Interpretant
Dictionary Entry | Posted 26/10/2015 Quote from "Lowell Lectures on The Logic of Science; or Induction and Hypothesis: Lecture VII" We are all […] sufficiently familiar with the fact that many words have much implication; but I think we need to reflect upon the circumstance that every word implies some proposition or, what is... |
|
Dictionary Entry | Posted 15/10/2015 Quote from "Pragmatism" …the essential nature of a sign is that it mediates between its Object which is supposed to determine it and to be, in some sense, the cause of it, and its Meaning, or, as I prefer to say, in... |
|
Dictionary Entry | Posted 14/10/2015 Quote from "Pragmatism" I pass now to the […] essential ingredient of the interpreter, or as I prefer to call it, the interpretant. I might call it the Meaning, since it includes all that... |
|
Dictionary Entry | Posted 14/10/2015 Quote from "Pragmatism" …any sign, of whatsoever kind, professes to mediate between an Object, on the one hand, that to which it applies, and which is thus in a sense the cause of the sign, and, on the other hand, a... |
|
Dictionary Entry | Posted 13/10/2015 Quote from "Pragmatism" How shall we name the entire mental effect which a sign of itself is calculated, in its proper significative function, to produce? The word signification is somewhat too narrow, since, as... |
|
Article in Journal | Posted 06/10/2015 Proni, Giampaolo (2015). Umberto Eco and Charles Peirce: A slow and respectful convergence The aim of the essay is to link Eco's theory of the Encyclopedia as regulative hypothesis with his theory of interpretation, by evidencing the intrinsic dynamic character of the encyclopedic...
|
|
Dictionary Entry | Posted 21/05/2015 Quote from "On the Classification of the Sciences" A Representamen can be considered from three formal points of view, namely, first, as the substance of the representation, or the Vehicle of the Meaning, which is common... |
|
Dictionary Entry | Posted 14/04/2015 Quote from "Meaning Preface" It is not only essential to a Sign that it should represent, i.e. stand in place of or for, an Object, but, if possible, still more so that it should be capable of Interpretation... |
|
Manuscript | Posted 19/01/2015 Peirce, Charles S. (1902 [c.]). Reason's Rules. MS [R] 599 Robin Catalogue: Truth, Opinion, Falsity, Assertion, Judgment, Proposition, Sentence, Command, Meaning, Subject, Reality, Mathematics, Absurdity, Emptiness, Insolubilia, Logic, Idealism, Berkeley, Value, Sign, Object, Thomas Aquinas, Port Royal Grammar, Consciousness, Eduard von Hartmann, Unconscious, Endless Series of Signs, Achilles and the Tortoise, Understanding, Reasonableness, Interpretant, Icon, Index, Symbol, Indeterminacy, Logical Possibility, Possibility, Self-contradiction, Innocent Self-contradiction, Vicious Self-contradiction
|
|
Dictionary Entry | Posted 15/01/2015 Quote from "Firstness, Secondness, Thirdness, and the Reducibility of Fourthness [R]" Every sign has an object, which may be regarded either as it is immediately represented in the sign to be [or] as it is in it own firstness. It is equally essential to the function of a sign that... |
|
Manuscript | Posted 15/01/2015 Peirce, Charles S. (1904). Firstness, Secondness, Thirdness, and the Reducibility of Fourthness [R]. MS [R] 914 Robin Catalogue: |
|
Manuscript | Posted 26/11/2014 Peirce, Charles S. (1909). Meaning Preface. MS [R] 637 Robin Catalogue: Retroduction, Methodeutic, Logic, Christoph Sigwart, Kant, Real, Existence, Thought, Immediate Perception, Dialogue, Argument, Semeiotic, Sign, Object, Icon, Index, Symbol, Precept, Emanation, Interpretation, Actual, Principle of Excluded Middle, Figment, Immediate Judgment, Berkeley, Utterance, Interpretant
|
|
Article in Journal | Posted 22/11/2014 Hilpinen, Risto (2013). Conception, Sense, and Reference in Peircean semiotics
In his Logical Investigations Edmund Husserl criticizes John Stuart Mill’s account of meaning as connotation, especially Mill’s failure to separate the distinction between connotative and non-...
|
|
Dictionary Entry | Posted 19/09/2014 Quote from "Letters to Paul Carus" … any thing that the sign, as such, effects may be considered as the Interpretant. |
|
Dictionary Entry | Posted 12/09/2014 Quote from "On the theory of Collections and Multitude" …an interpretant is an idea or other sign legitimately & purposely determined by a sign. |
|
Manuscript | Posted 12/09/2014 Peirce, Charles S. (1905-07 [c.]). On the theory of Collections and Multitude. MS [R] 31 Robin Catalogue: |
|
Manuscript | Posted 01/09/2014 Peirce, Charles S. (1904). Foundations of Mathematics [R]. MS [R] 11 Robin Catalogue: |
|
Manuscript | Posted 01/09/2014 Peirce, Charles S. (1904). Foundations of Mathematics [R]. MS [R] 10 Robin Catalogue: |
|
Manuscript | Posted 01/09/2014 Peirce, Charles S. (1904). Foundations of Mathematics [R]. MS [R] 9 A. MS., n.p. [c.1903?], pp. 1-5, with rejected pages. Vagueness, generality, and singularity. |
|
Manuscript | Posted 01/09/2014 Peirce, Charles S. (1904). On the Foundations of Mathematics. MS [R] 8 Robin Catalogue: |