Stephen - please don't change the issue. When you write something like: 
"But this is a case of renegade moderation and I am tired of it. I think Peirce 
would be too."

Then I have every right to ask you if you are 'privy to Peirce's thought such 
that you can assert that he too would consider my comments "a case of renogade 
moderation; and that he too would be tired of it". 

Why? Because we are 'privy' only to what Peirce wrote. And I have a sneaking 
suspicion that he hasn't read my posts on this list.

An 'attack' on Kristin? Certainly not personally, as you were implying. But if 
someone posts a comment on a discussion list, and then, when asked to clarify 
the meaning, refuses to do so and says that they are 'too busy', then I 
consider that I have every right to ask: So - why bother to post on this list 
if your comments are not open to debate - and debate includes critique and 
disagreement.

Edwina
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Stephen C. Rose 
  To: Edwina Taborsky 
  Cc: Määttänen Kirsti ; PEIRCE-L ; [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, September 17, 2015 10:44 AM
  Subject: Re: [peirce-l] [PEIRCE-L] [biosemiotics:8863] The problem with 
instinct - it's a category


  Of course I am privy to Peirce's thought and so are you and anyone else. You 
are privy to mine and vica versa. I found your post to K to be an attack. I 
have found you to be functioning as a moderator-sort.  I think I am on the 
cutting edge of things, but this Forum is not interested in Triadic Philosophy. 
I find most of the discussion here is insular or obscurantist or  hermeneutical 
nitpicking. Actually of late I have found you to be more germane than most and 
agree with you more often than you might guess, but you rarely acknowledge me 
and I know we disagree profoundly on issues that no doubt affect our 
philosophies. I  value K's input and that of people who now rarely post here. I 
do not deserve to be a member because of my jaundiced attitude. But I do not 
wish to be accused of evading your questions. I shall go back to being a 
largely silent lurker searching for gems.   


  Books http://buff.ly/15GfdqU Art: http://buff.ly/1wXAxbl 
  Gifts: http://buff.ly/1wXADj3



  On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 10:19 AM, Edwina Taborsky <[email protected]> wrote:

    Stephen - what the heck does 'ad feminem' mean? Surely you aren't 
'feminizing' the fallacy of 'ad hominem' ? [ I'm opposed to political 
correctness]. My comment to Kirsti had nothing to do with her personally (which 
is what ad hominem is all about) but about her posting a comment and then, 
refusing to explain or discuss what it means. Such an approach denies the 
nature of a discussion site - if you post something and then, refuse to explain 
or discuss what you posted.

    And what does 'renegade moderation' mean? Please explain.

    Are you privy to Peirce's thoughts?  Is that how you justify that you know 
what he would think? That, by the way, is a logical fallacy of 'ad verecundiam' 
or 'an appeal to authority'. Your comments should stand on their own, as 
logical and debatable - and not be removed from discussion by any 'appeal to 
authority' or other fallacy.

    Edwina
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Stephen C. Rose 
      To: Edwina Taborsky 
      Cc: Määttänen Kirsti ; PEIRCE-L ; [email protected] 
      Sent: Thursday, September 17, 2015 9:49 AM
      Subject: Re: [peirce-l] [PEIRCE-L] [biosemiotics:8863] The problem with 
instinct - it's a category


      Ad feminem. I used to moderate a forum that went on for a good while in 
the 90s. All forums suffer the slings and arrows of various dynamics. But this 
is a case of renegade moderation and I am tired of it. I think Peirce would be 
too.


      Books http://buff.ly/15GfdqU Art: http://buff.ly/1wXAxbl 
      Gifts: http://buff.ly/1wXADj3



      On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 9:43 AM, Edwina Taborsky <[email protected]> 
wrote:

        Kirsti- that's not a logical response. If you wish to keep your short 
assertions without explanation and refuse to either explain or discuss them, 
then, don't post them on to a discussion site!

        Also, if you can't accept disagreement - again, don't post your 
opinions to a discussion site! The whole nature of such a site is not for the 
readers to passively sit back and accept what each person posts  - but - to 
THINK about the posts, to ask questions, to debate, discuss - and that involves 
both agreement AND disagreement.

        And to declare that you are 'too busy' to explain - is a red herring 
cop-out. Again, a discussion site by its very essence,  involves discussion - 
not simple short assertions which you expect the reader to accept as Truth and 
when you are questioned about them - you refuse to explain their cryptic 
meaning or enter into any discussion.

        Edwina


        ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]>
        To: "Edwina Taborsky" <[email protected]>
        Cc: "PEIRCE-L" <[email protected]>
        Sent: Thursday, September 17, 2015 9:30 AM
        Subject: Re: [peirce-l] [PEIRCE-L] [biosemiotics:8863] The problem with 
instinct - it's a category



          Dear Edwina,

          My suggestion is that we both keep our views. And proceed according 
to them. - So far, we have only disagreed. We both have work to do, so lets 
proceed with it, separately.

          My short comments are, of course, available to use as you please.

          With kind regards,

          Kirsti

          Edwina Taborsky kirjoitti 17.9.2015 15:27:

            I'd disagree with Kirsti's view that instincts are unrelated to the
            Peircean categories. I'd say that instinct in itself is in a form of
            Thirdness, in that it is a genetically based knowledge. As to how it
            is activated and accessed - that can be via both Firstness and
            Secondness.

            As for 'the common understanding of instinct' and 'what was common 
in
            HIS times; and CSP's understanding - all of these definitions would
            have to be outlined by Kirsti. As well as Kirsti's own view - which
            she does not describe.

            Edwina


            ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]>
            To: "Clark Goble" <[email protected]>
            Cc: "PEIRCE-L" <[email protected]>
            Sent: Thursday, September 17, 2015 8:11 AM
            Subject: Re: [peirce-l] [PEIRCE-L] [biosemiotics:8863] The problem
            with instinct - it's a category



              I find Helmut's comments to the point. In terms of CSP's 
categories,
              "instincts" do not, as such have a place. - Well, a kind of
              firstnesslike, but that is it.

              Nowdays, the quite common understanding of "instict" is different 
than
              in CSP's times. Not to forget that HIS understanding differed 
from what
              was common in HIS times.

              These are the problems we need to tacle.

              Taking 'meaning' as a simple relation of reference does not so. 
As such,
              the question is reduced into two-placed-relations. - Which is
              un-Peircean, for starters.

              What are we referring to, when taking up "instincts"? - Well, I 
for my
              part, am referring to something very, very different from the 
views
              expressed here.

              Best,

              Kisti

              Clark Goble kirjoitti 15.9.2015 21:13:

                Apologies - I just found out I’d sent this to the old Peirce 
list
                rather than the new one. My apologies for the problem. Apple 
Mail
                appears to autosuggest based upon what emails you have archived.
                Sometimes this leads to the old list getting picked up. 
Unfortunately
                Mail’s UI also doesn’t display the full email unless you click 
on
                it. So unless I click on the Peirce-L name I occasionally get 
the
                wrong email. When I’m posting regularly I always remember. When
                I’m posting infrequently (as has of late been the case) then I 
can
                forget. Once again my apologies again.

                On Wed, Sep 9, 2015 at 12:03 PM, Clark Goble <[email protected]> 
wrote:


                  On Sep 8, 2015, at 1:36 PM, Helmut Raulien <[email protected]> 
wrote:

                  Stephen,
                  you wrote: "The axiomatic principles of cognition (Peirce’s
                  categories) will establish how mind-bodies define the things 
that
                  matter."
                  Again, I think that we have different concepts of the term 
"know" or
                  "cognition". In my understanding, cognition does not appear 
in the
                  three categories from the start, but is a matter of 
subcategories. I
                  agree, that everything underlies the three categories
                  possibility/quality, actuality/relation, 
representation/continuity.
                  Secondness has two modes, and thirdness has three modes. These
                  modes, or subcategories, again have submodes, or 
subcategories as
                  before. I think, that knowledge is a matter of eg. thirdness 
of
                  thirdness of thirdness, or something like that.

                  It seems to me Peirce adopts a position where things are more
                  mind-like or more matter-like as a matter of degree rather 
than
                  kind. I’m not sure it relates directly to the categories 
beyond
                  the idea of consciousness seems tied to firstness in certain 
ways.
                  Yet the categories are always at play in an irreducible way.

                  At times Peirce appears to see the more mind-like as what is 
less
                  constrained. So evolution is leading to the development of 
substance
                  as a kind of permanence. Up to that time there is more 
“swerve”
                  and that swerve, when seen from the inside, is likely 
traditional
                  phenomenal mind.

                  This ontology of Peirce is probably the most controversial 
aspect of
                  his thought but it does lead to all sorts of interesting
                  considerations. An analogy someone else brought up recently 
was
                  Richard Feynman’s QED really being thinking what it must be 
like
                  to be an electron. In this conception there’s always an 
inside and
                  outside and Peirce isn’t quite so divorced from Kant as people
                  assume. Yet in taking this inner view we don’t have the thing 
in
                  itself in quite the same fashion. If only because Peirce lets
                  firstness create a sign. Indeed remembering our experience of 
a
                  phenomena is always a sign (thirdness) in response to 
firstness.

                  That may be what you mean by modes or subcategories though. 
(Forgive
                  me - haven’t yet caught up on my reading of the list)

                  On Sep 8, 2015, at 12:18 PM, Stephen Jarosek 
<[email protected]>
                  wrote:

                  Bees are conscious in accordance with the same principles 
that we
                  are conscious. This is one important aspect of the axiomatic
                  framework that I base my thinking on. That is to say, Peirce’s
                  categories apply to _all_organisms, even cells.

                  Pierce says bees have mind. I’m not sure he means by that 
they are
                  conscious in any strong way. It seems a matter of degree for 
Peirce.



                    Thought is not necessarily connected with a brain. It 
appears in
                    the work of bees, of crystals, and throughout the purely 
physical
                    world; and one can no more deny that it is really there, 
than that
                    the colors, the shapes, etc., of objects are really there.
                    Consistently adhere to that unwarrantable denial, and you 
will be
                    driven to some form of idealistic nominalism akin to 
Fichte’s.
                    Not only is thought in the organic world, but it develops 
there.
                    But as there cannot be a General without Instances 
embodying it,
                    so there cannot be thought without Signs. We must here give
                    “Sign” a very wide sense, no doubt, but not too wide a sense
                    to come within our definition. Admitting that connected 
Signs must
                    have a Quasi-mind, it may further be declared that there 
can be no
                    isolated sign. Moreover, signs require at least two 
Quasi-minds; a
                    Quasi-utterer and a Quasi-interpreter; and although these 
two are
                    at one (i.e., are one mind) in the sign itself, they must
                    nevertheless be distinct. In the Sign they are, so to say, 
welded.
                    Accordingly, it is not merely a fact of human Psychology, 
but a
                    necessity of Logic, that every logical evolution of thought 
should
                    be dialogic. You may say that all this is loose talk; and I 
admit
                    that, as it stands, it has a large infusion of 
arbitrariness. It
                    might be filled out with argument so as to remove the 
greater part
                    of this fault; but in the first place, such an expansion 
would
                    require a volume - and an uninviting one; and in the second 
place,
                    what I have been saying is only to be applied to a slight
                    determination of our system of diagrammatization, which it 
will
                    only slightly affect; so that, should it be incorrect, the 
utmost
                    certain effect will be a danger that our system may not 
represent
                    every variety of non-human thought. (“Prolegomena to an 
Apology
                    for Pragmaticism CP 4.551)

                  Whenever you have signs, even physical signs, you have a
                  quasi-mind. So of course thirdness applies to them the same 
as it
                  does us. The question of feeling or firstness seems a bit more
                  tricky.

                  As I recall to the degree he talks about consciousness it’s 
the
                  inner aspect of the “swerve” or chaos. In other places he says
                  we have consciousness to the degree we have self-control. I 
think
                  this aspect of his ontology is among the most controversial 
of his
                  views. I think one can adopt most of his system without 
adopting
                  this particular thread. (Which I think comes out of the 
remnant of
                  Kant’s “in-itself” that survives no external thing-in-itself)


                    …whatever is First is _ipso facto _sentient. If I make atoms
                    swerve - as I do - I make them swerve but very very little,
                    because I conceive they are not absolutely dead. And by 
that I do
                    not mean exactly that I hold them to be physically such as 
the
                    materialists hold them to be, only with a small dose of 
sentiency
                    superadded. For that, I grant, would be feeble enough. But 
what I
                    mean is, that all there IS, is First, Feelings; Second, 
Efforts;
                    Third, Habits - all of which are more familiar to us on 
their
                    psychical side than on their physical side; and that dead 
matter
                    would be merely the final result of the complete induration 
of
                    habit reducing the free play of feeling and the brute
                    irrationality of effort to complete death (CP 6.201)

                    What further is needed to clear the sign of its mental
                    associations is furnished by generalizations too facile to 
arrest
                    attention here, since nothing but feeling is exclusively 
mental.
                    But while I say this, it must not be inferred that I regard
                    consciousness as a mere “epiphenomenon”; though I heartily
                    grant that the hypothesis that it is so has done good 
service to
                    science. To my apprehension, consciousness may be defined 
as that
                    congeries of non-relative predicates, varying greatly in 
quality
                    and in intensity, which are symptomatic of the interaction 
of the
                    outer world,— the world of those causes that are exceedingly
                    compulsive upon the modes of consciousness, with general
                    disturbance sometimes amounting to shock, and are acted 
upon only
                    slightly, and only by a special kind of effort, muscular
                    effort,— and of the inner world, apparently derived from the
                    outer, and amenable to direct effort of various kinds with 
feeble
                    reactions, the interaction of these two worlds chiefly 
consisting
                    of a direct action of the outer world upon the inner and an
                    indirect action of the inner world upon the outer through 
the
                    operation of habits. If this be a correct account of
                    consciousness, i.e., of the congeries of feelings, it seems 
to me
                    that it exercises a real function in self-control, since 
without
                    it, or at least without that of which it is symptomatic, the
                    resolves and exercises of the inner world could not affect 
the
                    real determinations and habits of the outer world. I say 
that
                    these belong to the outer world because they are not mere
                    fantasies but are real agencies. (Pierce, Pragmatism EP 
2.418-419)


                  As I said this is controversial. At the time it put Peirce 
quite at
                  odds with the mechanistic determinacy that was taken for 
granted in
                  physics. Today we allow chance or swerve, yet it seems a kind 
of
                  deterministic probability that still is at odds with Peirce’s
                  notion of control.

                  It would seem that Peirce would allow sentiency to even an 
electron
                  in some degree yet it seems the ability to control ones 
behavior and
                  form habits that makes for the degree of consciousness.







            
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