Gary, List,

 

Regarding Stampers Ladder you wrote: my interests have changed considerably in 
the baker's dozen of years since I wrote that paper and …

 

RE: The ‘might’ in ‘you might be interested’ wasn’t meant as  ‘you should’, but 
as a polite alternative to  ‘may’. 

My aim was not to get you reading Stamper, but to show that from practical need 
somebody extended the amount of layers in such a way that somebody interested 
in nagging about the technical terms of semiotics and their relations, could 
recognize this as fitting with the Peircean scheme and decided to try to put 
the idea further in such a way that all sign aspects are covered.

 

This example seemed especially fit since, lately, I see some quit 
fundamentalist attitude on this list regarding the interpretation of Peircean 
semiotics. If you look at the foundation of those attempt, it strikes me that 
the one seems to originate in turning speculative grammar to the end all of the 
enterprise and the other the semantic layer. If we do this when interested in 
information systems (as well man as an information system as in building them 
for organizations) then not only such enterprises fall short in coming to terms 
with the subject matter. They also tend to block the way of inquiry. Each sign 
aspect provides another perspective on the problem and each aspect has its own 
telos. The question ought not to be ‘who is right according to Peirce’, but how 
do we connect the different perspectives? 

 

When a student, I bought a worn reproduction because I wanted the frame it was 
put in. When home I hung it at the wall and soon decided to keep it because it 
showed three reformation ladies reading the holy bible. 1. One was intensely 
scrutinizing the text (Jon, John). 2. The other reads it at an arm’s length 
(Tom Short, with the first involved, he did a great job in his books on 
understanding Peirce, and remained critical), 3. with the third the book on her 
lap, while see looked around (Edwina, Dan). 

It nicely expresses the way one should deal with the philosopher one has a 
particular interest in, as a safeguard for an uncritical attitude. 

 

 

With regard to the example. 

Let’s take the DSM classification of autism. The label z is deemed applicable 
if x out of x+y characteristics is applicable, where x+y=characteristics of z.  
Let x be the characteristics pertaining to information processing and let y be 
the characteristics pertaining to empathy and social behavior. 

Now a parent and a school disagree regarding a child/pupil having z. If we now 
turn the attention to each of the characteristics, it will prove the case that 
on that score, there is less divergence in opinion. On top of that, in many 
cases the characteristics that remain contested prove to result from the 
context the child is in, i.e. home for the parents and school for the 
authorities. For me it is an expression of “inconsistencies arise at the level 
of axioms” at the social level and “they can usually accept lower-level facts 
without creating any conflict”. 

 

Hope this is more clearly stated.

 

Best,

Auke van Breemen

 

 

Van: Gary Richmond <gary.richm...@gmail.com> 
Verzonden: maandag 1 april 2019 21:11
Aan: Peirce-L <peirce-l@list.iupui.edu>
Onderwerp: Re: [PEIRCE-L] The pragmatics of Peirce .. and its importance

 

Auke, List,

 

Thank you for reading my paper on interoperability. It would appear that a 
great deal of work has been done in that area since I presented that paper as 
the keynote at a workshop developed by Aldo de Moor, Harry Delugach, and Simon 
Polovina at ICCS 2006. While interoperability continues to be, it seems to me, 
a vexing problem, it has appeared to me that clear advances have been made in 
the past decade.

 

I read some of Ronald Stamper's work years ago, but I must admit that my 
interests have changed considerably in the baker's dozen of years since I wrote 
that paper and, the following year, one on enterprise and inter-enterprise 
systems architecture:

http://www.iupui.edu/~arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/richmond/trikonic_architectonic.pdf
 _

 

You quoted me quoting John Sowa from the interoperability paper:

 

JS: The point is the UF is primarily intended as a framework for communication 
among potentially (or actually) incompatible systems. The major inconsistencies 
arise at the level of axioms, which none of these systems would accept from one 
another. But they can usually accept lower-level facts without creating any 
conflict.

 

And commenting on "[systems] can usually accept lower-level facts without 
creating any conflict" wrote:

 

AvB: It is supported in my research at the social level.

 

I would be interested in hearing more about this (your single example wasn't 
entirely clear to me).

 

Best,

 

Gary

 

 

Gary Richmond

Philosophy and Critical Thinking

Communication Studies

LaGuardia College of the City University of New York

 

 

 

On Sun, Mar 31, 2019 at 9:49 AM Auke van Breemen <a.bree...@chello.nl 
<mailto:a.bree...@chello.nl> > wrote:

Gary, Jon, Ronald, List,

 

Gary,

I read your  
<http://www.iupui.edu/~arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/richmond/InteropArisbe.pdf> 
http://www.iupui.edu/~arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/richmond/InteropArisbe.pdf

 

You distinguish three levels of interoperability. The Syntactic, semantic and 
pragmatic levels. You might be interested in Ronald Stamper and his semiotic 
ladder. He also started with three levels, but actually building information 
systems and designing methods to do that, he found the need to extend the 
amount of levels with three, the technical, empirical and after your three the 
social. I can match them with my semiotic KiF-Framework. Then still three 
pigeon holes of the nine sign aspects are left open. I hold it to be the index, 
the legisign and the symbol position. This makes sense because in the KiF-model 
they are either the connection (index) of state and effect or the type 
pertaining to the effect and the meaning attached to it in regular settings. 
This gives rise to two questions of interoperability: horizontal and vertical. 

 

If we follow the categorical scheme the semantical level is, as you also state 
in your trikon a second (relative to its first and third). We may assume a 
twofold distinction behind it. Lets venture as hypothesis that Sowa’s work is 
the firstness of that dyad. I would suggest looking at Stampers ontology Charts 
for the secondness of that dyad. The reason being that Stamper includes actors 
in his scheme, introduces time and looks at meanings as affordances. It seems 
to bridge with the pragmatic level and it has with the introduction of ‘person’ 
and ‘role’ the ability to align with my social layer framework for educational 
settings.

 

Note that your Trikon differs in directionality for different roles in IS 
design. The project leader serves the pragmatic level, the information analyst 
the semantical and the programmer the technical. Your use of the Trikons enable 
to sort out the directionalities and the order they ought to be put in. My use 
enables an inspection of the views on that matter in actual practice in terms 
of more or less. So, together we have a kind of control system if we design 
Trikons for the other levels too. In essence I think we need six. State is a 
sign with three relata and the effect is a sign with three relata of which one 
enters the interpretation process of the other depending on the goal that 
reigns the process. 

 

This is an interesting remark you cite from Sowa:

The point is the UF is primarily intended as a framework for communication 
among potentially (or actually) incompatible systems. The major inconsistencies 
arise at the level of axioms, which none of these systems would accept from one 
another. But they can usually accept lower-level facts without creating any 
conflict.

 

It is supported in my research at the social level. A mother with Hindu 
background typed her sun as an ‘old soul’, a common name for children with 
certain a-typical traits in het culture. The officials talk DSM and look for 
terms like autism or attention deficit. At the same time, when asked they 
agreed on multiple characteristics, only diverging for context sensitive 
responses (Home vs school). 

 

Still, I had to deal with the Platonic (mayeutica) element inherent in the 
mothers world view as it is opposed to the far more Deweyan didactics of 
pofessionals.

 

Best,

 

Auke

 

 

Van: Gary Richmond <gary.richm...@gmail.com <mailto:gary.richm...@gmail.com> > 
Verzonden: zaterdag 30 maart 2019 18:35
Aan: Peirce-L <peirce-l@list.iupui.edu <mailto:peirce-l@list.iupui.edu> >
Onderwerp: Re: [PEIRCE-L] The pragmatics of Peirce .. and its importance

 

Auke, Edwina, Dan, List,

 

Auke wrote:

 

AvB: I shifted from the production of objects made in arts to personal 
development and from there to interactions. Resulting in the application of a 
semiotically grounded method for conflict resolving in an educational setting, 
https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2F978-3-642-55355-4_3.pdf   (it 
is of wider use, I extended the model and used it in a commercial domain).

 

I find your semiotically grounded work for conflict resolution in and beyond 
educational settings of considerable interest. Much of my college teaching in a 
philosophy department, of especially creative and critical thinking, centered 
on the application of Peirce's semeiotic (and especially his pragmatism) to 
conflict resolution, problem solving, etc. But in workshops and papers I have 
also addressed its application to other matters, for example, interoperability 
in the use of internet technology here:

http://www.iupui.edu/~arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/richmond/InteropArisbe.pdf

 

My friend and colleague, Aldo de Moor (with whom I co-authored a paper along 
with Mary Keeler), also used Peircean principles in developing his consulting 
firm, CommunitySense 

https://www.communitysense.nl 

many of these principles gleaned from his years of attending John Sowa's/Mary 
Keeler's ICCS conferences, listening to, reading and writing papers, giving and 
auditing talks, and organizing and participating in seminars either about or 
related to Peirce's work. For a time he was quite actively using Sowa's 
Conceptual Graphs (built on Peirce's EGs) in his work. With all this in mind, 
I'm going to forward your paper to him, Auke. You continued:

 

AvB: For example, everybody reading the Springer Quality of service text will 
see that I am inspired by Gary R’s Trikonic, which I class as theoretical.  
Without that work I would never have imagined to try to incorporate it in my 
application. It proved gold because it enables me to have participants in my 
method explicate their position in such a way that contestants in a conflict 
can compare their differences in a systematic way. 

 

I'm gratified that my Trikonic inspired your work. Occasionally I'll receive an 
off-list note or link telling me how that work is being used in a context I'd 
never imagined it being used in (although tricategorial thinking by its very 
nature ought to be, in my view, applicable to any number of fields). 

 

So, I agree with you, Edwina, and Dan that, as Dan wrote:

 

DE: Always the point was to use his ideas to do empirical work.

 

And as Auke somewhat metaphorically wrote:

 

AvB: ". . .in the end, it must be the fruit of application that proves the 
worth of the tree.

 

Or as Edwina put it, Peirce's pragmatism concerns:

 

ET: ". . .the powerful functionality of his analytic framework when used in 
examining and explaining our real world, its operation and our interactions 
with that world. :

 

Yet, as I see it, there remains considerable work yet remaining for developing 
and explicating Peirce's theories and this includes refining, as it were, with 
an eye especially to its pragmatic use, his terminology. After all, as Auke 
just wrote: 

 

AvB: . . .one pins down an conceptual infrastructure with the help of ‘terms 
and their relationship’.

 

And, while I found Dan's overgrown beanstalk metaphor spot on, I would tend to 
strongly agree with Auke's conclusion regarding Peirce's terminology. 

 

AvB: . . . I like to be able to inspect that framework as to its build [I take 
this to mean, "how it's constructed"?] and for that I find the technical term 
distinctions that Peirce made very inspiring. / / / The focus is on the 
understanding of semiosis, the tools are the technical terms.  Its good to keep 
inspecting and comparing ones tools.

 

As I've repeatedly said in this forum over the years, it seems to me that there 
is no good reason why work in one should exclude work in the other; that is, 
there is no reason why the development of theory (I, for example, am very 
interested in the possible development of Peirce's phenomenology and technical 
terminology will most certainly play a part in that) and practice (as suggested 
by the examples Auke, Dan, and Edwina offered) can't operate side by side if 
not quite hand in hand. In my opinion hostility to one or ignoring one are 
equally unwise because finally unbalanced. While it may be necessary to 
concentrate on one and not the other at any given time (and this is something 
Peirce strongly suggested and was, indeed, his practice), in my view both are 
essential.

 

Best,

 

Gary 

 

Gary Richmond

Philosophy and Critical Thinking

Communication Studies

LaGuardia College of the City University of New York

 

 

 

On Sat, Mar 30, 2019 at 11:43 AM Auke van Breemen <a.bree...@chello.nl 
<mailto:a.bree...@chello.nl> > wrote:

Dan, Edwina, List,

 

I agree with Dan and Edwina with an however in favor of work on the semiotic 
engine and its make up in the technical terms that shy off the general public.

 

Since I started analyzing design processes of artist in the late 80’íes I tried 
to combine an empirical bend with an interest of modelling the situation 
graphically in technical semiotical terms. The general scheme Dan and Edwina 
point to (and as I understand it in my own undoubtedly very personal way, which 
itself evolves along the way) functioning as the hard core of the research 
program.  I shifted from the production of objects made in arts to personal 
development and from there to interactions. Resulting in the application of a 
semiotically grounded method for conflict resolving in an educational setting, 
https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2F978-3-642-55355-4_3.pdf   (it 
is of wider use, I extended the model and used it in a commercial domain).

 

However: This I could only do because I always tried to model semiosis in 
semiotic terms. And, because others on this list, and elsewhere (Sarbo, 
Farkas), were trying to come to grips with the technical side of semiotics. 

For example, everybody reading the Springer Quality of service text will see 
that I am inspired by Gary R’s Trikonic, which I class as theoretical.  Without 
that work I would never have imagined to try to incorporate it in my 
application. It proved gold because it enables me to have participants in my 
method explicate their position in such a way that contestants in a conflict 
can compare their differences in a systematic way. I leave out the valuable 
influence of many others on this list. 

 

It must be an interplay between both interests. It is also important to try to 
model the process of interpretation in semiotic terms for its own sake.  The 
key to that in my take is showing how the sign aspects are related to the 
interpretants, Peirce distinguishes, when a sign is inscribed in a sheet in its 
actual state. In that respect he left an interesting, still incomplete and as 
to its constituent pieces debated puzzle.

 

But of course, in the end, it must be the fruit of application that proves the 
worth of the tree.

 

Best Auke

 

 

 

Van: Dan Everett <danleveret...@gmail.com <mailto:danleveret...@gmail.com> > 
Verzonden: zaterdag 30 maart 2019 14:55
Aan: tabor...@primus.ca <mailto:tabor...@primus.ca> 
CC: peirce-l@list.iupui.edu <mailto:peirce-l@list.iupui.edu> 
Onderwerp: Re: [PEIRCE-L] The pragmatics of Peirce

 

I agree with Edwina . Peirce himself left strong indications that some of his 
finer terminological distinctions were likely to be unimportant for research 
purposes, which was his main concern. 

 

Always the point was to use his ideas to do empirical work.

 

The kind of article that Edwina links to is a beautiful example of the kind of 
thing that would have really interested Peirce. 

 

I think of Peircean terminology as a beanstalk he planted. It grew far too 
large in many ways. But the science, the math, the logic, these are the things 
of true lasting importance. 

 

Dan 

Sent from my iPad


On Mar 30, 2019, at 9:45 AM, Edwina Taborsky < <mailto:tabor...@primus.ca> 
tabor...@primus.ca> wrote:

In my view, the basis of Peirce is not which term is to be used when and where 
- although I acknowledge that such a descriptive outline can be fascinating for 
some - but my view is that Peirce is really 'all about pragmatics'; i.e., the 
powerful functionality of his analytic framework when used in examining and 
explaining our real world, its operation and our interactions with that world. 
This analytic framework - which functions regardless of the terms used - is, to 
me, 'the basic Peirce' - and can be of great insight in many disciplines.

 Here is an example. My minimal computer skills didn't allow me to copy more 
than once - so, I've left out the vital title and authors. It's in the online 
journal Entropy. The link below should get anyone interested to the site. My 
point is NOT to open discussion on the actual article - but to show how the 
Peircean analytic framework, which to me, consists of that dynamic triad 
[O-R-I] with its subsets and the powerful three categories -  is the basic 
pragmatic infrastructure of our entire world. 

The article below is about information dynamics - and - note the terms of 
'majority-logic decoding' [another term for 3ns???], and 'single unit 
transformations' [2ns???]...and entropy [1ns??] ….And non-equilibrium  dynamics 
[the triadic semiosic process??]

""We investigate the performance of majority-logic decoding in both reversible 
and finite-time information erasure processes performed on macroscopic bits 
that contain N microscopic binary units. While we show that for reversible 
erasure protocols single-unit transformations are more efficient than 
majority-logic decoding, the latter is found to offer several benefits for 
finite-time erasure processes: Both the minimal erasure duration for a given 
erasure and the minimal erasure error for a given erasure duration are reduced, 
if compared to a single unit. Remarkably, the majority-logic decoding is also 
more efficient in both the small-erasure error and fast-erasure region. These 
benefits are also preserved under the optimal erasure protocol that minimizes 
the dissipated heat. Our work therefore shows that majority-logic decoding can 
lift the precision-speed-efficiency trade-off in information erasure processes. 
 <https://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/21/3/284/htm> View Full-Text 

Keywords: finite-time information erasure; majority-logic decoding; 
nonequilibrium thermodynamics  
<https://www.mdpi.com/search?q=finite-time%20information%20erasure> finite-time 
information erasure;  <https://www.mdpi.com/search?q=majority-logic%20decoding> 
majority-logic decoding;  
<https://www.mdpi.com/search?q=nonequilibrium%20thermodynamics> nonequilibrium 
thermodynamics 

 

Edwina

 


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