Jon, List

Jon, I appreciate your reply (and the fact that you took the time out to read 
the paper). Yes, there's a lot of sociolinguistic terminology and 
socioliinguistic (anthropological) terminology. The key, however, (where this 
connects with Peirce), is in the notion of "meaning" and Silverstein's 
diagrammatic illustration of metapragmatics which is akin to something like a 
dynamic semeiotic — that is, (I don't know if any are familiar with Marshall 
Sahlins?), we talk in this thread of time and meaning and that is, largely, (in 
sections of course), what Silverstein is interested in.

For example, when we talk of time, are we talking of time itself (very hard to 
get to that?) or the objects of experience which participate in that idea? 
First/second/etc. orders of indexical entailment(s) and presuppositions. 
Silverstein can be read here as deconstructing ideologiy (meaning, more 
broadly) within a linguistic (socio) context.

He does use Peircean terms and if you (would not ask anyone to go through the 
man's works) read further you'd see he is very familiar with Peirce and what 
you see in that article, if more familiar with the man's work, is subtextual. 
He writes a lot on semiotic and also semeiotic (implicit, sometimes, and 
explicit, elsewhere).

Anyway, do not want to derail but in the above I have paraphrased Socrates (in 
Plato's Republic) regarding truth: be careful, that is, that we do not confuse 
the idea(l) of truth with the objects of experience which participate in the 
idea(l). And that is relevant with respect to Sivlerstein and also Peirce, of 
course.


Best

Jack
________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of 
Jon Alan Schmidt <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, July 18, 2025 10:44 PM
To: Peirce-L <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Alan Watts, Henri Bergson, and Charles Peirce (ans St. 
Augustine) on Time

Jack, List:

FYI, that entire paper by Silverstein is available online 
(https://www.academia.edu/32431007/Indexical_order_and_the_dialectics_of_sociolinguistic_life).
 I tried reading through it to get a better handle on how it might be relevant 
here, without much success because it contains a lot of discipline-specific 
jargon that is unfamiliar to me. It does not mention Peirce at all, instead 
repeatedly invoking Saussure, suggesting a dyadic rather than triadic 
conception of signs. Best I can tell, it is concerned only with linguistic 
instances (tokens) of indexical legisigns (types), such as informal/formal 
(T/V) second person pronouns in languages that (unlike English) have that 
distinction--tu/vos in Latin, tu/usted in Spanish, du/Sie in German, etc. I 
will say that its many references to context seem consistent with Peirce's 
emphasis on the necessity of collateral acquaintance/observation/experience for 
identifying the object of any sign, including how we learn words in the first 
place.

CSP: The subject of a pure symbolic proposition, i.e. one in which no diagram 
is involved, but only conventional signs, such as words, might be defined as 
that with which some collateral acquaintance is requisite to the interpretation 
(the understanding,) of the proposition. Thus the statement, "Cain killed Abel" 
cannot be fully understood by a person who has no further acquaintance with 
Cain and Abel than that which the proposition itself gives. Of course, Abel is 
as much a subject as Cain. But further, the statement cannot be understood by a 
person who has no collateral acquaintance with killing. Therefore, Cain, Abel, 
and the relation of killing are the subjects of this proposition. (SS 70, 1908 
Dec 14)

CSP: A person who says Napoleon was a lethargic creature has evidently his mind 
determined by Napoleon. For otherwise he could not attend to him at all. But 
here is a paradoxical circumstance. The person who interprets that sentence (or 
any other Sign whatsoever) must be determined by the Object of it through 
collateral observation quite independently of the action of the Sign. ... 
Another Partial Object is Lethargy; and the sentence cannot convey its meaning 
unless collateral experience has taught its Interpreter what Lethargy is, or 
what that is that "lethargy" means in this sentence. ...
But by collateral observation, I mean previous acquaintance with what the sign 
denotes. Thus if the Sign be the sentence "Hamlet was mad," to understand what 
this means one must know that men are sometimes in that strange state; one must 
have seen madmen or read about them; and it will be all the better if one 
specifically knows (and need not be driven to presume) what Shakespeare's 
notion of insanity was. ...
It is true of both Immediate and of Dynamical Object that acquaintance cannot 
be given by a Picture or a Description, nor by any other sign which has the Sun 
for its Object. If a person points to it and says, "See there! That is what we 
call the 'Sun'," the Sun is not the Object of that sign. It is the Sign of the 
sun, the word "sun" that his declaration is about; and that word we must become 
acquainted with by collateral experience. ... I think by this time you must 
understand what I mean when I say that no sign can be understood,--or at least 
that no proposition can be understood,--unless the interpreter has "collateral 
acquaintance" with every Object of it. (CP 8.178-83, EP 2:493-5, 1909 Feb 26)

CSP: We must distinguish between the Immediate Object,--i.e. the Object as 
represented in the sign,--and the Real (no, because perhaps the Object is 
altogether fictive, I must choose a different term, therefore), say rather the 
Dynamical Object, which, from the nature of things, the Sign cannot express, 
which it can only indicate and leave the interpreter to find out by collateral 
experience. For instance, I point my finger to what I mean, but I can't make my 
companion know what I mean, if he can't see it, or if seeing it, it does not, 
to his mind, separate itself from the surrounding objects in the field of 
vision. It is useless to attempt to discuss the genuineness and possession of a 
personality beneath the histrionic presentation of Theodore Roosevelt with a 
person who recently has come from Mars and never heard of Theodore before. (CP 
8.314, EP 2:498, 1909 Mar 14)

Presupposition and entailment strike me as corresponding to the antecedent and 
consequent of a conditional proposition, which are in a definite logical 
sequence. As Peirce says, "The idea of time must be employed in arriving at the 
conception of logical consecution; but the idea once obtained, the time-element 
may be omitted, thus leaving the logical sequence free from time. That done, 
time appears as an existential analogue of the logical flow," i.e., "temporal 
succession is a mirror of, or framework for, logical sequence" (CP 1.491&496, 
c. 1896). After all, both are hyperbolic sequences--"a unidimensional form in 
which there is a difference between the relation of A to B and of B to A ... 
[and] where A and B are different" (NEM 4:127, 1897-8). Unidimensional is a 
synonym of linear, and hyperbolic is an antonym of recursive--if the antecedent 
is true, then the consequent is necessarily true, but not vice versa; and the 
past determines the present to determine the future, not the other way around.

CSP: You cannot proceed from antecedent to consequent till you reach again your 
original antecedent (as in the 3rd kind of sequence, the elliptical), nor do 
you tend to such a return (as in the second, or parabolic sequence), but the 
two are distinct. (ibid.)

CSP: A cycle is a change which returns into itself so that the final state of 
things is very similar to the initial state. ... Certain cycles are judged by 
us, by their relation to the totality of synchronous events, to be such that 
the portions of time they occupy may be conveniently taken as comparable units. 
We count these from some one portion of time, during which some exceptional 
event occurred, and call the instant of the beginning of that cycle, our epoch, 
or zero; and by counting the cycles toward the infinite future with positive 
numbers, and toward the infinite past with negative numbers; and so attach 
whole numbers to instants. ... The numbers so attached to instants are called 
their dates. ... It is an important, though extrinsic, property of time that no 
such reckoning brings us round to the same time again. (NEM 2:250, 1895)

CSP: The Past consists of the sum of faits accomplis, and this Accomplishment 
is the Existential Mode of Time. For the Past really acts upon us, and that it 
does, not at all in the way in which a Law or Principle influences us, but 
precisely as an Existent object acts. ... [T]he mode of the Past is that of 
Actuality. ... [while] everything in the Future is either destined, i.e., 
necessitated already, or is undecided, the contingent future of Aristotle. In 
other words, it is not Actual, since it does not act except through the idea of 
it, that is, as a law acts; but is either Necessary or Possible ... (CP 5.459, 
EP 2:357-8, 1905)

Likewise, in semiosis, "The object is the antecedent, the interpretant the 
consequent of the sign," such that "the interpretant is, in some sense, in a 
future tense relatively to the sign, while the object is in a past tense" (R 
318:162[18], 1907).

Regards,

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

On Fri, Jul 18, 2025 at 4:02 AM Jack Cody 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Jon, Gary R, List,

I had a much longer reply in mind but with respect to time and semiosis I 
thought I'd just upload a capture from Michael Silverstein's (must read) 
Indexical Order and the Dialectics of Sociolinguistic Life (my own background 
situates me firmly within this literature but as many may know, Silverstein had 
an enormous interest in Semeiotic).

The point, regarding that capture, is entailment and from there we come into 
the analysis, in this context, of "time" as well as the objects of experience 
which, qua consciousness, allow us to understand whatever time is (Silverstein 
is always doing more than one thing, theoretical, at once).

Anyway, instead of a linear (past-present-future) flow, I wonder if you haven't 
considered a non-linar (albeit linear to whichever understanding is involved) 
"flow" of time.

I suppose more than my thoughts on the article I'd be interested to hear the 
thoughts of others, in fact, on this list, regarding what Silverstein might add 
here in temporal terms. He's more concerned with meaning-making and entailment 
(presupposition) than time itself but also requires a temporal model to make 
sense of this and so it is closely related, in my opinion, to this discussion.

Best

Jack
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