Gary F-  I'm aware that Peirce used the term 'sign' to refer to both the 
Representamen and the full triadic semiosic process. As you know, your 
confining the term to mean ONLY the Representamen, is a problem I have, not 
with Peirce, but with your outlines. I doubt that you and I will agree on this.

I don't think that the term 'peculiar' naturally leads to its being defined as 
'degenerate'. That's because I understand the terms 'genuine' and 'degenerate' 
to refer only to the modal categories. So, if the Relations between the three 
parts of the triad (Object-Representamen-Interpretant) are operating within the 
degnerate modes of (2-1, 3-1, 3-2) rather than the 'pure modes' (1-1, 2-2, 
3-3)...then, we can see them as 'degenerate relations'.

I do not know what Peirce meant by 'these qualisigns are of a peculiar kind and 
only form a sign through being actually embodied" 2.245.  He might be saying 
that a Sinsign, which functions as a particularity, might have a qualitative 
relation (as well as a direct relation) with its Object in the mode of 2-1, or 
Secondness-as-Firstness. 

Therefore, I reject your view that the "Qualisign is degenerate relative to the 
Sinsign and to the Legisign ".  It's the Relations in their categorical modes 
that are genuine or degenerate; i.e., the modes are genuine/degenerate. Not the 
Signs.

Qualisigns in themselves do not actually form a Representamen, for a 
Representamen is not a collection of particular relations, but is a 
transformation of these relations into generalities, into laws.  Qualisigns are 
connected to the object by an 'embodiment' process that is descriptive rather 
than denotative. . But, since no qualisign exists 'per se' but functions within 
a relation to its object (which could be also be in a mode of Firstness)  then, 
it could be that the 'peculiar' mode of a qualisign as related to a Sinsign 
(which is in a mode of Secondness) is in a categorical mode of 2-1, or, 
Secondness as Firstness. 

Peirce also, in 2.246, refers to the Legisign, as requiring Sinsigns, but 
again, 'these are not ordinary Sinsigns, such as are peculiar occurrences that 
are regarded as significant'. Same thing. In a Legisign Representamen, the 
Relations between the Representamen and the Object and Interpretant could be in 
a mode of 3-2, or Thirdness operating in Secondness.

Again - how can a 'normal Qualisign' be disembodied? What's your meaning of 
this statement?

Edwina


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [email protected] 
  To: 'Peirce-L' 
  Sent: Thursday, December 03, 2015 3:20 PM
  Subject: RE: [PEIRCE-L] RE: signs, correlates, and triadic relations


  Edwina, in my study of NDTR, I am using Peirce’s definition of “Sign” exactly 
as given in that work; I quoted it (again) in the post you are responding to. 
If you have a problem with it, you’ll have to take it up with Peirce, not with 
me. As for what you choose to place into your pigeonholes of “Saussurean sign”, 
“Platonism” etc., that has no relevance to NDTR that I can see.

   

  Peirce says that a Sinsign “involves a qualisign, or rather, several 
qualisigns. But these qualisigns are of a peculiar kind” — and I suggested an 
explanation of why Peirce calls them “peculiar” (implying of course that there 
is another kind of Qualisign that is not peculiar). My suggestion is prompted 
by Peirce’s statement about the Qualisign that its “embodiment has nothing to 
do with its character as a sign.” You don’t like my suggestion, which is fine, 
but you’ve offered no alternative. Why are the qualisigns involved in sinsigns 
“of a peculiar kind”?

   

  Gary f. 

   

  }  {

  http://gnusystems.ca/wp/ }{ Turning Signs gateway

   

  From: Edwina Taborsky [mailto:[email protected]] 
  Sent: 3-Dec-15 14:41
  To: [email protected]; 'Peirce-L' <[email protected]>
  Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] RE: signs, correlates, and triadic relations

   

  Gary F - I certainly consider all ten classes as genuine Signs. I don't  
think this suggests an ambiguity in the meaning of 'genuine' and 'degenerate' 
but rather, an ambiguity in your definition of the Sign.  

   

  You, as I understand it, confine the meaning of 'Sign' to be a synonym for 
'Representamen.  This leads, I think, to an understanding of the Sign as really 
a Saussurian Sign, with the Signifier=Object; and the Signified=Interpretant. 
Obviously, I reject this dyadism. I  consider the Peircean Sign to be an 
integral triad of three Relations: That between the Representamen and Object; 
that of the Representamen in itself; and that between the Representamen and the 
Interpretant. [See 8.344--]

   

  So, if you consider only the Representamen as the Sign, then, I don't see how 
you can define it, on its own, as genuine or degenerate.  It isn't that the 
Representamen can't act as a sign [Representamen] unless it is embodied; it 
isn't a Representamen UNLESS it is embodied. Otherwise, you are moving into 
Platonism which does accept non-embodied Forms. [And yes, I'm aware of Peirce's 
terms of "it cannot actually act as a sign until it is embodied" 2.244.

   

  I don't see how a Sign (the triad) with all three Relations in a mode of 
Firstness is  degenerate or even 'doubly degenerate'. After all, Firstness as a 
categorical mode, has no nature of degeneracy. 

   

  The genuine and degenerate forms of the Categories, is another issue, where, 
as we know, Peirce considers that Firstness has no degeneracy; Secondness has 
both a genuine and degenerate mode (2-2 and 2-1); and Thirdness has both a 
genuine and two degenerate modes (3-3, 3-2, 3-1). 


  When Peirce refers to a genuine or degenerate index, he is referring to its 
categorical mode of Secondness. That is, the modal categories in themselves are 
genuine or degenerate not the Relation.

   

  I don't see that a Qualisign, which is in a mode of pure Firstness (and not 
3-1) can be degenerate as compared to a Sinsign or Legisign.

   

  How can 'a normal Qualisign' be disembodied? There's no such thing in Peirce 
as a 'free-floating Representamen'.  That's Platonism. 

   

  Edwina

   

   

    ----- Original Message ----- 

    From: [email protected] 

    To: 'Peirce-L' 

    Sent: Thursday, December 03, 2015 11:31 AM

    Subject: [PEIRCE-L] RE: signs, correlates, and triadic relations

     

    Moving on to the first trichotomy of sign types in “Nomenclature and 
Divisions of Triadic Relations”:

     

    CP 2.244: According to the first division, a Sign may be termed a 
Qualisign, a Sinsign, or a Legisign. 

    A Qualisign is a quality which is a Sign. It cannot actually act as a sign 
until it is embodied; but the embodiment has nothing to do with its character 
as a sign.

    [As a Sign, this “quality” must be a correlate of a triadic relation with 
its Object and Interpretant, “by which triadic relation the possible 
Interpretant is determined to be the First Correlate of the same triadic 
relation to the same Object, and for some possible Interpretant” (CP 2.242). 
Yet it cannot act as a sign until it is embodied, i.e. until it becomes 
involved in at least a dyadic relation, and thus enters the universe of 
existence. Yet its significance is its quality (not its embodiment), and 
qualities being monadic, there is no real difference between Sign and Object 
(or Interpretant either). So I think we might call this a doubly degenerate 
kind of triadic relation, where the Sign is virtually self-representing, and 
self-determining as its own Interpretant. Compare the “self-sufficient” point 
on a map which Peirce offers as an example of doubly degenerate Thirdness in 
his third Harvard Lecture, EP2:162.) Or, since this degeneracy is relative, we 
can say that the Qualisign is degenerate relative to the Sinsign and to the 
Legisign (just as the Icon is degenerate relative to the Index and the genuine 
Symbol, according to Peirce in both the third Harvard lecture of 1903 and “New 
Elements” of 1904).

     

    On the other hand, some semioticians say that all ten of the sign types 
defined in NDTR, including the Qualisign, are genuine Signs. This flags a 
possible ambiguity in the concepts of genuine and degenerate; and possibly this 
problem is related to the concepts of embodiment, just introduced, and of 
involvement, which is introduced in the next paragraph:]

     

    245. A Sinsign (where the syllable sin is taken as meaning “being only 
once,” as in single, simple, Latin semel, etc.) is an actual existent thing or 
event which is a sign. It can only be so through its qualities; so that it 
involves a qualisign, or rather, several qualisigns. But these qualisigns are 
of a peculiar kind and only form a sign through being actually embodied.

    [Evidently it is the involvement of qualisigns in a Sinsign — which, I 
suppose, constitutes their embodiment — that makes them “peculiar,” because a 
“normal” Qualisign is disembodied (and does not act as a Sign). But perhaps 
this will be clarified by the definition of Legisign, which I’ll leave for the 
next post.]

     

    Gary f. 

     


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