Jon, list:

Jon wrote:
My initial response is that I do not find it plausible to treat the Immediate, 
Dynamic, and Normal/Final Interpretants as a division of the Logical 
Interpretant. Instead, my current understanding--still tentative, 
admittedly--is that the Immediate Interpretant is the range of all possible 
Interpretants, the Dynamic Interpretant is the occurrence of any actual 
Interpretant, and the the Final Interpretant is the development of a habitual 
Interpretant; i.e., a habit of interpretation. Each of these can then be 
trichotomized into feeling, action, and thought. 

I agree, in large part, with the above, i.e., with the description of the 
Immediate Interpretant, Dynamic Interpretant and Final.  I'd add however that 
the Final is to my understanding, not a set of habits, but a valid correlation 
with the Dynamic Object.

Where I remain puzzled is Jon's claim that each of these three Interpretants 
can be further refined within the three categories. I can see the Immediate 
Interpretant as functioning in the categorical modes of 1-1, 2-1 and even 3-1 
but it must retain some Firstness to function as an internal 'immediate'.  I 
can see the Dynamic Interpretant as functioning in 2-2, 2-1..and even 3-2 
because it must have some Secondness to function as an Actual.  I am unsure of 
the Final Interpretant which must include Thirdness. Is it 3-3, 3-2, 
3-1...which then also bind it to the Immediate and Dynamic Interpretants. Note 
that these cross-connections filiate the three Interpretants with each other.  
I haven't explored these areas of 'fine-tuning' and so - can only question the 
supposition. I'm not sure...

Edwina

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jon Alan Schmidt 
  To: Auke van Breemen 
  Cc: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, October 20, 2016 9:31 AM
  Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Re: Universes and Categories (was Peirce's Cosmology)


  Auke, List:


  I am familiar with the Sheet of Assertion in the Existential Graphs, and I 
reviewed both De Tienne's paper and yours from 2007 yesterday.  My initial 
response is that I do not find it plausible to treat the Immediate, Dynamic, 
and Normal/Final Interpretants as a division of the Logical Interpretant.  
Instead, my current understanding--still tentative, admittedly--is that the 
Immediate Interpretant is the range of all possible Interpretants, the Dynamic 
Interpretant is the occurrence of any actual Interpretant, and the the Final 
Interpretant is the development of a habitual Interpretant; i.e., a habit of 
interpretation.  Each of these can then be trichotomized into feeling, action, 
and thought.  In my mind, this follows the order of determination that leads to 
classification, as well as the order of semeiotic process.  Universes and 
Categories come into play with the observation that this approach defines the 
three Interpretants in terms of modality, rather than dividing each individual 
Interpretant on that basis.


  Regards,


  Jon


  On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 5:11 AM, Auke van Breemen <[email protected]> wrote:

    Jon,



    Thanks for your questions. Some short answers below.



    With regard to sheets I suggest to read for

    a.      Sheets of assertion:

    Zeman, J. (1977). Peirce's Theory of Signs. In T. A. Seboek (Ed.), A 
Perfusion

    of Signs. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

    b.      Descriptive sheets

    De Tienne: 
http://www.iupui.edu/~arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/detienne/isphanscience.pdf

    c.      Semiotic sheet, for a first orientation my 2007 paper will do.

    The relevance of the concept semiotic sheet for the current discussion.




    A signs gives rise to its interpretant sign. Lets picture this as follows:

    Sign  -proces of interpretation-  interpretant/sign -proces of 
interpretation- interpretant/sign – I/S – I/S, etc.



    Short is interested in sign types and focusses on the interpretant/sign. My 
interest is in the intermediate processes between two signs. In order to get a 
run of an interpretation process an interpreting system (of whatever nature) 
must be assumed. Lets reserve the term ‘semiotic sheet’ for this interpreting 
system. This interpreting system is a sign itself, cf Peirce’s dictum ‘Man is a 
sign’. So, interpretation starts when a sign inscribes itself in an 
interpreting sign or semiotic sheet. 

    (1)    Looked at as a first, in itself, we have the radical subjectivist 
(Stamper) or phenomenological view (architectonic of sciences).

    (2)    Looked at as a second, as related to a sign that inscribes itself, 
we have the actualist (Stamper) or semiotic view, (architectonic of sciences). 
But only to the extend that an interpreting system interprets a sign (critic).

    (3)    Looked at as a thirdness, we have the rhetorical part of semiotics. 
Stamper, being in his 80ies, started back then from Morris and didn’t get a 
clear view on this communicative view on the matter. Here we are concerned with 
two sheets conversing with each other (a,b -> goal of a and b,a -> goal of b).

    The connection between the two trichotomies of interpretants (emotional, 
energetic and logical; fruit of phenomenological or radical subjectivist 
considerations) and iimmediate, dynamical and normal interpretants; fruit of 
semiotics proper) can be established in 2. It sets of with




    Kant gives the erroneous view that ideas are presented separated and then 
thought together

    by the mind. This is his doctrine that a mental synthesis precedes every 
analysis.

    What really happens is that something is presented which in itself has no 
parts, but which

    nevertheless is analyzed by the mind, that is to say, its having parts 
consists in this that the

    mind afterward recognizes those parts in it. Those partial ideas are really 
not in the first

    idea, in itself, though they are separated out from it. It is a case of 
destructive distillation.

    W6:449, CP 1.384



    So, interpretation sets of with a collection of qualia. In phaneroscopy it 
is called the phaneren, in semiotics it is termed the emotional interpretant:

    The first proper significate effect of a sign is a feeling produced by it

    [. . . ]. It [a tune; AvB] conveys, and is intended to convey, the 
composer's

    musical ideas; but these usually consist merely in a series of feelings (CP

    5.475).



    From this further interpretants may evolve. First the energetive 
interpretants (mental, physical), next the logical (immediate, dynamical and 
normal).



    In short: The semiotic sheet is needed if we want to get a hold on the 
process of interpretation.



    Best,  Auke



    Van: Jon Alan Schmidt [mailto:[email protected]] 
    Verzonden: woensdag 19 oktober 2016 21:18
    Aan: Auke van Breemen <[email protected]>
    CC: [email protected]
    Onderwerp: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Re: Universes and Categories (was Peirce's 
Cosmology)



    Auke, List:

      AB:  As Tom Short remarked about Peirce’s semiotics: much groping, no 
conclusions.

    Yes, Peirce was right to call himself "a pioneer, or rather a backwoodsman, 
in the work of clearing and opening up what I call semiotic" (CP 5.488; 1907). 

      AB:  I in particular disagree with your:  "However, as I have suggested 
previously, the three Interpretants themselves seem to be more properly 
characterized as possible (Immediate), actual (Dynamic), and habitual (Final), 
with each divided into feeling/action/thought."

    It is a working hypothesis, at best.  I am certainly open to being 
convinced otherwise. 

      AB:  It disregards the possibility of the sheet of description (De 
Tienne) and a sheet of semiosis (Breemen/Sarbo) as related to each other 
according to the mature division of the sciences.

    I am not too familiar with these concepts and would like to learn more 
about them, so I will review your 2007 paper, which I apparently downloaded a 
while ago.  Would you mind elaborating their specific relevance to the current 
discussion, and perhaps suggest some additional reading that I could do?




    Thanks,




    Jon Alan Schmidt - Olathe, Kansas, USA

    Professional Engineer, Amateur Philosopher, Lutheran Layman

    www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt - twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt



    On Wed, Oct 19, 2016 at 1:34 PM, Auke van Breemen <[email protected]> 
wrote:

      Jon,



      As Tom Short remarked about Peirce’s semiotics: much groping, no 
conclusions. The EP only gives a fragment of the groping. As much of his other 
writings gives a lot more fragments. It may be that only not being able to 
regard the blackboard (or in its mundane character the sheets of Assertion, 
description or semiotics as a sign) that prevented him from finishing the 
system. All ingredients are present. 



      I in particular disagree with your:

      ."  However, as I have suggested previously, the three Interpretants 
themselves seem to be more properly characterized as possible (Immediate), 
actual (Dynamic), and habitual (Final), with each divided into 
feeling/action/thought.

      --



      This is the Short arrangement of both trichotomies of interpretants. It 
disregards the possibility of the sheet of description (De Tienne) and a sheet 
of semiosis (Breemen/Sarbo) as related to each other according to the mature 
division of the sciences. From a sign type perspective Shorts approach makes 
sense: Each sign has an element of feeling of action and of thought, but from a 
processual approach it is better to apply Ockham’s razor in order to find the 
system behind processes of interpretation. Peirce paved the way for that by his 
notion of involvement. The logical note books are key, in combination with 
Shorts (or Stampers implied) criticism of Peirce’s focus on scientific progress 
in developing a theory of interpretation.  (Cf personal, scientific and 
practical needs that govern comunication).



      Best, Auke van Breemen



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