIRCE-L" in the BODY of the message. More at 
http://www.cspeirce.com/ [8]peirce-l/peirce-l.htm .


Links:
------
[1]
http://webmail.primus.ca/javascript:top.opencompose(\'jonalanschm...@gmail.com\',\'\',\'\',\'\')
[2]
http://webmail.primus.ca/javascript:top.opencompose(\'tabor...@primus.ca\',\'\',\'\',\'\')
[3]
http://webmail.primus.ca/javascript:top.opencompose(\'jonalanschm...@gmail.com\',\'\',\'\',\'\')
[4] http://www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt
[5] http://twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt
[6]
http://webmail.primus.ca/javascript:top.opencompose(\'peirce-L@list.iupui.edu\',\'\',\'\',\'\')
[7]
http://webmail.primus.ca/javascript:top.opencompose(\'l...@list.iupui.edu\',\'\',\'\',\'\')
[8] http://www.cspeirce.com/peirce-l/peirce-l.htm
-----------------------------
PEIRCE-L subscribers: Click on "Reply List" or "Reply All" to REPLY ON PEIRCE-L 
to this message. PEIRCE-L posts should go to peirce-L@list.iupui.edu . To 
UNSUBSCRIBE, send a message not to PEIRCE-L but to l...@list.iupui.edu with the 
line "UNSubscribe PEIRCE-L" in the BODY of the message. More at 
http://www.cspeirce.com/peirce-l/peirce-l.htm .




Reply via email to