Re: [PEIRCE-L] Synesthesia Was Re: interpretant and thirdness

2023-12-18 Thread Robert Marty
The problem with using the triangle to represent a sign is not its vertices, but its sides. The triangle above, which illustrates a very simple (algebraic) category in Wikipedia, represents the triadic sign as Peirce defined it after 1905, in which the arrows represent determinations, A the object,

Re: [PEIRCE-L] Synesthesia Was Re: interpretant and thirdness

2023-12-18 Thread John F Sowa
Mary, List, I agree that the triangle by Ogden & Richards is horribly misleading. But a triangle by itself can be used for many useful purposes of various kinds. What is misleading is that O & R drew their triangle in a book that also contained an appendix with MSS by Peirce. That combination

Re: [PEIRCE-L] Synesthesia Was Re: interpretant and thirdness

2023-12-18 Thread Edwina Taborsky
Mary- yes, I fully agree with you. Tha semiotic triangle is disastrous to the study of genuine semiotics. Peirce never used it; his diagram/image was of a three-tailed ‘umbrella’..[for want of a better metaphor]. In 1.347, you can see his outline of “a graph with three tails”.

Re: [PEIRCE-L] Synesthesia Was Re: interpretant and thirdness

2023-12-18 Thread Mary Libertin
I agree with Edwina about “the generative capabilities of the Peircean infrastructure.” Robert Marty’s trellis of 28 classes opens a perspective that the "semiotic triangle” never did. [By the way, Peirce never uses a triangle, that I am aware of. Was the triangle first popularized by Ogden in

[PEIRCE-L] Synesthesia Was Re: interpretant and thirdness

2023-12-16 Thread Jerry LR Chandler
List: (Hi Edwin! Good to read your compositions! Hope this finds you well and enjoying life.) Before commenting on CSP’s fluidity of propositional terminologies, I would introduce (if you are not already cognizant of the term) a novel, recently coined term, Aphantasia. Aphantasia is a cogni