Jon, a few brief responses inserted:

 

From: Jon Alan Schmidt <[email protected]> 
Sent: 19-Sep-18 13:07



Gary F., List:

I was not previously aware of Peirce's marginal note about "Replica," so thank 
you for bringing it to my attention; the CP editors dated it "c. 1910," not 
1904.  He used "Replica" quite extensively before that--including in "New 
Elements"--for each enduring embodiment of a Sign within a particular Sign 
System, such as each appearance of "the" on a printed page of English text.

GF: The date of the note is of no importance. What I said was that Peirce did 
not use the term “replica” after 1904 in a semiotic context. You have not cited 
an example to refute that observation, nor have you cited an instance of Peirce 
ever using the term “Sign-Replica.”

  I am proposing to retain it for this purpose, mainly to differentiate it from 
an "Instance" of a Sign as he defined that term in 1906, which is an occurrence 
at exactly one time and place.  As long as a book is closed and sitting on the 
shelf, it contains many Replicas of "the," but an Instance of that Sign only 
happens each time someone actually reads one of them.  Also, for the record, 
Peirce definitely did not use "replica" as a synonym for "sinsign" in 1903.

CSP:  Every legisign signifies through an instance of its application, which 
may be termed a Replica of it. Thus, the word "the" will usually occur from 
fifteen to twenty-five times on a page. It is in all these occurrences one and 
the same word, the same legisign. Each single instance of it is a replica. The 
replica is a sinsign. Thus, every legisign requires sinsigns. But these are not 
ordinary sinsigns, such as are peculiar occurrences that are regarded as 
significant. Nor would the replica be significant if it were not for the law 
which renders it so. (CP 2.246, EP 2:291; 1903)

GF: True, the two words are not synonyms in the strictest sense of the word. 
But a “replica is a sinsign” and a sinsign is a sign in this classification, 
which means that the replica is a sign. This is not the case in your 
systematization, because all signs are Types, and a Replica is not a Type, is 
it?

In this scheme, every Replica was a Sinsign, but not an ordinary one, such that 
not every Sinsign was a Replica; and a Replica was only significant because it 
was rendered so by the Legisign that it embodied.  I acknowledge that my 
current approach is different--I am proposing that all Signs are what Peirce 
called Legisigns in 1903 (Types in 1906 and later), because as he wrote 
elsewhere, a Sign only exists in Replicas; in itself, it is an Entelechy (3ns), 
not a Matter (2ns).  We can (and Peirce often did) call the Replicas "Signs" in 
the same way that we can talk about "the" both as one word and as 15 to 25 
different words on a page.  However, for the sake of clarity--especially within 
technical discussions of Speculative Grammar--I continue to advocate reserving 
"Sign" for the former, calling the latter "Replicas," and using "Instance" for 
each individual event of semiosis that produces a Dynamic Interpretant.

GF:  But it makes less sense to speak of written, printed or pronounced 
instances of the word “the” as “replicas”, because they differ radically in 
perceptible form ...

I have addressed this before.  Replicas of the same Sign within the same Sign 
System will resemble each other; it is precisely their significant characters 
(Tones) that make them recognizable as Replicas of Signs at all.  However, 
Replicas of the same Sign in different Sign Systems--e.g., written/printed 
English vs. spoken English, not to mention other languages--may indeed "differ 
radically."

GF: Sorry, this rationalization of your usage does not address the issue. 
Peirce said that there is only one word “the” in the English language, only one 
Type, regardless of whether Tokens of it are spoken or printed. A language is 
one Sign System, regardless of the variety of media used to utter the signs. 

Again, none of this amounts to an exegetical claim about Peirce's writings; 
rather, it is a systematic proposal for understanding Signs and their relations 
today.  I would be glad to consider any purported cases of "existing things or 
events which turn out to be significant," but allegedly cannot be analyzed as 
Replicas/Instances of general Signs.  I have already explained in other threads 
why I do not view ripples on a lake, weathercocks, thermometers, barometers, 
etc. as counterexamples.

GF: Yes, I’ve seen those explanations, which mainly demonstrates your skill at 
rationalizing. The footprint I saw in the mud just now is not a replica of any 
other sign or a Token of any Type. The fact that we have a general concept of 
“footprint” does not constitute an analysis of that sign in the mud, or indeed 
of any genuine index. I just don’t see how such repurposing of Peirce’s terms 
contributes anything but confusion to the understanding of signs today.

Gary f.

Regards,

Jon Alan Schmidt - Olathe, Kansas, USA

Professional Engineer, Amateur Philosopher, Lutheran Layman

www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt <http://www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt>  
- twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt <http://twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt> 

 

On Wed, Sep 19, 2018 at 9:18 AM, <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Jon, list,

I agree with you (and Gary R) that “sign-vehicle” is an unfortunate choice of 
term, for the reasons you’ve given. But similar reasons apply to your term 
“Sign-Replica,” another term that Peirce himself never used (with or without 
the hyphen), as far as I can tell. He did use the term “Graph-replica” to 
distinguish between a graph that visibly existed on paper and the imagined 
diagram that it “replicated”; but he stopped using the term “replica” in 
reference to EGs in 1904, for reasons given in a marginal note to CP 4.395: “I 
abandon this inappropriate term, replica, Mr. Kempe having already (‘Memoir on 
the Theory of Mathematical Form’ [Philosophical Transactions, Royal Society 
(1886)], §170) given it another meaning. I now call it an instance.”

Peirce also stopped using the term “replica” in reference to signs generally, 
and I doubt that you can find an instance of it in his semiotics after 1904. In 
the 1903 classification, he was using it as a synonym for “sinsign.” Since 
qualisign/sinsign/legisign is a trichotomy of signs — as is tone/token/type — a 
sinsign, or token, or replica, is a kind of sign. So is a legisign, or Type; in 
which case it makes no sense to say that all Signs are Types; which is probably 
why Peirce never said that, not even in “Kaina Stoicheia.” Likewise the term 
“Sign-Replica” makes no sense because a replica is a sign in the only 
classification system where Peirce actually used the word “replica,” that of 
1903. And besides that, many of the examples Peirce gave of sinsigns at that 
time do not actually replicate anything; they are simply existing things or 
actual events which are determined by objects to determine interpretants. (The 
fact that you have to use a symbol in order to name or denote these things is 
irrelevant to their functioning as signs.)

I’m inclined to think that Peirce’s use of “replica” in the 1903 classification 
of signs was already a mistake. It is misleading because for all ordinary 
purposes, a replica is a copy of something, usually of an existing thing. This 
is not necessarily the case with sinsigns, or with tokens as defined by Peirce 
in 1906: “A Single event which happens once and whose identity is limited to 
that one happening or a Single object or thing which is in some single place at 
any one instant of time, such event or thing being significant only as 
occurring just when and where it does.” Peirce does not say here, or anywhere 
that I know of, that a Token of a Type is a “replica” of that type, because 
that would be misleading: the relationship between a Token and the Type that it 
‘betokens’ is not the same as the relation between a replica and what it 
replicates, because the latter two are ordinarily in the same mode of being. It 
makes sense to speak of a “replica” of a graph which has been imagined but not 
scribed, because both graph and replica are essentially visual. But it makes 
less sense to speak of written, printed or pronounced instances of the word 
“the” as “replicas”, because they differ radically in perceptible form — which 
is probably why Peirce didn’t use that term for them after 1904, not even when 
he was using the word as his paradigmatic illustration of the Type-Token 
distinction.

For your “systematic” revision of Peircean terminology you could, I suppose, 
follow Peirce’s example and replace “replica” with “instance.” But that would 
be a band-aid solution to the deeper problem, which is your claim (or proposal) 
that all Signs are Types. For Peirce, an existing instance of a word is a sign 
(albeit a fragmentary and incomplete one), and calling it a “sign-instance” or 
“sign-replica” as if it were only an instance of a Sign is at best redundant. 
As for existing things or events which turn out to be significant, calling them 
“sign-replicas” is deeply misleading — more deeply than the notion of a 
“sign-vehicle.”

Gary f.

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