List, There are several items of considerable interest in this latest Peirce Society Newsletter, but I want to direct you to two I think are of particular interest.
Included in the newsletter is a brief obituary by Shannon Dea of Christopher Hookway whom she calls "one of the great pragmatism scholars of our age." Chris died this year after a long battle with Early Onset Dementia. Chris was also a wonderful colleague and delightful fellow, interested not only in philosophy, but in the arts, especially theater, as well. I first met him at Sheffield Hallam University where I'd been invited to deliver the keynote address that year at the annual *Conference of Conceptual Structures*. As I recall, he approached me as I was eating lunch the first day of the conference, showing interest in my work on more iconic trichotomic (three category) diagrams (trikonic) which was also the subject of my invited paper. I was a bit in awe given his reputation, but quickly discovered what a wonderfully congenial person he was. I encourage you to read Dea's obituary. Given the recent heated on List discussion involving, especially, John Sowa and Jon Alan Schmidt, I would also encourage you to read Jon Alan Schmidt's paper in Volume 60, number 2 of *Transactions.* Jon Alan Schmidt, “Enhancing Existential Graphs: Peirce’s Late Improvements .” Best, Gary Richmond (writing as moderator of Peirce-L) Internationally, the thought of Charles S. Peirce continues to stimulate significant work and discussion. The Charles S. Peirce Society Newsletter 8:2 View this email in your browser <https://mailchi.mp/e400aa48f10c/the-charles-s-peirce-society-newsletter-82-november-2024?e=860edf35dc> [image: Header: The Charles S. Peirce Society] Dear Gary Richmond Internationally, the thought of Charles S. Peirce continues to stimulate significant work and discussion. Dedicated to promoting Peirce’s work and thought, the Charles S. Peirce Society is pleased to update you on its efforts, on new publications relating to Peirce and to pragmatism, and on other news relating to Peirce. We are grateful for your support and for being a part of such a wonderful and expansive community of inquirers. Yours truly, The Charles S. Peirce Society Executive Committee *2024-25 PEIRCE ESSAY PRIZE WINNER AND ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING* We are pleased to announce that *Niall Roe*, a doctoral student at Fitzwilliam College at the University of Cambridge, is this year’s Peirce Essay Prize winner! His winning essay, “Charles Peirce and Experimental Science,” will be published in *The Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society*. The annual essay prize is open to all graduate students and recent PhDs who are not previous winners. Please help encourage any potentially interested junior scholars to submit their work for next year’s contest. Niall will also present his winning essay at our upcoming annual general meeting, which is planned to be held in conjunction with the annual meeting of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy, at Howard University in Washington D.C., March 13-15, 2025. The exact day and times will be announced to members of the Society over email. Also presenting at the Society's annual meeting in March is our current president, *Hans Joas*, Ernst Troeltsch Professor for the Sociology of Religion at the Humboldt University of Berlin. Professor Joas will deliver the annual presidential address.The business portion of the annual meeting will take place entirely over Zoom. Members of the Society will be emailed a Zoom link for the annual meeting, so long as Zoom access to the meeting is technically permitted. *Join the Society today as a member for an opportunity to join us virtually for our annual** meeting*! *MEMBERSHIP AND FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES* Interested in becoming a member of the Charles S. Peirce Society? Official membership grants you the privileges of nominating individuals to the executive committee, voting for individuals to the executive committee, voting on constitutional amendments, and Zoom access to our annual meeting. Members also qualify for funding requests for presentations at conferences and other scholarly activities. The executive committee also always welcomes suggestions from active members. Membership is included in an *individual *subscription to the *Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society* <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=552aa658b0&e=860edf35dc> (membership is not included with institutional subscriptions). Alternatively, you can join by paying dues directly to the Society through its PayPal account <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=f64f61caa5&e=860edf35dc>, priced at about half the cost of the journal subscription, and offering 1-year, 3-year, and lifetime options. Graduate students can receive free memberships by contacting the Director, Dr. Aaron B. Wilson. Details on Funding scholarly activities is available here: https://peircesociety.org/funding/ <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=a5bfdf20f9&e=860edf35dc>. Generally, the Society’s executive committee favors using funds to support (a) early-career scholars over mid- and late-career scholars, (b) scholars of underprivileged backgrounds, (c) projects that will expand access to Peirce’s writings or expand interest in Peirce’s work to groups traditionally less likely to have such interest, and (d) projects that will celebrate Peirce’s work and the international community of Peirce scholarship. Typical financial support does not exceed $500 for a single project, however, requestees are welcome to apply for more. *IN MEMORIAM: ERIC B. DAYTON AND CHRISTOPHR HOOKWAY* We are saddened by the passing of two distinguished scholars over the past six months, whose contributions to pragmatism and to Peirce studies are well known. It is our duty and privilege to remember and honor them. *ERIC B. DAYTON, 1946 —2024* Professor Dayton taught and researched at the University of Saskatchewan for over 40 years. He was a major contributor to philosophy in Canada through his teaching, research, and service. His work is well known and widely respected in C.I. Lewis circles, and he advised many MA students over the years, including theses on Peirce. His students include our at-large executive committee member, Diana Heney, and previous essay prize winner Ian MacDonald. He was the editor of the official journal of the Canadian Philosophical Association for over 12 years. >From his obituary: “[Professor Dayton] was uncommonly broad in his interests and talents, teaching and publishing in areas as diverse as advanced logic, aesthetics, epistemology, and Descartes studies. He made significant contributions on the work of the American pragmatist, C.I. Lewis. Eric loved teaching Critical Thinking (a course for which he wrote a textbook) and would regularly encounter former students who had taken it years before, full of appreciation for such a useful and interesting class. Eric valued contributing to worthy shared goals and was in it for the good, not the recognition. He played a large role in the Philosophy Department’s community outreach program, Philosophy in the Community for 17 years, offering lectures on many topics, and making coffee and delicious cookies.” *CHRISTOPHER HOOKWAY, 1949 – 2024* By Shannon Dea, *Former director of the Charles S. Peirce Society, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and **Professor of Philosophy at the University of Regina* One of the great pragmatism scholars of our age died. Christopher Hookway made important contributions in epistemology, the philosophy of language, ethics, metaphysics and the history of philosophy but was best known for his work on American pragmatism, and especially on Charles Sanders Peirce. Chris completed a PhD at Cambridge University under the supervision of Bernard Williams and Ian Hacking. His dissertation research centred on mind and meaning, and on the question of whether semantic notions admit of psychological reduction, with considerable attention paid to the indeterminacy of translation and related issues. In examining these questions, he drew on both Quine and, to a lesser extent, Peirce. After finishing his PhD, Chris developed a deeper curiosity about Peirce, in large part through Bryce Gallie’s *Peirce and Pragmatism* (1952). He received a Fullbright grant which enabled him to work on Peirce at Harvard University for a year. That research became the basis for his first book, *Peirce* (1985). After Peirce, he dug deeper into Quine’s thought, and published *Quine: Language, Experience and Reality* in 1988. Decades later, Chris described Peirce and Quine as the two thinkers whose thought had been most influential on his own. Chris went on to write three more books – *Scepticism *(1990); *Truth, Rationality, and Pragmatism: Themes for Peirce* (2003); *The Pragmatic Maxim: Essays on Peirce and Pragmatism* (2012) – several edited books, and around 90 papers in journals and edited collections. Several of Chris’s books appeared in French and Japanese, which especially delighted him. Throughout his career, Chris’s scholarship was animated by his understanding of pragmatism as both grounded in and supporting inquiry. In later years, he was especially interested in the role of community in inquiry. In his plenary address at the Charles S. Peirce Centennial International Conference in Lowell, Massachusetts in 2014, Chris began to map out what he believed to be the source of Peirce’s conception of the community of inquirers in Royce’s thought. While his illness prevented him finishing that work on his own, Mara-Daria Cojocaru and Paniel Reyes Cárdenas (to whom Chris was, respectively, mentor and PhD supervisor) have each advanced this – Chris’s final – project. Chris held research and visiting posts at Harvard University, University of Pittsburgh and Peterhouse, Cambridge University. He spent 18 years (1977-1995) in the University of Birmingham Department of Philosophy and another 18 years (1995-2013) at the University of Sheffield Department of Philosophy, where he also served as Department Head and Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities. His other significant roles included Editor of the European Journal of Philosophy, President of the Aristotelian Society, President of the Mind Association, Chair of the Analysis Trust. Chris was also the 39th.President of the Charles S. Peirce Society. An extraordinary teacher, supervisor and mentor, Chris combined philosophical brilliance and intellectual acuity with extraordinary kindness and generosity. In a discipline that is often agonistic, Chris was committed to doing philosophy in a way that built and strengthened philosophical communities and that aimed to build up rather than tear down other philosophers’ ideas. (In this, Chris was very like his beloved Sheffield colleague, Bob Stern, who predeceased Chris by two months to the day.) Chris loved to travel, and his scholarship took him around the world. He remembered with particular fondness teaching in Szechuan Province in China in the 1990s, and retained a lifelong long of Szechuan cuisine. He also nurtured a 25-year association with the University of Valencia, which he often visited, and was influential on their Department of Philosophy. In 2012, he was delighted to be awarded the Gold Medal of Valencia’s Faculty of Philosophy and Education, surrounded by friends and colleagues. For Chris, philosophy happened over hot pot or paella. It also happened over coffee, over cake, or while hiking through Peak District National Park. Chris’s love of food and coffee notwithstanding, his wife, Jo, had a strict “no philosophy in the kitchen” rule that occasionally fell into abeyance in the presence of champagne. Great lovers of theatre, Chris and Jo regularly partook of Sheffield’s excellent theatre scene. In 2019, he and Jo funded the creation of The Bank <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=46b3abe3dc&e=860edf35dc>, Sheffield Theatres' creative hub for local artists and theatre makers to develop work, skills, collaborations and careers. In 2013, Chris retired and gave his last lecture at the University of Sheffield. Before he could dismiss class, trespassers showed up with cake and champagne to fête him. The celebrations of Chris’s extraordinary contributions to the discipline continued in 2015 with The Idea of Pragmatism conference in honour of his work. The conference, held at the University of Sheffield, featured such speakers as Hilary Putnam, Philip Kitcher and Cheryl Misak, and was immediately followed by a group jaunt to Paris for a pragmatism workshop at Collège de France. In further tribute to Chris, Andrew Howat edited a special issue of the *Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society* (51.4: 2015) that gathered the papers from The Idea of Pragmatism. The most recent scholarly tribute to Chris was the publication of the edited volume, *Pragmatic Reason: Christopher Hookway and the American Philosophical Tradition* (2023), by co-editors Robert Talisse, Paniel Cárdenas and Daniel Herbert. The book launch, held in Sheffield, was attended by many of Chris’s former students and colleagues, as well as Jo, but not alas Chris himself. In 2014, shortly after his retirement, Chris was diagnosed with Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA), a rare form of Early Onset Dementia. In the early years following his diagnoses, Chris remained engaged in philosophy but was able to pursue very little of his own scholarship. He continued his Peak walks as long as he could, and he resumed playing guitar for the first time since his youth. He also participated actively in research and advocacy on PCA. In more recent years, he was no longer able to pursue these interests. Chris died peacefully in his care home on October 21, 2024. Memorial donations may be made to the Dementia Research Fund, part of the National Brain Appeal, via a JustGiving page <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=893da9e730&e=860edf35dc> created by Jo. *HAVE YOU BEEN KEEPING UP WITH THE TRANSACTIONS?* Since its founding in 1965, the *Transactions *is the premier and oldest peer-reviewed journal specializing in American philosophy and its history. Though named after the founder of American Pragmatism, all types of American thought are covered, from the Colonial period to the present. The *Transactions *also publishes book reviews in every issue, covering the breadth of scholarship related to American philosophy. We accept papers of any length, although preference is given to papers under 7500 words. See full author submission guidelines here <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=084b721db3&e=860edf35dc>. *Submit your paper for publication to the Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society!* *Call for papers:* The *Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society* is issuing a call for papers for a special issue on the pragmatism of Max Scheler, its relation to contemporaneous European and American philosophy, and its Influence. Zachary Davis’s recent translation of Max Scheler’s *Erkenntnis und Arbeit* has made a largely ignored early European evaluation of pragmatism more readily accessible to an Anglo-American audience. Scheler’s work sheds an interesting light on the early European conception of pragmatism. Though pragmatism is often considered America’s contribution to world philosophy, Scheler’s work leaves a very different impression. Though he does pay attention to James (Peirce and Schiller are largely absent), the focus is squarely on European thinkers, scientists as well as philosophers. We are looking for papers that put Scheler’s work in its historical context, connect it with other thinkers, provide philosophical discussions of his views, etc. If you are interested in contributing to this special issue, please send an abstract with a working title to the *Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society* at [email protected] by the end of January. We are aiming to have this published in the first half of 2026. Please let me know if you have any questions. - Cornelis de Waal, general editor *Recent Transactions Publications * *Volume 60, number 1* - Susan Haack, “Ugly Enough to be Safe from Kidnappers: ‘Pragmatism,’ ‘Pragmaticism,’ and the Ethics of Terminology.” - Rocco Monti, “Charles S. Peirce and the Origins of Vagueness.” - Joseph Dillabough, “Josiah Royce’s Absolute Semiotics: Pragmatism, Phenomenology, and Error.” - Austin Gray, “The Jamesian Right to Faux-Believe.” - Yi Jiang, “Charles S. Peirce and Chinese Philosophy: A Comparative Study.” - Duncan R. Cordey, Review of *Insurrectionist Ethics: Radical Perspectives on Social Justice*. Edited by Jacoby Adeshei Carter and Daryl Scriven *Volume 60, number 2* - Robby Finley, “Peirce on the Normative Basis of Deductive Logic.” - Konstantinos Chatzigeorgiou, “F. J. E. Woodbridge in the Context of American Historiography.” - Jon Alan Schmidt, “Enhancing Existential Graphs: Peirce’s Late Improvements.” - A.T. Fyfe, “Carrying Gold to California: “The Will to Believe” as a Work of Philosophy of Science.” - Aaron B. Wilson, Review of *Peirce on Inference: Validity, Strength, and the Community of Inquirer*s, by Richard Atkins. *NEW BOOKS RELATED TO PEIRCE* - Bisanz, Elize; Schneider, Stephanie (eds.). *On the logic of drawing history from symbols, especially from images*. New York: Peter Lang, 2024. - Pietarinen, Ahti-Veikko. *Logic of the Future: Volume 3,1 Pragmaticism*, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 2024. - Pietarinen, Ahti-Veikko & Shafiei, Mohammad (eds.). *Phaneroscopy and Phenomenology: A Neglected Chapter in the History of Ideas.* Cham: Springer, 2024. - Tragel, Elli Marie. *Explorations in Dynamic Semiosis.* 1st ed. 2024. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland, 2024. - Flórez Restrepo, Jorge Alejandro (ed.). *Peirce y el mundo clásico* / *Peirce and the Classical World*. Sello Editorial Universidad de Caldas, 2024. *2024 DISSERTATIONS ON PEIRCE* - Donato, Pablo. Deep Inference for Graphical Theorem Proving. Logic in Computer Science [cs.LO]. Institut Polytechnique de Paris, 2024: English. ⟨NNT : 2024IPPAX015⟩ <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=420d9a4b75&e=860edf35dc> . ⟨tel-04698985⟩ <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=6ffe90f879&e=860edf35dc> - Haydon, Nathan. Peirce’s Existential Graphs and the Logic of String Diagrams. TalTech Press, 2024: https://doi.org/10.23658/taltech.31/2024 <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=bb1b1dd9af&e=860edf35dc> - Metzger, Scott. Peirce’s Semeiotic Realism. McMaster University. Macsphere, 2024: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/30094 <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=19cce878f4&e=860edf35dc> - Serra, Vittorio Justin. Peircean Realism – Towards a Scientific Metaphysics. University of Kent, 2024: 10.22024/UniKent/01.02.105832 <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=37bc9ec143&e=860edf35dc> *NEW ARTICLES RELATED TO PEIRCE* - Brown, M.J. For values in science: "Assessing recent arguments for the ideal of value-free science." *Synthese *204, 112 (2024). - Cardoso Jr., Helio Rebello. "Deleuze’s zeroness and Peirce’s pure zero regarding the expansion of semiotics’ categorial frame" *Semiotica*, vol. 2024, no. 258 (2024): 1-23. - D. Cavalcante F. M. "The expanded mind from a pragmatic point of view: contributions of Charles Sanders Peirce's philosophy to the psychic sciences." *Cognitio*: Philosophy Magazine, 25(1) (2024). - Dart, Bradley C. “Axioms, Definitions, and the Pragmatic a Priori: Peirce and Dewey on the ‘Foundations’ of Mathematical Science.” *European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy* XVI, no. 1 (2024). - de La Gorce, Bernard. “La croyance et le doute. De Sigmund Freud à Charles Sanders Peirce , de Patrick Merot.” *Revue française de psychanalyse* 88, no. 1 (2024): 265–69. - Dillabough, Joseph. "John Dewey's Objective Semiotics: Existence, Significance, and Intelligence." *The Pluralist *19 (2) (2024): 1-22. - Dilworth, D. "The cornerstone of the bow: Peirce's synechistic principle in the wake of Schelling's philosophy of nature and the post-critical reading of Plato's Timeus." *Cognitio*: Philosophy Magazine, 25(1) (2024). - Donato, Pablo. "The Flower Calculus. In 9th International Conference on Formal Structures for Computation and Deduction" (FSCD 2024). *Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics *(LIPIcs), Volume 299, pp. 5:1-5:24, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik (2024). - Finley, R. "Towards a pragmatist epistemology for theory choice in logic." *Synthese *204, 9 (2024). - Goncalves, Hugo Nogueira. “Hypnogenesis, Chronic Pain and Peircean Habit: Implications for Clinical Endeavors.” *Culture & Psychology* 30, no. 3 (2024): 551–66. - Gregory, Maughn Rollins (2024). "Justus Buchler and the Community of Query." Journal of Philosophy in Schools 11 (1) (2024): 7. - Klemick, Griffin. "*Of Hopes and Hinges: Peirce, Epistemic Constraints on Truth, and the Normative Foundations of Inquiry." Erkenntnis (2024):1-20.* - Koed Madsen, Anders. “Digital Methods as ‘Experimental a Priori’ – How to Navigate Vague Empirical Situations as an Operationalist Pragmatist.” *Convergence *(London, England) 30, no. 1 (2024): 94–115. - Lassiter, Charles. "Reading the Signs: From Dyadic to Triadic Views for Identifying Experts." *Social Epistemology* 38 (1) (2024): 98-109. - Legg, Catherine. "Your World is Different from a Pigeon’s - But a New Theory Explains how we can still Live in the Same Reality." *The Conversation*: July 24, 2024. - Legg, Catherine. "Getting to post-post-truth." *Journal of Philosophy in Schools *11 (1) (2024): 137. - Liszka, James Jakób. "Charles Peirce’s New Esthetics: Good Design." Design Studies 91–92 (2024): 101-249. - Misak, Cheryl. “Ryle’s Debt to Pragmatism and Margaret Macdonald.” *Journal of the History of Philosophy* 62, no. 4 (2024): 639–56. - Nöth, Winfried. “A linguística e a semiótica no quadro geral das ciências: Naville, Saussure e Peirce.” Estudos semióticos 20, no. 1 (2024): 80–100. - Pratt, Alexander B. “The Consequences of Peirce’s Theory of Agential Ideas for Qualitative Research.” *Educational Theory* 74, no. 4 (2024): 551–71. - Redding, Paul. "Hegel’s (Anticipated) Answer to Peirce’s Stalled Critique of Cantor’s Analytic Continuum." *Hopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science* 14 (2) (2024):479-507. - Rodríguez Higuera, Claudio. “Charles Peirce’s Philosophy and the Intersection Between Biosemiotics and the Philosophy of Biology.” Biological Theory 19, no. 2 (2024): 94–104. - Romanini, Vinicius. "A Periodic Table for Peirce's Sixty-Six Classes of Signs." *The Pluralist *19, no. 3 (2024): 1-21. - Rusu, Bogdan. "Peirce’s Semiotics and the Background of Whitehead’s Symbolism." Dialogue and Universalism 34 (2) (2024):7-37. - Rydenfelt, Henrik. "Pragmatism and Experimental Bioethics. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics" 33 (2) (2024): 174-184. - Sanchez-Ovcharov, Carmen, and Mauricio Suarez. “Peirce’s Pragmatism, Semiotics, and Physical Representation.” European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 16, no. 1 (2024). - Shiff, Richard. “Feeling Is First.” Arts (Basel) 13, no. 2 (2024). - Sinclair, Robert. “Pragmatism and Scientific Philosophy in Carnap and Quine.” British Journal for the History of Philosophy32, no. 4 (2024): 895–902. - Steinle, Friedrich. "How to Conceive Virtual Entities: Peirce’s Proposal." *Perspectives on Science *32 (3) (2024): 269-277. - Schmidt, Jon Alan. "Semiosic Synechism: A Peircean Argumentation." PhilPapers, 2024: https://philpapers.org/archive/SCHSSA-42.pdf <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=2028733896&e=860edf35dc> *SHARE!* If you think someone might be interested in this newsletter, please forward it to them. If you wish to be added to the email list for the Peirce Society, please send your first and last name and email address to [email protected]. [image: Facebook group] <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=712f6b8e7d&e=860edf35dc> [image: Website] <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/track/click?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=8b0eed92a6&e=860edf35dc> [image: logo: The Charles S. Peirce Society] *Copyright © 2024 Charles S. Peirce Society, All rights reserved.* You are receiving this message because either you are a member or former member of the Charles S. Peirce Society or you signed up to the previous email list. *Our mailing address is:* Charles S. Peirce Society 140 Commonwealth Ave Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 Add us to your address book <https://peircesociety.us15.list-manage.com/vcard?u=2d67a1b536f133c3e9f9d5d8c&id=465a32ebdd> Want to change how you receive these emails? 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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ARISBE: THE PEIRCE GATEWAY is now at https://cspeirce.com and, just as well, at https://www.cspeirce.com . It'll take a while to repair / update all the links! ► PEIRCE-L subscribers: Click on "Reply List" or "Reply All" to REPLY ON PEIRCE-L to this message. PEIRCE-L posts should go to [email protected] . ► To UNSUBSCRIBE, send a message NOT to PEIRCE-L but to [email protected] with UNSUBSCRIBE PEIRCE-L in the SUBJECT LINE of the message and nothing in the body. More at https://list.iupui.edu/sympa/help/user-signoff.html . ► PEIRCE-L is owned by THE PEIRCE GROUP; moderated by Gary Richmond; and co-managed by him and Ben Udell.
