Jerry, list,

Let me begin by addressing very briefly, then in greater detail, your three
short paragraphs. Some of what follows may be well known to many members of
this forum, but as they may not be true of others, this post in a newly
named thread is meant in part as a kind brief, albeit personal, reflection
on the nature of Peirce's Phenomenology. I hope and expect that others here
will correct any errors on my part and I apologize if this turns out to
read like *Phaneroscopy for Dummies*. It will undoubtedly be quite
incomplete, especially as to relevant sources, something which I hope
others will fill in.

Jerry wrote:

JC: Your post raises many questions in my mind; they all seem to involve
the meaning of the term “phenomenology” in your usage of the term.


When I write "phenomenology" without qualification, I am referring to
Peirce's--not Hegel's, nor Husserl's, nor any of the myriad contemporary
versions of--phenomenology. One can hardly keep up with, especially, the
European varieties of phenomenology and I've stopped trying.

Peirce sometimes uses the alternative term *phaneroscopy*, in part to
distinguish his work from Hegel's, but especially to point to the object of
phenomenological observation, the Phaneron, a term coined by him ". . .in
order to avoid loading ‘phenomenon,’ ‘thought,’ ‘idea,’ etc., with
multiple meanings" (*The Century Dictionary Supplement*, Vol. II,  CDS
2:978, 1909, in the *Commens Dictionary*).

But, surprise! he is not always consistent in his terminology. Nonetheless,
here's a definition which gets at the essence of this science as well as
its first and quintessential finding, viz., the three Universal Categories.


Phenomenology is the science which describes the different kinds of
elements that are always present in the Phenomenon, meaning by the
Phenomenon whatever is before the mind in any kind of thought, fancy, or
cognition of any kind. Everything that you can possibly think involves
three kinds of elements (1903, Lowell Lectures, in *Commens*).


There are some scholars who imagine that all the important work of Peircean
phenomenology was accomplished in Peirce's discovery that all thought
"involves three kinds of elements," that is, the categories. I am most
emphatically not one of them. Indeed, I follow Andre de Tienne in seeing
Phaneroscopy, that is, observation of the phaneron,  as only the first
observational branch of Phenomenology. See:
http://www.iupui.edu/~arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/detienne/isphanscience.pdf

As I've previously noted, de Tienne adds a second possible branch which he
calls Iconoscopy, but which he suggests he might have more property termed
Imageology (or something like that) because of his emphasis on images. H
See:
https://www.erudit.org/en/journals/rssi/2013-v33-n1-2-3-rssi02379/1035282ar/
.
He conjectures that this hypothetical branch might serve as a bridge
between Phanerscopy and Logic as Semeiotic. From the Abstract:

The mature writings reveal the important role the notion of image plays in
this transition. Peirce indeed develops a pragmatic conception of image
that turns the latter into the fundamental ingredient of the concrete
experience of signs. An image in this sense is not a drawing or a picture,
but at first a logical concept with a mathematical basis that helps explain
the psychological phenomenon. The image is at the junction between the
percept (phaneral element) and the perceptual judgment (the most elementary
kind of semiotic event) through the percipuum, and it can be observed
through a special kind of activity called iconoscopy.


In any event, de Tienne certainly holds that Phaneroscopy is a positive
science, albeit a peculiar one, and writes in "Iconoscopy" (footnote 9):

Peirce conceived of it as an activity that was to be conducted through and
through in a scientific spirit, both regarding its methods of observation
and description (mathematically grounded and diagrammatic), and regarding
its strenuous ethics of honest and unbiased reporting to a community of
inquirers and fellow observers. Thus, the place occupied by phaneroscopy in
the classification of the sciences is fully justified : it is the first of
the positive science, in that its object is actually an inquiry into the
very nature of positive experience, one that is preliminary to any more
particular inquiry into its myriad embodiments in the esthetic, ethical,
logical, metaphysical, psychical, and physical realms.

I have suggested that a third branch may be needed to fully develop
Phenomenology as a science, a branch which Joe Ransdell suggested that I
call Category Theory (I sometimes refer to it as *Trikonic* because of the
kind of iconic diagrams involved). It is principally concerned with
diagramming trichotomies, groups of related trichotomies, vectors (paths)
through some trichotomies, etc.
See:
http://www.iupui.edu/~arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/richmond/trikonic.htm

Work in Iconoscopy and Category Theory has barely begun, and the truth is
that Peirce's Phaneroscopy itself hardly been considered, let alone
developed Be that as it may, Peirce places Phenomenology directly after
Mathematics in his Classification of Sciences as the first of the
Coenscopic (Philosophical) sciences. As such according to what Richard
Atkins has termed "the principle of principle," Phenomenology offers
principles to all the sciences below it in Peirce's classification, which
is to say, to virtually all other sciences whatsoever excluding pure
mathematics.

Now, considering Peirce's own writings on Phenomenology, it's no doubt best
to look first at the source material. One good place to start to get a
handle on what Peirce means by Phenomenology (aka Phaneroscopy) is to read
the material on phenomenology in Vol. I of the Collected Papers, Book III.
Phenomenology. CP 284 to 353. Here one finds discussions of the phaneron,
valency, indecomposable elements, and the three categories.

While not strictly phenomenololgic, one also finds in Book III is A Guess
at the Riddle (CP 453  to 416) with an introductory chapter titled
"Trichotomy," by which Peirce applies category theory (trichotomic) to
everything from 'reasoning' to 'biological development'. In addition, one
of the most important theoretical discussions of the categories, "The Logic
of Mathematics: An Attempt to Develop My Categories from Within" (CP 417 to
520) is also found in Book III on Phenomenology.

Gary Fuhrman, in this forum, offers a nice introduction to Peirce's
Phaneroscopy here:
https://www.gnusystems.ca/PeircePhenom.htm

I haven't yet finished it and so can't yet recommend it, but you might take
a look at Richard Atkins recent book, which several of us on this list are
reading or have read: *Charles S. Peirce's Phenomenology: Analysis and
Consciousness *as it might suggest the state of current scholarship in
Phenomenology.
https://global.oup.com/academic/product/charles-s-peirces-phenomenology-9780190887179?cc=us&lang=en&;

JC: Could you explain the meaning that you wish to convey in terms of other
philosophers usage of the term? That is, historical? or contemporary?


For now I'll only say that Peirce phenomenology appears to me so completely
different from Hegel's, Husserl's, Merleau-Ponty's, Heidegger's, Levina's,
Varela's, etc. that there's very little to compare. And the work of the
above mentioned writers on phenomenology have themselves for the most part
very different emphases and methodologies from each other (although there
is some overlap in some of their work, and the dominance of Husserl's work
until fairly recently is patent). Furthermore, the *Encyclopedia of
Phenomenology *offers at least seven or eight distinct schools of
phenomenology. See: https://www.springer.com/us/book/9780792329565

Some contemporary phenomenologists seem more directed to semiotics than to
phenomenology. So, for example, while Maurita Harney's paper,  while
"Naturalizing Phenomenology" purports to bring together Merleau-Ponty's and
Peirce's work in phenomenology, in my view there isn't much phenomenology
in it--much more semiotics.
See:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0079610715001182?via%3Dihub

You might be interested in a recently published paper, "Phenomenology and
Biosemiotics"
by Morten Tonnessen, Timo Maran, and Alexei Sharov to see how phenomenology
might be being dealt with in biosemiotics. Incidently, they reference the
work of Maurita Harney, mentioned above. I have only had time to skim
through it, but it does point out that some biosemioticians are indeed
employing Peirce's phenomenology in their work. However, this remark is a
bit off-putting: "Many biosemioticians, as well as other semioticians,
regard the ‘Phaneroscopy’ of Charles Sanders Peirce as the semiotic
counterpart to phenomenology." Huh? So, phenomenology and semiotics
conflated again?
See:
https://www.academia.edu/38372367/Phenomenology_and_Biosemiotics?email_work_card=title

Joseph Ransdell's paper, "Is Peirce a Phenomenologist?" does, however, do a
decent job o contrasting Husserl's and Peirce's work.
http://www.iupui.edu/~arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/ransdell/PHENOM.HTM

JC: The meaningfulness of a future inquiry here depends to a large extent
on the perceptions of the meanings of “semiotics” and “phenomenology”.


I agree and, again, I hope that the thread that Gary Fuhrman anticipates
commencing will help towards clarifying those meanings.

Best,

Gary R




*Gary Richmond*
*Philosophy and Critical Thinking*
*Communication Studies*
*LaGuardia College of the City University of New York*




On Tue, Feb 19, 2019 at 6:17 PM Jerry LR Chandler <
jerry_lr_chand...@icloud.com> wrote:

> Gary, List:
>
> On Feb 19, 2019, at 4:27 PM, Gary Richmond <gary.richm...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> At the moment I cannot think of how phenomenology might address that
> question which seems to me at the moment to be a strictly semeiotic one.
> But it is a most interesting question which I hope we can pursue further in
> discussion here and whether or not phenomenology can contribute anything to
> its answer.
>
> Your post raises many questions in my mind; they all seem to involve the
> meaning of the term “phenomenology” in your usage of the term.
>
> Could you explain the meaning that you wish to convey in terms of other
> philosophers usage of the term? That is, historical? or contemporary?
>
> The meaningfulness of a future inquiry here depends to a large extent on
> the perceptions of the meanings of “semiotics” and “phenomenology”.
>
> Cheers
>
> Jerry
>
>
>
>
>
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