Jon, list,

The passage by Peirce that you quoted below has nagged at me for some time.  On 
your mywikibiz page to which you linked, as regards that passage, you said "The 
first thing to extract from this passage is the fact that Peirce's Categories, 
or 'Predicaments', are predicates of predicates"

In the editors' footnote to CP 4.549, the editors say that what there Peirce 
calls the Modes of Being are "Usually called categories by Peirce. See vol. 1, 
bk. III". Maybe they're wrong, but what here he calls the "Mods of Being" - 
"Actuality, Possibility, and Destiny (or Freedom from Destiny)" do at least 
comprise one of his formulations of his categories, even if not the definitive 
formulation.

Peirce says "[...] what you have called Categories, but for which I prefer the 
designation Predicaments, and which you have explained as predicates of 
predicates.."  Peirce everywhere else prefers the name Categories for his own 
categories and who is the "you" who would have been speaking of Peirce's own 
categories? 

Peirce says, 

  [...] the divisions so obtained must not be  confounded with the different 
Modes of Being:  Actuality, Possibility, Destiny (or Freedom from Destiny). On 
the contrary, the succession of Predicates of Predicates is different in the 
different Modes of Being.

Where else does he say that the successions of his categories are "different in 
the different Modes of Being"?  Where in his other writings does he call his 
own categories "predicates of predicates"? It's hard not to think that by 
"Predicates of Predicates" he does not mean his own categories, and instead 
that, at most, 1st-intentional, 2nd-intentional, and 3rd-intentional entities, 
on which he says that his "thoughts are not yet harvested," will end up being 
treated by him as Firsts, Seconds, Thirds - instances or applications of his 
categories. 

Best, Ben

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Jon Awbrey 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Wednesday, March 07, 2012 3:30 PM 
Subject: Re: [peirce-l] Categorical Aspects of Abduction, Deduction, Induction

Peircers,

Here is a passage that I think is critical for
understanding what Peirce meant by a category.

| I will now say a few words about what you have
| called Categories, but for which I prefer the
| designation Predicaments, and which you have
| explained as predicates of predicates.
|
| That wonderful operation of hypostatic abstraction by which
| we seem to create ''entia rationis'' that are, nevertheless,
| sometimes real, furnishes us the means of turning predicates
| from being signs that we think or think ''through'', into being
| subjects thought of.  We thus think of the thought-sign itself,
| making it the object of another thought-sign.
|
| Thereupon, we can repeat the operation of hypostatic abstraction,
| and from these second intentions derive third intentions.  Does this
| series proceed endlessly?  I think not.  What then are the characters
| of its different members?
|
| My thoughts on this subject are not yet harvested.  I will only say that
| the subject concerns Logic, but that the divisions so obtained must not be
| confounded with the different Modes of Being:  Actuality, Possibility, Destiny
| (or Freedom from Destiny).
|
| On the contrary, the succession of Predicates of Predicates is different
| in the different Modes of Being.  Meantime, it will be proper that in our
| system of diagrammatization we should provide for the division, whenever
| needed, of each of our three Universes of modes of reality into ''Realms''
| for the different Predicaments.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.549, “Prolegomena to an Apology for Pragmaticism”,
| The Monist 16, 492–546 (1906), CP 4.530–572.

The way that Peirce explains his concept of a category in this passage is also
helpful in building a bridge, or seeing the underlying continuities that exist,
between the categories of Aristotle and Kant and the mathematical concept of
a category that we find in play in more recent times. I began an exploration
of this connection in a page of rough notes that I collected a while back.

• http://mywikibiz.com/Directory:Jon_Awbrey/Notes/Precursors

Regards,

Jon

-- 

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word press blog 2: http://inquiryintoinquiry.com/

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