Jon, Jerry, List,

Peirce was a pioneer in analysis and experiments in psychology, and William 
James said that he learned more from Peirce than he could ever repay.   But 
it's important to recognize that over a century of research has been done in 
the field -- some by students of Peirce and some people who were directly or 
indirectly influenced by Peirce.  More recently, the technology of brain scans 
has made an immense advance in detail, precision, and innovations that go far 
beyond anything that Peirce could have observed.

JAS>  This is effectively the conclusion of a much longer passage (CP 
7.539-552) in which Peirce spells out in detail what he only summarizes here. 
He indeed describes primisense (or feeling), altersense, and medisense as 
"forms of consciousness" and asserts that there are no others.

That passage is based on experiments in phaneroscopy that Peirce carried out.  
He did his best with the limited technology available to him.   But it's 
important to recognize the immense increase in depth and variety of 
experiments, the precision of observations and measurements, and the much more 
detailed theories that have been developed in the past century.

Any commentary about these issues must be compared to the developments in 21st 
C neuroscience and cognitive science.  Otherwise, the comments are  likely to 
be more misleading than helpful

John

----------------------------------------
From: "Jon Alan Schmidt" <jonalanschm...@gmail.com>
Sent: 1/19/24 11:27 AM
To: Peirce-L <peirce-l@list.iupui.edu>
Subject: [PEIRCE-L] Forms of Consciousness (was Categorizations of Triadic 
Relationships)

Jerry, List:

Here is the entire referenced paragraph.

CSP: There are no other forms of consciousness except the three that have been 
mentioned, Feeling, Altersense, and Medisense. They form a sort of system. 
Feeling is the momentarily present contents of consciousness taken in its 
pristine simplicity, apart from anything else. It is consciousness in its first 
state, and might be called primisense. Altersense is the consciousness of a 
directly present other or second, withstanding us. Medisense is the 
consciousness of a thirdness, or medium between primisense and altersense, 
leading from the former to the latter. It is the consciousness of a process of 
bringing to mind. Feeling, or primisense, is the consciousness of 1ns; 
altersense is consciousness of otherness or 2ns; medisense is the consciousness 
of means or 3ns. Of primisense there is but one fundamental mode. Altersense 
has two modes, Sensation and Will. Medisense has three modes, Abstraction, 
Suggestion, Association. (CP 7.551, c. 1896)

This is effectively the conclusion of a much longer passage (CP 7.539-552) in 
which Peirce spells out in detail what he only summarizes here. He indeed 
describes primisense (or feeling), altersense, and medisense as "forms of 
consciousness" and asserts that there are no others. They are not tones, 
tokens, or types because they are not signs. Although this text predates 
Peirce's incorporation of phaneroscopy into his architectonic by several years, 
it nevertheless exhibits his characteristic categorial analysis of phenomena 
such that primisense has only one mode, altersense has two modes, and medisense 
has three modes. Note also that he explicitly identifies sensation as one of 
the two modes of altersense, thus corresponding to 2ns rather than 1ns--the 
feeling of a sensation as prescinded from it is 1ns (quality), while the actual 
sensation itself is 2ns (reaction).

CSP: The sensation has two parts: first, the feeling, and second, the sense of 
its assertiveness, of my being compelled to have it. The consequence is that 
remembering a sensation is not at all the same thing as having it. For though 
there is some vestige of compulsiveness, even in the memory, it is not at all 
comparable to the compulsiveness of the actual sensation. But if I remember, or 
imagine a feeling, whatever I remember or imagine is a feeling, and I cannot 
remember or imagine or anywise represent to myself a feeling without having 
that very feeling then and there. All the existence a feeling can have is had 
the moment it is thought. But a sensation is not had until I am really acted 
upon by something out of my control. (CP 7.543)

In accordance with this distinction, perhaps people with aphantasia have visual 
sensations of images at each moment while looking at them, but then are unable 
to remember them afterwards due to the merely vestigial compulsiveness of such 
memories and/or an incapacity in their imaginative faculties.

Regards,

Jon Alan Schmidt - Olathe, Kansas, USA
Structural Engineer, Synechist Philosopher, Lutheran Christian
www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt / twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt

On Thu, Jan 18, 2024 at 9:45 PM Jerry LR Chandler 
<jerry_lr_chand...@icloud.com> wrote:
List: On Jan 11, 2024, at 3:52 PM, Edwina Taborsky <edwina.tabor...@gmail.com> 
wrote:
Peirce’s outline of these forms of consciousness [7.551] of Feeling, Altersense 
and Medisense’ or primisense, alter sense, medisense. And, just as in his 
outline of the modal categories, these can be subdivided, so to speak, for 
‘primisense’ has only one mode; Altersnese has two modes [Sensagion and Will]; 
and Medisense has three modes ‘Abstraction, Suggestion, Association’. 7.551.

I am curious about your reasoning here.

In particular with regard to those individuals with the genetic deficiency of 
aphantasia (lack of ability to recall images or mental pictures).

Are these terms intended to be “forms” of consciousness?
Would perhaps conscious “tones” more like musical notations?
Clearly, a basis to related such terms to either “tokens” or “types” seem 
inappropriate given CSP’s allocation of these terms to words (composed from 
alphabetic symbols).

Alternatively, perhaps I’m not reading your usage of “modal categories” 
properly….

Cheers

Jerry
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