Jon, Ben, List,

Thanks for this most intriguing post which, helpfully, rehearses your
discussions with Ben Udell.

I'm afraid I haven't much to offer, especially as regards "specific
illustrative examples." But your post brought to mind a paper published
some years ago in *Semiotica*, a response  by the author to a critique of
his ideas--regarding the relationship of the 1906 division of interpretants
to the 1909 division--by Tom Short in *Transactions.*
(1996, “Interpreting Peirce’s Interpretant: A Response to Lalor, Liszka,
and Meyers,” <http://www.peircesociety.org/contents.html> 32:4, pp. 488-541)
*.*

See: "The Classification of Peirce's Interpretants," Brendan Lalor.
*Semiotica* 114-1/2, 31-40, 1997.
https://philosophy.thereitis.org/the-classification-of-peirces-interpretants/
 (Note to Ben: the link at Arisbe doesn't take one to this paper.)

I tended at the time--and since--to agree with him contra Tom Short
regarding his principal thesis. Here's his abstract followed by the paper's
concluding two paragraphs.

*Abstract.* After characterizing the role of the interpretant in semiosis,
I consider two passages in which Peirce makes a threefold division of
interpretants, one from 1906, one from 1909. Then I suggest that Thomas
Short and others are wrong in holding that in the two passages, Peirce put
forward two completely separate trichotomies. Instead, I argue that the
1906 trichotomy is in fact a special case of that put forward by Peirce in
the 1909 passage, not a separate trichotomy. I then explain more
specifically how we ought to conceive the relationship between these two
classifications.

[The concluding two paragraphs of the paper]

One might argue that even if my view is right, Short’s view, that the two
trichotomies of interpretant intersect yielding nine types in all, could be
right as well, in the following sense. Perhaps what at one level of
analysis is an immediate interpretant, could turn out to supervene on what
at a lower level of analysis are emotional, energetic, and logical
interpretants — and likewise in the case of dynamic and final
interpretants. In this way, for example, perhaps a dynamic interpretant
could in a sense also be said to be a logical interpretant. However, Short
is committed to the conceptual clarity of the proposition, ‘this dynamic
interpretant *is *a logical interpretant’. This is quite different from
what my view asserts as conceptually clear: i.e. that ‘this dynamic
interpretant *in part*supervenes on a logical interpretant’ — not that it
*is* one. I will not make a judgment here about the prospects for working
out some unnoticed way of showing that *something like *Short’s view is
conceptually clear after all. If such a partial vindication is possible,
however, I fail to see how it can be made apart from exploiting the notion
of coarser- and finer-grained levels of semiotic analysis.

While I have not analyzed the other two kinds of interpretant, I want to
comment on the last kind, the ‘final interpretant’ of 1909. By defining it
as ‘the one Interpretive result to which every Interpreter is destined to
come if the sign is sufficiently considered’ (Hardwick 1977: 111), Peirce’s
general 1909 presentation of the theory provides a context for discourse
about the *truth *of an interpretant. Such an interpretant would be a true,
precise representation of the dynamical object mentioned above. Even though
we have pointed out in the first section of this paper that no interpretant
is informationally determinate in every respect, the human version of the
final interpretant is for us an ideal. It would result from an indefinite
series of interpretations of signs, perhaps by sign processing beings with
fewer ‘incapacities’ than human beings. To say that the final interpretant
is within our possible reach is the expression of a hope. The 1906
presentation, on the other hand, specifies the context as that of human
semiosis, in which discourse about the ultimate logical interpretant is
about *meaning,*not necessarily truth. The hope of science is that
eventually the ultimate logical interpretant — that Homo sapien version of
the final interpretant — will perfectly correspond to the final
interpretant itself. Then we will have carved the world at its joints.[ 12
<https://thereitis.org/index.php?module=ContentExpress&func=display&ceid=8&meid=#fn12>
]
This is, as Pape (1991) put it, ‘the intellectual hope that the sequence of
interpretations — perhaps there are infinitely many of them and we are
connecting one infinity with another — will ultimately represent reality’
(174).

This short paper is, I think, well worth reading. But I'll have to reread
it as my memory is quite fuzzy as to its details.

Best,

Gary

[image: Gary Richmond]

*Gary Richmond*
*Philosophy and Critical Thinking*
*Communication Studies*
*LaGuardia College of the City University of New York*
*C 745*
*718 482-5690 <718%20482-5690>*

On Sat, Aug 15, 2015 at 2:19 PM, Jon Alan Schmidt <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Greetings!  I am by no means a Peirce scholar--I am a professional
> engineer and amateur philosopher--but I became interested in his ideas a
> few months ago for various reasons.  I have read a considerable amount of
> the secondary literature since then, as well as EP1 and portions of EP2
> (still in progress).  I have also been looking through the list archives
> and monitoring some of the recent discussions.  In one of the latter, Ben
> Udell made this comment that caught my eye:
>
> <QUOTE Ben Udell, 08/06/2015,
> http://article.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/16922>
> To top it off, years ago at peirce-l, I harshly and wrong-headedly
> criticized Atkin's account of Peirce's immediate, dynamical, and
> final/normal interpretants, as regards certain points about which Atkin was
> in fact quite correct (the final/normal interpretant determines the
> dynamical interpretant, and those interpretants determine the immediate
> interpretant).
> <END QUOTE>
>
> Ben and I exchanged a few e-mails about this, which led us to the
> discovery that his memory was mistaken--his criticism had actually been
> directed at what Atkin wrote about the alignment of the three interpretants
> with the three grades of clarity.  However, I was still surprised by what
> Ben said about the determination of the interpretants (If>Id>Ii); my
> previous readings had pretty consistently indicated the reverse order
> (Ii>Id>If).  Digging further into the list archives led me to a 2008 post
> in which Ben cited this passage:
>
> <QUOTE Peirce, 12/23/1908, EP2:481>
> It is evident that a Possible can determine nothing but a Possible; it is
> equally so that a Necessitant can be determined by nothing but a
> Necessitant.  Hence it follows from the Definition of a Sign that since the
> Dynamoid Object determines the Immediate Object,
> which determines the Sign itself,
> which determines the Destinate Interpretant,
> which determines the Effective Interpretant,
> which determines the Explicit Interpretant,
> the six trichotomies, instead of determining 729 classes of signs, as they
> would if they were independent, only yield 28 classes ...
> <END QUOTE>
>
> Ben then added this comment:
>
> <QUOTE Ben Udell, 10/28/2008,
> http://article.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/4881>
> (It seems fair to take "Destinate Interpretant," "Effective Interpretant,"
> and "Explicit Interpretant" as, respectively, "Final Interpretant,"
> "Dynamic Interpretant," and "Immediate Interpretant.")
> <END QUOTE>
>
> Apparently, Peirce never spelled out how he would map the
> destinate/effective/explicit interpretants to the immediate/dynamic/final
> interpretants.  Ben matched them up based on Peirce's usage elsewhere of
> "destined," "predestinate," and similar terms, along with the fact that
> "explicit" can simply mean "expressed."  On the other hand, I pointed out
> that "destinate" can also mean "set apart for" or "intended," while
> "explicit" can also mean "fully revealed or expressed without vagueness" or
> "fully developed or formulated."
>
> However, it really comes down to Peirce's first sentence quoted above.  If
> the immediate interpretant is an Actual, which can the final interpretant
> be--a Possible (Ii determines If) or a Necessitant (If determines Ii)?
> Same question regarding Ii/Id and Id/If.  Unfortunately, Peirce did not
> provide clear answers and explanations like he did for Od>Oi>S
> (EP2:480-481,485-489, 1908), as well as S-If>S-Id (L463, 1904).  The bare
> terminology from EP2:482-483,489-490 (1908) is not terribly illuminating:
>
> Ii = Mode of Presentation = Hypothetic, Categorical, Relative.
> Id = Mode of Being = Sympathetic/Congruentive, Shocking/Percussive, Usual.
> If = Nature or Purpose = Gratific, To produce action, To produce
> self-control.
>
> Alternatively, L463 indicates Ii = qualities of feelings or appearances,
> actual experiences, thoughts or other signs of the same kind in infinite
> series.  This seems consistent with Short's thesis that all three
> interpretants can be emotional, energetic, or logical; but it is not much
> help in sorting out the order of determination.  To muddy the waters
> further, Ii is often defined as a sign's interpretability, the effect that
> it *may *have (Possible); Id as any effect that it *does *have (Actual);
> and If as the effect that it *would *eventually have (Necessitant).
>
> I would be grateful for some assistance with all this, especially specific
> illustrative examples, which I have had a hard time formulating myself.
>
> Regards,
>
> Jon Alan Schmidt
>
>
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