Victoria Lady Welby
Keyword: Victoria Lady Welby
Article in Journal | Posted 03/11/2014 Chang, Han-liang (2013). Cassirer, Benveniste, and Peirce on deictics and "pronominal" communication For all his profound interest in Secondness and its manifestation in various kinds of indices, including deictics, Peirce rarely addresses the inter-pronominal relationships. Whilst the American...
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Article in Journal | Posted 30/10/2014 Rauch, Irmengard (2013). Hic et nunc: Evidence from canine zoosemiotics Lady Welby's significs centers on her pursuit of the seminal concepts of sense, meaning, and significance, fueled by her confluence of modern and postmodern thought. Of the encyclopedic wealth...
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Article in Journal | Posted 30/10/2014 Colapietro, Vincent M. (2013). The life of significance: Cultivating ingenuity no less than signs Victoria Lady Welby's notion of wit plays a pivotal role in her voluminous writings and, accordingly, in Susan Petrilli's illuminating expositions of the most relevant texts bearing on this...
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Article in Journal | Posted 30/10/2014 Pietarinen, Ahti-Veikko (2013). Christine Ladd-Franklin's and Victoria Welby's correspondence with Charles Peirce The Peirce-Welby correspondence has been an invaluable source for the historians of logic and semiotics mapping the development of Peirce's thought and of the significs movement. The unpublished...
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Article in Journal | Posted 30/10/2014 Luisi, Maria (2013). Space and time: Continuity in the correspondence between Charles Peirce and Victoria Welby Though from two different points of view, both Charles Peirce and Victoria Welby examined the problem of time during the same years. In their correspondence, whereas Peirce explains his position...
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Article in Journal | Posted 30/10/2014 Borges, Priscila (2013). Tracing signs of a developing science: On the correspondence between Victoria Lady Welby and Charles S. Peirce The correspondence between Victoria Lady Welby and Charles Sanders Peirce started in 1903 when Welby sent Peirce her book What is meaning?, and continued with the exchange of letters about language...
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Manuscript | Posted 22/09/2014 Peirce, Charles S. (1903). Lecture I [R]. MS [R] 449 Robin Catalogue: |