Howard, the quote from W6 is just another example of Peirce’s assertion that 
observation of a diagram does not differ radically from the kind of observation 
made in “empirical” science. It’s quite a stretch to read it as an assertion 
that “the subject-object relation” is “obscure and mysterious,” and it has 
nothing to do with the “mind-matter problem” which is the legacy of Cartesian 
dualism. It’s about the unreasonable “obsistence” of Secondness as an element 
of the phenomenon.

 

The “received subject-object dichotomies” to which Frederik refers on NP 307 
are problematic simply because they are dichotomies, which Peirce referred to 
as distinctions made “with an axe.” Peirce is quite capable of distinguishing 
between the physical and the psychical, as he calls them, when it is useful to 
do so; but instead of making the distinction into a core principle of 
metaphysics, he argues for continuity between the two, saying that what we call 
matter is “merely mind hidebound with habits” (EP1:331). But as I tried to say, 
Peircean semiotic has no need either to address or to avoid this “problem” at 
all, because it simply doesn’t arise. His very definitions of “sign,” in their 
context, make this quite clear to anyone who conceptualizes cognition and 
perception in terms of triadic relations, and quite incomprehensible to anyone 
who adheres tenaciously to a different framework of interpretation (as Polanyi 
put it).

 

Gary f. 

 

From: Howard Pattee [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: May 5, 2015 10:56 AM
To: Gary Fuhrman; [email protected]; 'Peirce-L 1'
Subject: RE: [PEIRCE-L] RE: [biosemiotics:8567] Re: Natural

 

At 08:57 AM 5/5/2015, Gary Fuhrman wrote:



 
306 in NP is actually a blank page, so I don't have the context here.


Here is where you should use Peircean reasoning and inference. On page 307 
Frederick says:

"The crooked and not very successful history of modern semiotics, however, is 
no testimony to the idea  that it should be easy to steer such a conception of 
signs away from the dangers of received subject-object dichotomies
      I hope this book makes a case for Peircean semiotics being able to follow 
this course, with the conception of signs in which biological intentionality 
must, from the very beginning, be able to instantiate simple inferences."

HP: I agree with Frederik's aim of generalizing intentionality to all life, 
including the first self-replicating individual. I have read the book, and I do 
not see how intentionality, which is an exclusive property of an individual 
mind or self, can exist without distinguishing it from the properties of 
matter, which does not exhibit intentionality. This has been known as the 
mind-matter problem for 2500 years. (At the origin of self-replication, which 
requires a symbol-system, I call it the symbol-matter problem.)

Peirce says:

“The result that the chemist observes is brought about by nature, the result 
that the mathematician observes is brought about by the associations of the 
mind. . . the power that connects the conditions of the mathematicians diagram 
with the relations he observes in it is just as occult and mysterious to us as 
the power of Nature that brings about the results of the chemical experiment." 
[hhp italics] W:6, 37, Letter to Noble on the Nature of Reasoning, May 28, 
1987. (1897)

This is the same problem, only Peirce does not call it a "dangerous dichotomy", 
but only an "occult mystery". Does Peirce claim to solve the mystery or 
eliminate the subject-object dichotomy? If so, can anyone outline concisely how 
he does it?

Howard   







I think it’s already been pointed out on the list (though I don’t have time 
to search for it now) that the words you put in quotation marks here are not 
Peirce’s, nor is it clear what they are applied to, so your parenthesis is 
also without context.
If you really want to know what “the Peircean signs and triads” are good 
for, philosophically or biosemiotically, I think you could learn from 
Frederik’s examination of dicisigns in Natural Propositions, or even from the 
first half or so of my (less technical) book, or more directly from EP2. 
However –
“Formal operations relying on one framework of interpretation cannot 
demonstrate a proposition to persons who rely on another framework. Its 
advocates may not even succeed in getting a hearing from these, since they must 
first teach them a new language, and no one can learn a new language unless he 
first trusts that it means something.” 
— Michael Polanyi (1962, 151))
 
Gary f.
 
From: Howard Pattee [ mailto:[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> ] 
Sent: May 4, 2015 9:46 AM
To: Gary Fuhrman; [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> ; 
'Peirce-L 1'
Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] RE: [biosemiotics:8567] Re: Natural
 
At 09:49 AM 5/2/2015, Gary Fuhrman wrote:

Frederik, you wrote, 

[So here I agree with Howard (and I guess P would do so as well) that the right 
direction is to generalize the observer-phenomenon distinction so as to cover 
all biological organisms.]

 

GF: I agree about the right direction, but I don't see that Howard does, 
because he defines "phenomenon" not as the thing observed, or the object of 
attention, but as the result of the observation.


HP: Gary, you should know by now that generalizing the subject-object problem 
to all life is what I've been doing! You are just quibbling over choice of 
words and missing the problem. If you want to call "the thing observed" a 
phenomenon, that's OK. But then what do you want to call the result or 
experience of observation? Whatever words you choose to call the object and the 
observer, or the  detected and detector, you will still require a 
subject-object distinction. 

The common usage in physics calls "the thing observed," or what is being 
detected, an "event." The result is the phenomenon, or the "first person 
experience" according to the phenomenologist. 

GF; In Howard's words,"A phenomenon is information resulting from an individual 
subject's detection of a physical interaction." And this result is entirely 
"subjective . . ."


HP: Exactly.The result is an experience, and all experience is entirely 
subjective -- without exception [see Max Born, or any phenomenologist]. 
Experience is accumulated by interpreting and evaluating phenomena.  

GF: . . . as if you could have a subject of experience without an object, or a 
sign with an immediate object but no dynamic object, or an interpretant sign 
unrelated to the object of the sign it interprets. 


HP: Your "as if . . ." is a false inference. Phenomena obviously require 
events, including events arising from the individual's memory.

GF: For logical purposes, the subject/object distinction is a poor substitute 
for the sign/object/interpretant triad . . .


HP: It is not a substitute. As I explained in my 5/1 post: Physical measurement 
is irreducibly triadic -- the object-event itself, the record of the event 
(usually a symbol), and the agent-subject-interpreter. Agreed, this may not be 
Peircean, but it is Hertzian. 

I would still like some comment on my original question to Frederik (re p. 306 
in NP ): How do the Peircean signs and triads avoid facing the subject-object 
relation (which Peirce himself called "obscure and mysterious")? 

Howard 

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