List,

The first question I'd like to address is: what is Peirce's general account of 
the concept of "determines"? In searching for a general account, I'm not 
looking for a conception that is developed solely for use in some specific area 
of inquiry--such as the study of dynamics in physics, or the study of formal 
logical systems in mathematical logic.  Rather, I'm trying to follow Peirce's 
lead in MS 612.  There, he starts with an explanation of how we use the concept 
of "determine" in ordinary experience when explaining what it is for a person 
to make a decision and form an intention about how they will act.  Then, he 
says that his aim is to broaden this concept so that it will have a 
considerably wider use.

That, I believe, is Peirce's methodological strategy for working with a number 
of conceptions in philosophy.  Where there is a special need for technical 
terminology, he looks to see how other philosophers have been using a 
conception (i.e., the conceptions of breadth, depth, connotation and 
denotation).  If there is nothing in the prior works in philosophy that 
adequately captures the conception he is trying to develop, then he introduces 
a technical term (i.e., a qualisign).  In some cases, there is no need for such 
technical terminology--such as when we are developing an account of 
self-control and need to employ concepts such as "decision" and "intention."   
As Peirce sets up his normative theories of aesthetics, ethics and semiotics, 
he is working from a conception of "determines" that is drawn--first and 
foremost--from common experience.  He adopts the same approach when refining 
and using other key conceptions, such as the concept "cause." Here is what 
Peirce says about his use of that concept:

Everybody will make slips in the use of words that have been on his lips from 
before the time when he learned to think; but the practice which I endeavor to 
follow in regard to the word cause is to use it in the Aristotelian sense of an 
efficient cause, in all its crudeness. In short, I refuse to use it at all as a 
philosophical word. When my conception is of a dynamical character, I endeavour 
to employ the accepted terminology of dynamics; and when my idea is a more 
general and logical one, I prefer to speak of the explanation. (CP 6.600)

In saying that he intends to use the "Aristotelian sense of an efficient cause, 
in all its crudeness," I believe he is saying  that Aristotle's conception of 
efficient cause was drawn from ordinary experience and common sense.  So, with 
that short explanation of the strategy I believe Peirce is employing in working 
out a general account of the conception of "determines", let's compare what he 
says says in the early pages of MS 612 to the definitions he provides for the 
Century Dictionary.  Starting with the general idea of what it is for a person 
to form a determination, he engages in a dialogue about what having such a 
determination seems to involve.  As such, he is working from a use of 
determines that matches the 8th definition of the transitive meaning of 
"determines," or the 1st definition of the intransitive meaning.

Determine

I. Transitive

1. To fix the bounds of, mark off, settle, fix, establish
2. To limit in space or extent; for the limits of; bound; shut in: as yonder 
hill determines our view.
3. To ascertain or state definitely; make out; find out; settle; decide upon as 
after consideration or investigation: as to determine the species of any animal 
or a plant; to determine the height of a mountain, or the quantity of nitrogen 
in the atmosphere.
4. In logic, to explain or limit by adding differences.
--5. To bring to a conclusion; put to an end; end
--6. To find, as the solution of a problem; end, as a dispute, by judicial or 
other final decision: as, the court determined the cause.
7. To fix or settle definitely; make specific or certain; decide the state or 
character of.
8. To come to a definite intention in respect of; resolve on; decide: as he 
determined to remain.
9. To give direction or tendency to; decide the course of; as impulse may 
determine a moving body to this or that point.
10. To influence the choice of; cause to come to a conclusion or resolution: 
as, this circumstance determined him to the study of law.

II. Intransitive

  1.  ​       To come to a decision or resolution; settle definitely on some 
line of conduct.
  2.         To come to a close; end terminate.
  3.         To come to a determinate end in time, reach a fixed or definite 
limit; cease to exist or to be in force.
 Determined:

  1.        Limited, restricted; confined within bounds; circumscribed
  2.         Definite; determinate; precisely marked.
  3.         Characterized by or showing determination or fixed purpose; 
resolute: as a determined many; a determined countenance: a determined effort
  4.         Unfaltering; unflinching, unwavering
Determining:

1. Having the power of fixing; directing, regulating, or controlling: as 
determining influences or conditions.

Jon Awbrey refers us to work he has done on the function of logical constraints 
in Peirce's account of information as extension x comprehension.  Jon's nicely 
developed remarks are helpful in a number of ways.  Given my goal of trying to 
arrive at a clearer understanding of Peirce's general account of "determines," 
however, I plan to hold off on questions about the concepts of "definition", 
"information" and the like in the science of logic.  Rather, I'd like to focus 
on the more general question of how we should work from a nominal definition, 
to a logical definition, to a real definition of "determines" that will meet 
our needs in the normative sciences generally.  The aim, as I've suggested 
before, is to see how we might use the pragmatic maxim to help us arrive at a 
third grade of clarity about the meaning of the conception of "determines".  
That will help us understand how the conception might be used to formulate 
explanatory hypotheses in philosophy--such as the hypotheses that Peirce offers 
of what it is for an object to determine a sign, or for a sign to determine an 
interpretant, etc.

Yours,

Jeff


Jeffrey Downard
Associate Professor
Department of Philosophy
Northern Arizona University
(o) 928 523-8354


________________________________
From: Jeffrey Brian Downard
Sent: Wednesday, April 20, 2016 10:31 AM
To: Peirce List
Subject: Re: Peirce on the Definition of Determination

Gary F., Ben, Jon, List,

Jon has supplied us with a number of passages that characterize what it is for 
a sign to determine an interpretant—and he draws our attention to two 
definitions that are published in the NEM.  Let’s note that both of those 
definitions are incomplete. The key idea that is omitted is made clear if we 
compare those definitions to the following passage:

First, an analysis of the essence of a sign, (stretching that word to its 
widest limits, as anything which, being determined by an object, determines an 
interpretation to determination, through it, by the same object), leads to a 
proof that every sign is determined by its object, either first, by partaking 
in the characters of the object, when I call the sign an Icon; secondly, by 
being really and in its individual existence connected with the individual 
object, when I call the sign an Index; thirdly, by more or less approximate 
certainty that it will be interpreted as denoting the object, in consequence of 
a habit (which term I use as including a natural disposition), when I call the 
sign a Symbol.  (CP, 4.531)

So, there are three relations of determination that we need to examine:

a) A sign is anything that is determined by an object so that
b) an interpretant is determined by the sign and so that
c) the interpretant comes to have a determination through the sign by the same 
object.

Based on what Peirce says in this passage, it appears that order of 
determination in the relations between sign, object and interpretant are as 
follows: the object determines sign, the sign determines interpretant, the same 
object that determines the sign also determines the interpretant through the 
mediation of the sign.

With that much said, let’s try to frame a set of questions that we’d like to 
answer.  Here are four questions that stand out in my mind.

1. What is Peirce’s general account of determination?
2. How does the general account apply to the relations between possibilities, 
existing individuals and general rules so that:
a. possibilities only determine other possibilities;
b. general rules are only determined by other general rules, but general rules 
can determine both possibilities and the characters of existing individuals, 
although general rules cannot determine individual objects to exist;
c. individual existing objects determine the possibilities of the characters 
that they possess, and the order of the characters of existing objects may be 
determined by general rules, although only existing individuals can determine 
other individual objects to exist?
3. How does the general account of determination apply to the different sorts 
relations that hold between signs, objects and interpretants in the process of 
semiosis? For instance, how do the different sorts of relations of 
determination a help us to clarify and explain the relations of:
a. similarity so that the icon partakes of the characters of the objects;
b. connection between the token index and individually existing object;
c. the habit that determines with more or less certainty that the symbol will 
be interpreted as denoting the object?
4. How might the general account of determination help us clarify what he says 
about the relations of reference that are central in his account of the 
categories, that is, the relations of:
a. reference to ground,
b. reference to object,
c. and reference to interpretant?

Let me know if I’ve omitted questions that we should consider or if any of the 
questions are poorly framed. For starters, let’s focus our attention on the 
first question: What is Peirce’s general account of determination? Once we’ve 
made some progress on that front, we can turn to the other questions, one at a 
time.

Peirce makes the following claim: All determination is by negation; we can 
first recognize any character only by putting an object which possesses it into 
comparison with an object which possesses it not. (CP 5.294) Having examined a 
number of places where Peirce describes different sorts of determination, one 
of the clearest sets of definitions and explanations are found in an 
unpublished set of manuscript.  In particular, MS 612 contains a detailed 
analysis of the meaning of “determination,” “determined to accord,” and 
“determined after.” Here are links to the manuscript pages and (as yet 
unedited) transcriptions of the relevant passages in FromThePage:

http://fromthepage.com/display/read_work?page=9&work_id=149
http://fromthepage.com/display/read_work?page=10&work_id=149

What Peirce is doing in these passages.  As far as I can tell, he starts with a 
nominal definition of how we use the word in a relatively narrow context.  
Then, he provides a formal definition that is designed to be adequate to the 
more general meaning of the conception.  That is, the procedure is to work from 
the first to the second level of clarity.  As such, more work is needed to 
arrive at a definition of the conception of determination that will be adequate 
for the scientific employment of the conception in philosophical 
explanations—such as in a speculative grammar. That is, we still need to apply 
the pragmatic maxim in order to arrive at a third grade of clarity in our 
understanding of the conception of determination. My hunch is that the 
definitions of "determined to accord" and "determined after" are needed for 
such an application of the pragmatic maxim.

Yours,

Jeff

Jeffrey Downard
Associate Professor
Department of Philosophy
Northern Arizona University
(o) 928 523-8354
________________________________________
From: Jon Awbrey <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, April 8, 2016 11:00 AM
To: Peirce List
Subject: [PEIRCE-L] Re: Peirce on Definition and Determination

Peircers,

I was trying to spare a few gray cells by looking up
the discussions we had on this subject the last time
it came up but it looks like that occurred during the
last half of 2012 when the List was migrating between
different servers and a lot of the Gmane archives from
that time are missing.

It was my custom until recently (when the Arisbe Dev and
Inquiry List servers went down for maintenance or forever,
not sure which) to cross-post my Peirce List messages there,
so a lot of older material survives in the WayBak archives of
those two lists.  I subbed the archive links in the post below.

At any rate, it appears I first posted that collection of
excerpts to the Peirce List back in May and August of 2001.
Internal evidence, like the quote from Prigogine, tells me
that the assemblage goes back to 1997 or so, in the period
when I had gone back to grad school in systems engineering
and was cudgeling my brains to think about Peirce's theories
of signs, information, and inquiry in systems-theoretic terms.

Good times ...

Jon

On 5/28/2012 10:46 AM, Jon Awbrey wrote:
> Note 1
>
> Peircers,
>
> It looks like we might be due for one of our recurring reviews
> on the closely related subjects of definition and determination,
> with especial reference to what Peirce himself recurrently wrote
> about them.
>
> Here is a set of excerpts that I collected in regard to determination,
> mostly from Peirce, but with a few thoughts from other thinkers, both
> before and after him, due to the larger questions of determinacy that
> I was pursuing at the time.
>
> Arisbe List Archive (serial thread)
> http://web.archive.org/web/20030619214031/http://stderr.org/pipermail/arisbe/2001-May/thread.html#489
> http://web.archive.org/web/20030619212516/http://stderr.org/pipermail/arisbe/2001-August/thread.html#942
>
> MyWikiBiz Page (all in one section)
> • http://www.mywikibiz.com/Directory:Jon_Awbrey/EXCERPTS#Determination
>
> One naturally looks to the Baldwin and Century dictionaries for
> Peirce-connected definitions of definition, but I would like to
> start with a series of texts that I think are closer to Peirce's
> own thoughts on definition, where he is not so duty-bound to give
> a compendious account of every significant thinker's point of view.
>
> It may be a while before I get these all copied out:
>
> • http://www.mywikibiz.com/Directory:Jon_Awbrey/EXCERPTS#Definition
>
> Regards,
>
> Jon
>

--

academia: http://independent.academia.edu/JonAwbrey
my word press blog: http://inquiryintoinquiry.com/
inquiry list: http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/
isw: http://intersci.ss.uci.edu/wiki/index.php/JLA
oeiswiki: http://www.oeis.org/wiki/User:Jon_Awbrey
facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/JonnyCache
-----------------------------
PEIRCE-L subscribers: Click on "Reply List" or "Reply All" to REPLY ON PEIRCE-L 
to this message. PEIRCE-L posts should go to [email protected] . To 
UNSUBSCRIBE, send a message not to PEIRCE-L but to [email protected] with the 
line "UNSubscribe PEIRCE-L" in the BODY of the message. More at 
http://www.cspeirce.com/peirce-l/peirce-l.htm .




Reply via email to