>” You say 'how a living entity, as a self, defines the things that matter'. 
>But how does the 'self' emerge? Exist? How does it KNOW the 'things that 
>matter'. After all - does a bird have to, via its own self, learn which 
>insects are food and which are poisonous, or is there an innate stored 
>knowledge base that provides such information to the collective, of which that 
>single bird is merely one example?”

My position on this is that imitation plays just as vital a role for birds. 
Furthermore, I am also receptive to Rupert Sheldrake’s morphic resonance 
theory, because it is consistent with the DNA nonlocality that I discuss in my 
article, Quantum Semiotics 
<http://journals.sfu.ca/jnonlocality/index.php/jnonlocality/article/view/64/63> 
. The idea that knowledge of which insects are food and which are poisonous is 
somehow stored in the genetic code, in the sense of information determinism, is 
conjectural. The question of morphic resonance (and DNA nonlocality) introduces 
another subconscious level of choice-making, as an alternative to instinct in 
the sense of information determinism. And what do you mean by “How does the 
‘self’ emerge?” It emerges by experience, and experience wires the neuroplastic 
brain (Norman Doidge, The Brain that Changes Itself).

>”But this didn't explain how different isolated populations developed the same 
>technology or mode of behaviour/belief.”

Examples? I can’t really comment without specifics. HOW different are these 
different, isolated examples? For example, communities that were once connected 
but later become isolated from one another, will share the same predispositions 
in cultural logic, to go on to create the parallel technologies and beliefs. 
Predispositions are as relevant to cultures as they are to mind-bodies. A human 
mind-body (hands, vocal-cords) is predisposed to self-evident inventions like 
fire and the wheel, or even mud huts and tree huts and even pottery, across 
most cultures, even when they are isolated from one another.

>”that the FORM of matter, i.e., a particular body-shape predisposes the 
>organism as to its behaviour.”

The late Tomas Sebeok’s line of thinking basically parallels my own, when he 
attributes an ape’s inability to speak to the absence of vocal chords:
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/01/02/us/thomas-sebeok-81-debunker-of-ape-human-speech-theory.html

>”So - the wings of a bird will predispose it to fly - but that's not an 
>analysis in my view.”

What do you mean that it’s not an analysis? It’s a self-evident observation… 
like an axiom. Experience wires the neuroplastic brain (Norman Doidge), and a 
winged animal is predisposed to wiring its brain to fly. Furthermore, in many 
species of birds, young birds learn to fly from their parents. That is, they 
learn to apply their winged predispositions, from their parents. So again, 
imitation plays an important role, despite the physiological predispositions.

>”Am I correct that your analysis excludes Mind and Thirdness? It seems to 
>focus primarily on Firstness and Secondness - if I may use these Peircean 
>categories within its framework.”

Absolutely not. Thirdness is integral to my line of thinking. I was addressing 
that aspect of semiosis - pragmatism and imitation - that is best characterized 
in the context of firstness and secondness. What is it that motivates an 
organism to imitate (the associations that become habits)? That’s a question, 
in the first instance, of Firstness.

>”It also seems to focus on the individual [as Self] rather than the collective 
>[i.e., that exclusion of Thirdness].”

Again, as per preceding point, I am addressing that aspect of semiosis – 
pragmatism and imitation – that most immediately takes place at the level of 
the self. There is, of course, the collective that provides the recursion of 
behaviors that manifests as habit, or Thirdness, but that’s beyond the point 
that I wanted to emphasize.

Just a final comment on what I am trying to achieve with my line of thinking. 
There are now estimated to be trillions of galaxies throughout the universe, 
with a couple hundred-thousand stars per galaxy. What I am outlining, with my 
line of thinking, suggests life as inevitable, and not accidental. It’s a 
living universe. Mine is an attempt to address the entropy problem - Shannon 
entropy, thermodynamic entropy, entropy as the tendency to disorder. By 
contrast, the notion of instinct as stored information, as with the 
NeoDarwinian theory of evolution, are inconsistent with the reality of entropy. 
It is the persistence of complexity across time, as evident in the persistence 
of life across time on Earth, that is the deal-breaker for any kind of 
information determinism.

Regards sj

 

From: Edwina Taborsky [mailto:tabor...@primus.ca] 
Sent: Sunday, December 10, 2017 5:40 PM
To: tabor...@primus.ca; g...@gnusystems.ca; peirce-l@list.iupui.edu; 'Mike 
Bergman'; Stephen Jarosek
Subject: Re: RE: RE: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Laws of Nature

 

Stephen, list:


I think that this is a vastly different perspective from one that includes Mind 
and Thirdness.

You say 'how a living entity, as a self, defines the things that matter'. But 
how does the 'self' emerge? Exist? How does it KNOW the 'things that matter'. 
After all - does a bird have to, via its own self, learn which insects are food 
and which are poisonous, or is there an innate stored knowledge base that 
provides such information to the collective, of which that single bird is 
merely one example?

As for 'imitation' - this sounds similar to the old 'diffusion' explanation of 
human behaviour, where it was assumed that a new technology was invented once 
and then, diffused by imitation to other populations. But this didn't explain 
how different isolated populations developed the same technology or mode of 
behaviour/belief.

You seem to be saying, if I understand you correctly, that the FORM of matter, 
i.e., a particular body-shape predisposes the organism as to its behaviour. So 
- the wings of a bird will predispose it to fly - but that's not an analysis in 
my view.

Am I correct that your analysis excludes Mind and Thirdness? It seems to focus 
primarily on Firstness and Secondness - if I may use these Peircean categories 
within its framework.

It also seems to focus on the individual [as Self] rather than the collective 
[i.e., that exclusion of Thirdness]. 

Edwina

 


 

On Sun 10/12/17 11:19 AM , "Stephen Jarosek" sjaro...@iinet.net.au sent:

Hi Edwina

No, knowing how to be is not a synonym for instinct. It is an expression of 
pragmatism, and how a living entity, as a self, defines the things that matter. 
It particularly relates to firstness and self. Knowing how to be incorporates 
the self into pragmatism. I suppose one might say, in this context, that a 
proper appreciation of firstness needs to factor in the role of self, and the 
self’s relationship to the world, in the context of its needs. By taking this 
approach, we attain a different and more compelling perspective on the role of 
imitation, particularly in the context of pragmatism. By factoring in 
imitation, we obtain a greater appreciation of the nuances that motivate a self 
to imitation… for example, fear. Fear motivates selves to imitate the current 
Bitcoin craze… the fear of missing out, versus the fear of loss when people 
begin to flee the market. The comfortable known versus fear of the unknown.

Mind-body predisposition… again, relates to pragmatism. The body provides the 
“tools” that predispose us to how we define the things that matter… as per Mark 
Twain’s famous aphorism, ‘A man whose only tool is a hammer will perceive the 
world in terms of nails’.

There are different layers to pragmatism, for example:

1)      There are the mind-body predispositions;

2)      There is imitation.

 

Imitation sometimes overrides mind-body predispositions, for example, in the 
domestication of animals or in the feralization of humans (feral children, eg, 
the Wild Boy of Aveyron).

Regards

 

From: Edwina Taborsky [mailto:tabor...@primus.ca 
<javascript:top.opencompose('tabor...@primus.ca','','','')> ] 
Sent: Sunday, December 10, 2017 4:26 PM
To: tabor...@primus.ca 
<javascript:top.opencompose('tabor...@primus.ca','','','')> ; 
g...@gnusystems.ca <javascript:top.opencompose('g...@gnusystems.ca','','','')> 
; peirce-l@list.iupui.edu 
<javascript:top.opencompose('peirce-l@list.iupui.edu','','','')> ; 'Mike 
Bergman'; Stephen Jarosek
Subject: Re: RE: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Laws of Nature

 


Stephen - the problem I have with your hypothesis is that you haven't explained 
what 'know how to be' involves. How does it exist? Where? How does it evolve? 
It seems to be a synonym for 'instinct'! 

What is a 'mind-body' predisposition?

Edwina
 

On Sun 10/12/17 10:05 AM , "Stephen Jarosek" sjaro...@iinet.net.au 
<javascript:top.opencompose('sjaro...@iinet.net.au','','','')>  sent:

List, in the interests of the universality of semiosis, it would be helpful, I 
believe, to do away entirely with the notion of instinct. No such thing. ALL 
organism's are decision-makers, making choices from their ecosystems. What one 
might typically categorize as instinct, in other animals, is nothing other than 
a reduced horizon of options (analogous to a goldfish living inside a small 
bowl instead of a wide ocean). ALL organisms have to "know how to be." A fish 
behaves exactly as I would behave if my body were that of a fish. Or, putting 
it another way… a man behaves as a woman would behave if her body were that of 
a man.

And once we do away with this notion of instinct as a preprogrammed blueprint 
for behavior, so too we might extend the same reasoning to atoms and molecules. 
That is, the mechanics of chemical bonds and subatomic forces are not what 
"determine" atomic and molecular properties (behavior). Rather, atoms and 
molecules must also "know how to be", in accordance with their own mind-body 
predispositions... that's why semiosis is relevant also to quantum mechanics, 
imho... and nonlocality (entanglement) is integral to enabling semiosis to take 
place at that level. The mechanics of chemical bonds and subatomic forces are 
the product of semiosis, and not its cause. Hence the motivation behind my 
previously-referenced article, Quantum Semiotics 
<http://journals.sfu.ca/jnonlocality/index.php/jnonlocality/article/view/64/63> 
. 

While we are discussing the role of mind-body predispositions in semiosis and 
pragmatism... I am reminded of Simon and Garfunkel's El Condor Pasa. In its 
original form, it was a Peruvian folk song about a group of Andean miners who 
were exploited by their boss. The condor (condor mind-body) looks from the sky, 
at the human mind-bodies toiling away in the mines, and it becomes the symbol 
of freedom for the miners to achieve:

I'd rather be a sparrow than a snail
Yes, I would; If I could; I surely would

I'd rather be a hammer than a nail
Yes, I would; If I only could; I surely would

Away, I'd rather sail away
Like a swan that's here and gone
A man gets tied up to the ground
He gives the world its saddest sound
It's saddest sound

I'd rather be a forest than a street
Yes, I would; If I could; I surely would

I'd rather feel the earth beneath my feet
Yes, I would; If I only could; I surely would

Regards

 

 

From: Edwina Taborsky [ mailto:tabor...@primus.ca <javascript:top.opencompose(> 
] 
Sent: Sunday, December 10, 2017 2:07 AM
To: g...@gnusystems.ca <javascript:top.opencompose(> ; peirce-l@list.iupui.edu 
<javascript:top.opencompose(> ; Mike Bergman
Subject: Re: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Laws of Nature

  

Mike, list - My reference to semiosis within the physical realm refers to its 
functioning as a triadic process: Object-Representamen-Interpretant, with each 
of these nodes in any one of the three modal categories. 

Certainly, as in the quotes from my other post - habit-taking is a basic 
quality in the physical realm [see his discussion of such by atoms]. But 
semiosis is not simply habit-taking [ which is a modal category]. It is a 
relational or interactive process where one 'bit' of matter interacts with 
another 'bit' of matter. This is not, as Peirce frequently pointed out, 
confined to mechanical interactions [Secondness], but includes both spontaneity 
[Firstness]  and also, Mind or Thirdness. 

But - the focus is on the results of these interactions. Does a crystal simply 
increase its size by simple mechanical contact or, are its atoms such that Mind 
both attracts and organizes this expansion. The latter is a key semiosic 
interaction. [though I would say that a simple mechanical triadic interaction 
is also semiosic - with each node [O-R-I]  in a mode of Secondness. But 
organization of the results of contact - involves Mind or Thirdness.

Edwina

 

On Sat 09/12/17 6:50 PM , Mike Bergman m...@mkbergman.com 
<javascript:top.opencompose(>  sent:

Hi Gary f, List,

I am generally familiar with the general references for laws and the tendencies 
to them. I guess I did not address my question well. Are there passages from 
Peirce where he specifically connects semiosis or signs to nature, other than 
the passing reference to crystals? I believe we can infer that Peirce likely 
believed the laws of nature to be subject to semiosis, but is it anywhere 
stated something like that? 

I found the connection of CP 5.105 'law of nature' to signs or semiosis in the 
context of my question to be unclear, though suggesting it was helpful. I read 
on and found CP 5.107 a little more to the point, but still vague. I do like 
the fact this comes up in his discussion of the reality of Thirdness. Still, 
pretty thin gruel. Maybe that is as strong as the evidence gets.

Thanks!

Mike

 

On 12/9/2017 5:02 PM, g...@gnusystems.ca <javascript:top.opencompose(>  wrote:

Mike,

 

There are plenty of passages in Peirce which virtually identify semiosis with 
Representation and thus with Thirdness, and the laws of nature being general 
laws, Thirdness is predominant in them. For instance there is CP 5.105, EP 
2:184):

[[ Thirdness, as I use the term, is only a synonym for Representation, to which 
I prefer the less colored term because its suggestions are not so narrow and 
special as those of the word Representation. Now it is proper to say that a 
general principle that is operative in the real world is of the essential 
nature of a Representation and of a Symbol because its modus operandi is the 
same as that by which words produce physical effects. ]]

 

Gary f.

 

From: Mike Bergman [mailto:m...@mkbergman.com <javascript:top.opencompose(> ] 
Sent: 9-Dec-17 17:25
To: peirce-l@list.iupui.edu <javascript:top.opencompose(> 
Subject: [PEIRCE-L] Laws of Nature

 

Hi List, 

I was reading Nathan Houser's piece on "Peirce, Phenomenology, and Semiotics" 
in the Routledge Companion [1] and came across this quote:

"One of the principal realms of sign activity, or semiosis (semeiosis), is 
human thought; but semiosis prevails wherever there is life and there is some 
reason to believe that even the laws of nature are semiotic products." 
(emphasis added) 

I am aware of the reference to crystals and bees (CP 4.551), but do not recall 
seeing Peirce references to signs in inanimate nature other than crystals. Does 
anyone on the list know of others?

Thanks!

Mike

[1] Houser, N., “Peirce, Phenomenology, and Semiotics,” The Routledge Companion 
to Semiotics, P. Cobley, ed., London  ; New York: Routledge, 2010, pp. 89–100.

 

 

 

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