Gary F, List,

I'd be happy to explore the ideas with you. Thank's for providing a link to the 
relevant passage:

Firstness may be defined as follows: It is the mode in which anything would be 
for itself, irrespective of anything else, so that it would not make any 
difference though nothing else existed, or ever had existed, or could exist. 
Now this mode of being can only be apprehended as a mode of feeling. For there 
is no other mode of being which we can conceive as having no relation to the 
possibility of anything else. In the second place, the First must be without 
parts. For a part of an object is something other than the object itself. 
Remembering these points, you will perceive that any color, say magenta, has 
and is a positive mode of feeling, irrespective of every other. Because 
Firstness is all that it is, irrespective of anything else, when viewed from 
without (and therefore no longer in the original fullness of firstness), the 
firstnesses are all the different possible sense-qualities, embracing endless 
varieties of which all we can feel are but minute fragments. Each of these is 
just as simple as any other. It is impossible for a sense quality to be 
otherwise than absolutely simple. It is only complex to the eye of comparison, 
not in itself.
— Peirce, RLT 147, PM 167 (1898)

My working assumption is that, in 1898, Peirce is continuing, deepening and 
possibly revising the inquiries taken up earlier in his career in works such as 
"A New List of Categories". He refers to this work just few paragaphs after 
this remark, so this seems like a safe assumption.

What is more, I think it is helpful to compare Peirce's philosophical inquiries 
in RLT to those conducted by others--especially the philosophers he was 
actively engaging with. In Putnam's comments on Lecture 3, he makes some 
references to the work of Kant and Mill. Following Putnam's lead, consider 
Mill's analysis of the categories of experience in his works in A System of 
Logic. In Vol. I, Book I, Chapter 3, Mill examines the different kinds of 
things that may be denoted by names. The analysis appears to draw on, and 
disagree with, Aristotle's account of the Categories. Unlike Aristotle's list, 
Mill narrows his account of the categories down to three that he treats as 
fundamental:  quality, relation and quantity.

Consider what Mill says in the relevant section:  
https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_3frepePb6XsC/page/68/mode/2up

"Of Quality, Quantity, and Relation. We shall come to the two latter presently: 
in the first place we shall confine ourselves to the former.

Let us take, then, as our example, one of what are termed the sensible 
qualities of objects, and let that example be whiteness. When we ascribe 
whiteness to any substance, as, for instance, snow; when we say that snow has 
the quality whiteness, what do we really assert? Simply, that when snow is 
present to our organs, we have a particular sensation, which we are accustomed 
to call the sensation of white. But how do I know that snow is present? 
Obviously by the sensations which I derive from it, and not otherwise. I infer 
that the object is present, because it gives me a certain assemblage or series 
of sensations. And when I ascribe to it the attribute whiteness, my meaning is 
only, that, of the sensations composing this group or series, that which I call 
the sensation of white colour is one.

This is one view which may be taken of the subject. But there is also another, 
and a different view. It may be said, that it is true we know nothing of 
sensible objects, except the sensations they excite in us; that the fact of our 
receiving from snow the particular sensation which is called a sensation of 
white, is the ground on which we ascribe to that substance the quality 
whiteness ; the sole proof of its possessing that quality. But because one 
thing may be the sole evidence of the existence of another thing, it does not 
follow that the two are one and the same. The attribute whiteness (it may be 
said) is not the fact of our receiving the sensation, but something in the 
object itself; a power inherent in it; something in virtue of which the object 
produces the sensation. And when we affirm that snow possesses the attribute 
whiteness, we do not merely assert that the presence of snow produces in us 
that sensation, but that it does so through, and by reason of, that power or 
quality.

For the purposes of logic it is not of material importance which of these 
opinions we adopt. The full discussion of the subject belongs to the other 
department of scientific inquiry, so often alluded to under the name of 
metaphysics ; but it may be said here, that for the doctrine of the existence 
of a peculiar species of entities called qualities, I can see no foundation 
except in a tendency of the human mind which is the cause of many delusions. I 
mean, the disposition, wherever we meet with two names which are not precisely 
synonymous, to suppose that they must be the names of two different things; 
whereas in reality they may be names of the same thing viewed in two different 
lights, which is as much as to say under different suppositions as to 
surrounding circumstances. Because quality and sensation cannot be put 
indiscriminately one for the other, it is supposed that they cannot both 
signify the same thing, namely, the impression or feeling with which we are 
affected through our senses by the presence of an object; although there is at 
least no absurdity in supposing that this identical impression or feeling may 
be called a sensation when considered merely in itself, and a quality when 
regarded as emanating from any one of the numerous objects, the presence of 
which to our organs excites in our minds that among various other sensations or 
feelings. And if this be admissible as a supposition, it rests with those who 
contend for an entity per se called a quality, to show that their opinion is 
preferable, or is anything in fact but a lingering remnant of the scholastic 
doctrine of occult causes; the very absurdity which Moliere so happily 
ridiculed when he made one of his pedantic physicians account for the fact that 
“l’ opium endormit,” by the maxim “parcequ’il a une vertu soporifique.”

It is evident that when the physician stated that opium had “une vertu 
soporifique,” he did not account for, but merely asserted over again, the fact 
that it endormit. In like manner, when we say that snow is white because it has 
the quality of whiteness, we are only re-asserting in more technical language 
the fact that it excites in us the sensation of white. If it be said that the 
sensation must have some cause, I answer, its cause is the presence of the 
assemblage of phenomena which is termed the object. When we have asserted that 
as often as the object is present, and our organs in their normal state, the 
sensation takes place, we have stated all that we know about the matter. There 
is no need, after assigning a certain and intelligible cause, to suppose an 
occult cause besides, for the purpose of enabling the real cause to produce its 
effect. If I am asked, why does the presence of the object cause this sensation 
in me, I cannot tell: I can only say that such is my nature, and the nature of 
the object; that the fact forms a part of the constitution of things. And to 
this we must at last come, even after interpolating the imaginary entity. 
Whatever number of links the chain of causes and effects may consist of, how 
any one link produces the one which is next to it remains equally inexplicable 
to us. It is as easy to comprehend that the object should produce the sensation 
directly and at once, as that it should produce the same sensation by the aid 
of something else called the power of producing it.

But as the difficulties which may be felt in adopting this view of the subject 
cannot be removed without discussions transcending the bounds of our science, I 
content myself with a passing indication, and shall, for the purposes of logic, 
adopt a language compatible with either view of the nature of qualities. I 
shall say, — what at least admits of no dispute,— that the quality of whiteness 
ascribed to the object snow, is grounded on its exciting in us the sensation of 
white ; and adopting the language already used by the school logicians in the 
case of the kind of attributes called Relations, I shall term the sensation of 
white the foundation of the quality whiteness. For logical purposes the 
sensation is the only essential part of what is meant by the word; the only 
part which we ever can be concerned in proving. When that is proved, the 
quality is proved; if an object excites a sensation it has, of course, the 
power of exciting it."

In the analysis of Firstness in lecture 3 of RLT, where does Peirce appear to 
be agreeing and/or disagreeing with Mill's account of this feature of 
experience?

Yours,

Jeff





________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of 
[email protected] <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, December 10, 2025 11:25 AM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [PEIRCE-L] Firstness and sentience


List, every now and then I return to a statement of Peirce’s that has puzzled 
me in the past, and try again to make sense of it. My latest attempt concerns 
something CSP said about Firstness in 1898, a few years before he started 
referring to phenomenology (and later phaneroscopy) as the “primal positive 
science.” Here is a link to it: https://gnusystems.ca/TS/tpx.htm#1stns  — in 
case anyone cares to comment on whether it makes sense or not.

By the way, a few readers have told me that the high-contrast 
white-text-on-black is hard for them to read. I can put up an inverted version 
if necessary; let me know privately.

Love, gary f.

Coming from the ancestral lands of the Anishinaabeg

} The division of the perceived universe into parts and wholes is convenient 
and may be necessary, but no necessity determines how it shall be done. [G. 
Bateson] {

substack.com/@gnox<https://substack.com/@gnox> }{ Turning 
Signs<https://gnusystems.ca/TS/>
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