TITLES
Abduction, Reason, and Science: Processes of Discovery and Explanation
American Ethics: A Source Book from Edwards to Dewey
Artikulu eta hitzaldien bilduma
Becoming John Dewey: Dilemmas of a Philosopher and Naturalist
Charles Peirce's Guess at the Riddle: Grounds for Human Significance
Charles S. Peirce's Evolutionary Philosophy
Charles Sanders Peirce
Classical American Pragmatism: Its Contemporary Vitality
Consciousness and the Play of Signs
Deconstruction and Reconstruction
Defining the Semiotic Animal: A Postmodern Definition of “Human Being”
Democracy and the Post-Totalitarian Experience
Development of Peirce's Philosophy, The
Der dramatische Reichtum der konkreten Welt: Der Ursprung des Pragmatismus im Denken von Charles S. Peirce und William James.
Erkenntnisentwicklung
The Establishment of Science in America: 150 Years of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
Evidence and Inquiry Towards Reconstruction in Epistemology
Experiencing Tess of the D’Urbervilles: A Deweyan Account
Founders of Constructive Postmodern Philosophy: Peirce, James, Bergson, Whitehead, and Hartshorne
Four Ages of Understanding: The First Postmodern Survey of Philosophy from Ancient Times to the Turn of the Twenty-First Century
From Peirce to Skolem: A Neglected Chapter in the History of Logic
From Time and Chance to Consciousness: Studies in the Metaphysics of Charles Peirce
Habermas and Pragmatism
Interpréter l’art contemporain: La sémiotique peircienne appliquée aux æuvres de Magritte, Klein, Duras, Wenders, Chávez, Parant et Corillon
Introduction to Probability and Inductive Logic
Josiah Royce’s Late Writings, 2 volumes
Living Doubt: Essays concerning the Epistemology of Charles Sanders Peirce
Matrizes da linguagem e pensamento: Sonora, visual, verbal
The Metaphysical Club: A Story of Ideas in America
Modelos das relações sígnicas na semiose segundo C.S. Peirce: evidências empírico theóricas
Native Pragmatism: Rethinking the Roots of American Philosophy
On Mead
On Translating Signs: Exploring Text and Semio-Translation
Peirce crítico de Mill: Sobre os contextos realista e nominalista da indução
Peirce and Contemporary Thought
Peirce and Theology: Essays in the Authentication of Doctrine
Peirce and Value Theory: On Peircean Ethics and Aesthetics
Peirce Seminar Papers, Volume 2, The
Peirce’s Doctrine of Signs: Theory, Applications, and Connections
Peirce's Esthetics of Freedom: Possibility, Complexity, and Emergent Value
Peirce's Pragmatism: The Design for Thinking
Philosophy of Jonathan Edwards, A Study in Divine Semiotics, The
Pragmatic Moral Realism: A Transcendental Defense
Pragmatism (1995)
Pragmatism (1999)
Pragmatism, Old and New: Selected Writings
Pragmatism and Values
Pragmatismo: I valori dell’esperienza: Letture di Peirce, James e Mead
Promise of Pragmatism, The
Rethinking Metaphysics
Richard Rorty: An Annotated Bibliography of Secondary Literature
Sachen und Zeichen: zur Philosophie des Pragmatismus
Science, Knowledge, and the Mind
The Search for Mathematical Roots, 1870-1940
Semantic Games in Logic and Language
De Semiosis: het semiotiek van C. S. Peirce in verband gebracht met het verschijnsel (The Semiosis: C.S. Peirce's Semiotics Applied to 'Film')
Semiosis in Hindustani Music
Semiosis in the Postmodern Age
Semiotic Self, The
Semiotics and the Problem of Translation: With Special Reference to the Semiotics of Charles S. Peirce
Sign Design, ou o design dos signos: a construção de diagramas dinâmicos das classes de signos de C.S. Peirce
Signos Reales del Uruguay Imaginario
Signs Solidarities and Sociology
Song and Significance: Virtues and Vices of Vocal Translation
Strands of System The Philosophy of Charles Peirce
Tekenen van waarheid: C.S. Peirce en de hedendaagse wetenschapsifilosofie
Thomas Albert Sebeok and Semiotics
Truth, Rationality, and Pragmatism: Themes from Peirce
Video Mind, Earth Mind

Book Notes & Notices

In this section we publish short descriptive notices of new books about Peirce or subjects likely to interest our readers.  We cannot survey all new publications or prepare critical reviews, so we notice only those books sent by authors and publishers.   When available, we reprint notices supplied with the books (often edited and supplemented with text from prefaces or introductions); otherwise we prepare our own brief announcements.  Please note:  we notice books only if they are sent as review copies to be deposited in the Project library.


Abduction, Reason, and Science: Processes of Discovery and Explanation

Lorenzo Magnani. Dordrecht: Kluwer, 2000, 224 pp.

Magnani ties together work in philosophy of science and Artificial Intelligence, lays out a general framework for discussing different types of abduction, and develops ideas about aspects of abductive reasoning that have been relatively neglected in cognitive science, including the use of visual and temporal representations and the role of abduction in the withdrawal of hypotheses.


American Ethics: A Source Book from Edwards to Dewey

G. W. Stroh and H. G. Callaway. Lanham: University Press of America, 2000, 500pp.

This anthology is divided into six sections: Puritanism, liberty of conscience, and the religious background; enlightenment and natural rights; transcendentalism and human dignity; pragmatism, evolution, and humanism; Idealism, evil, and prejudice; and, Naturalism, science, and society.


Artikulu eta hitzaldien bilduma.

Charles S. Peirce. Klasikoa, 2005. 415 pp.

Sixteen papers from the Essential Peirce are translated into the Basque language, including the original editorial annotations. Foreword by Nathan Houser.


Becoming John Dewey: Dilemmas of a Philosopher and Naturalist

Thomas C. Dalton. Indiana University Press, 2002, 377 pp.

Engaged in a lifelong struggle to understand the human mind, Dewey had to become more than a philosopher. Tapping archival resources and Dewey’s extensive correspondence, Dalton shows that Dewey had close personal and intellectual ties to scientists and scholars who helped form the mature expression of his thought. His relationships with F.M. Alexander, Henri Matisse, Niels Bohr, Myrtle McGraw, and Lawrence K. Frank, among others, show how Dewey dispersed pragmatism throughout American thought  and culture.

Charles Peirce's Guess at the Riddle: Grounds for Human Significance

John K. Sheriff. Indiana University Press, 1994. 100 pp. $20.00 cloth; $9.95 paper.

As Emerson describes it in his essay "Nature," the riddle that the Sphinx puts to every great thinker concerns the relation between mind and matter. In this introduction to the thought of Charles S. Peirce, John K. Sheriff presents a philosopher who speaks to this fundamental question of the nature of human existence. In clear and concise prose, Sheriff describes Peirce's "theory of everything," a vision of cosmic and human meaning that offers a positive alternative to popular pessimistic and relativistic approaches to life and meaning. Aimed at nonspecialists, this book does not attempt to evaluate every concept in Peirce's philosophy but instead shows how Peirce's analyses of aesthetics, ethics, logic, and human consciousness rest on the foundations of his grand theory of the cosmos, mind, and signs. Sheriff convincingly demonstrates that Peirce's answer to the riddle of the Sphinx has the potential to be a powerful, positive force in contemporary culture. Foreword by Nathan Houser.


Charles S. Peirce's Evolutionary Philosophy

Carl R. Hausman. Cambridge University Press, 1993. xvii, 230 pp. $54.95 cloth.

This excellent book by one of today's leading Peirce scholars provides a systematic introduction to the philosophy of Charles S. Peirce. It focuses on four of Peirce's fundamental conceptions: pragmatism and Peirce's development of it into what he called "pragmaticism"; his theory of signs; his phenomenology; and his theory that continuity is of prime importance for philosophy.

Hausman argues that at the center of Peirce's philosophical project is a unique form of metaphysical realism, whereby both continuity and evolutionary change are necessary for our understanding of experience. In his final chapter Hausman applied this version of realism to current controversies between anti-realists and anti-idealists. Peirce's views are compared with those of such present-day figures as Davidson, Putnam, and Rorty.


Charles Sanders Peirce

Klaus Oehler. Munich: C.H. Beck, 1993. 163 pp. DM 24.

Charles Sanders Peirce appears in the respected Grosse Denker Series (C. H. Beck Verlag, Munich).

This is an introductory but scholarly treatment, in German, of Peirce's work, viewed from a European perspective. Oehler focuses on Peirce's pragmatism, theory of signs, categories and cosmology, and on his significance for thought in the 21st century, after the decline of ideological thinking. Oehler's thesis is that pragmatism will be the Idealtypus of future philosophy, but Peirce's form of pragmatism, not Rorty's.


Classical American Pragmatism: Its Contemporary Vitality

Ed. Sandra B. Rosenthal, Carl R. Hausman, and Douglas R. Anderson. University of Illinois Press, 1999, 263 pp.

A collection of essays that provides a thorough grounding in the philosophy of American pragmatism by examining the views of four principal thinkers—Charles S. Peirce, William James, John Dewey, and George Herbert Mead—on issues of central and enduring importance to life in human society.


Consciousness and the Play of Signs

Robert E. Innis. Indiana University Press, 1994. ix, 177 pp. $35.00 cloth.

In Consciousness and the Play of Signs, Robert E. Innis offers a brilliant study of the relationship between philosophy and semiotics. Taking up the problem as foregrounded by Eco, Merleau-Ponty, Derrida, Goodman, and Rorty, Innis reformulates and reconfigures the philosophical and semiotic premises and frameworks of a descriptively adequate theory of knowledge. In so doing he opens the way to a cultural and historical epistemology of embodied knowledge forms.

Innis bases his analysis primarily on conceptual tools derived from deep and sophisticated readings of Peirce, Polanyi, Dewey, BŸhler, Husserl, and Cassirer. He explores the variety of contexts--including the motoric, the perceptual, the aesthetic, the linguistic, and the theoretical--in which semiotic and nonsemiotic factors in consciousness and world building can be related without blurring their crucial differences or irreconcilably opposing them to one another. This book heightens our understanding of ourselves and intersects with all those disciplines concerned with the production and interpretation of meaning.


Deconstruction and Reconstruction

Ed. John Ryder and Krystyna Wilkoszewska. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2004, 270 pp.

These are an additional twenty-three essays written for the Slovakia conference in 2000. The focus of this second volume is on democracy, ethics, aesthetics, epistemology, philosophy of mind, and pragmatism’s relation to analytic philosophy.


Defining the Semiotic Animal: A Postmodern Definition of “Human Being”

John Deely. Sofia, 2005, 96 pp.

This small book composed at the 2005 Semiotics Seminar Series organized by the Southeast European Center for Semiotic Studies in Sofia, Bulgaria, contains a gathering of recent work by Deely on the question how to understand the expression “semiotic animal.”


Democracy and the Post-Totalitarian Experience

Ed. Leszek Koczanowicz and Beth  J. Singer. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2005, 238 pp.

Presents in thirteen essays the work of Polish and American philosophers on Poland’s transition from communist domination to democracy. Topics include nationalism, liberalism, law and justice, academic freedom, religion, fascism, and anti-Semitism.


Development of Peirce's Philosophy, The

Murray G. Murphey. Hackett Publishing Company, 1993. 448 pp. $38.95 cloth; $19.95 paper.

Hackett has reissued Murray Murphey's landmark study of Peirce's philosophy--including a paperback issue for the classroom. In this work, which follows Peirce's development from the late 1850's to Peirce's death in 1914, Murphey presents Peirce's philosophy as a continuing attempt to create an architectonic system adequate for dealing with both scientific and metaphysical problems, and suggests an underlying consistency throughout Peirce's work and explains the considerations behind what appear to be radical contradictions in Peirce's thought. Peirce's theories of geometry, topology, and arithmetic are treated in detail. Murphey also sets forth what Peirce intended in referring to his later philosophy as "synechism" and explains Peirce's intellectual goals and why he failed to achieve them. In a new preface, Murphey announces that he now believes that Peirce was more successful in achieving a coherent system than he thought when he wrote this work in 1961. In addition to a new preface, Murphey has added a new appendix where footnotes are keyed to the Robin manuscript classification. Students and scholars will welcome the return of this "old friend."


Der dramatische Reichtum der konkreten Welt: Der Ursprung des Pragmatismus im Denken von Charles S. Peirce und William James.

Helmut Pape. Weilerswist: Velbrück, 2002. 379 pp.

An account of the origin and early development of pragmatism understood as a healthy dialectic between Peirce and James.  The final part of the book seeks to situate pragmatism within the main philosophical tendencies.


Erkenntnisentwicklung

Michael Hoffmann. Frankfurt am Main: Klostermann, 2005, 271 pp.

Hoffmann offers an in-depth study of the question of the possibility of the development of knowledge within the context of an epistemology more preoccupied with a genetic than with a justificatory perspective. A key chapter is devoted to an explanation of Peirce’s semiotic theory of knowledge. Hoffmann brings together the results of his epistemological studies of abduction, of mathematical inquiry, and of diagrammatic reasoning, and connects them with a pragmatic account of rationality. A short chapter on creativity is well worth perusing. The final chapter unifies the argument by linking knowledge development with the process of generalization.


The Establishment of Science in America: 150 Years of the American Association for the Advancement of Science

Sally Gregory Kohlstedt, Michael M. Sokal, Bruce V. Lewenstein. Rutgers University Press, 1999, 236 pp.

Tracing the evolution of the role of scientists in American society, public attitudes toward science, and changing dimensions of the sponsorship of science and its participants, the authors connect the AAAS history to issues of continuing importance in American history, such as the integration of women and minority groups into mainstream professions and the role of expert knowledge in a democratic society.

Evidence and Inquiry Towards Reconstruction in Epistemology

Susan Haack. Blackwell Publishers, 1995. x, 259 pp. $44.95 cloth.

In this book Haack effectively challenges "enthusiasts of the latest developments in cognitive science or neurophysiology" (e.g. the Churchlands), "radical self-styled neo-pragmatists" (e.g. Stich), and "followers of the latest Paris fashions" (e.g. Rorty) on the legitimacy and fruitfulness of epistemology. Haack claims, contra the above hostile parties, that epistemology is far from terminal, but that it is in need of reconstruction (not deconstruction). Haack goes on to provide the needed reconstruction, a new explication of epistemic justification that takes the grain from the "opposing" foundationalist and coherentist accounts but blows off the chaf. In the neologistic tradition of Peirce, Haack gives her new theory a unique (and not very pretty) name: foundherentism. Haack describes her new approach to the project of ratification as "an approach which [is] neither purely a priori nor purely empirical in character, but [is] very modestly naturalistic, allowing the contributory relevance both of empirical considerations about human beings' cognitive capacities and limitations, and of considerations of a logical, deductive character." Though the name of her new theory may not be pleasing, the theory (supported by a broadly Peircean account of perception) is; it is likely to be the theory that will carry epistemology into the 21st century.


Experiencing Tess of the D’Urbervilles: A Deweyan Account

Arthur Efron. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2005, 248 pp.

An interpretation of Hardy’s famous novel through John Dewey’s Art as Experience, thus offering a new way of evaluating literature inspired by a Deweyan pragmatist aesthetics. The fictional characters of Tess are considered as real people having sexual bodies and complex minds.


Founders of Constructive Postmodern Philosophy: Peirce, James, Bergson, Whitehead, and Hartshorne

David Ray Griffin, John B. Cobb Jr., Marcus P. Ford, Pete A. Y. Gunter, and Peter Ochs. State University of New York Press, 1993. xi, 241 pp. $16.95 paper.

In presenting Peirce, James, Bergson, Whitehead, and Hartshorne as members of a common and distinctively postmodern trajectory, this book casts the thought of each of them in a new light. It also suggests a new direction for the philosophical community as a whole, now that the various forms of modern philosophy, and even the deconstructive form of postmodern philosophy, are widely perceived to be dead-ends. This new option offers the possibility that philosophy may recover its role as a critic and guide within the more general culture. The five essays in Constructive Postmodern Philosophy are presented with the hope that they will contribute to a revitalization of philosophy in the coming decades and to a better fulfillment by philosophers of the cultural role they should play, and thereby, in some way, to a better world. Introduction by D. R. Griffin.


Four Ages of Understanding: The First Postmodern Survey of Philosophy from Ancient Times to the Turn of the Twenty-First Century

John Deely. University of Toronto Press, 2001, 1019 pp.

Taking the notion of a sign as central, Deely distinguishes four eras in the history of philosophy: Greek thought, the Latin age, the modern period, and the postmodern age, which in Deely’s view begins with Peirce. Considering the history of philosophy in connection with the emergence of contemporary semiotics, Deely gives a new and fruitful vantage point from which to review and reinterpret both our heritage and today’s intellectual culture.

From Peirce to Skolem: A Neglected Chapter in the History of Logic

Geraldine Brady. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2000, 625 pp.

Brady traces the influence of Peirce and O.H. Mitchell on the development of mathematical logic through the work of Schröder, Löwenheim, and Skolem, showing that the Löwenheim-Skolem theorem has its pedigree in Peirce.


From Time and Chance to Consciousness: Studies in the Metaphysics of Charles Peirce

Edited with introduction by Edward C. Moore and Richard S. Robin. Oxford and Providence: Berg Publishers, 1994. xii, 269 pp. $59.95 cloth.

Charles Peirce, sometimes said to be the finest philosopher the United States has yet produced, was also a physicist, chemist, and mathematician. He belongs to a long line of physical scientists reaching from Aristotle to Einstein--including contemporaries such as Planck, Schršdinger and Heisenberg--for whom physics was not enough, and who went beyond physics to metaphysics and cosmology.

The seventeen papers contained in _From Time and Chance to Consciousness_ were first presented to the Harvard Congress commemorating the 150th anniversary of the birth of Charles Peirce. They are devoted primarily to the metaphysics on which Peirce based his pragmatism. Problems with Peirce's metaphysics, involving both the understanding of his position and the viability of it, persist. For example, is Peirce's defense of First Philosophy sufficient to meet the objections of W. Quine and others? Given scientific metaphysics as Peirce understands it, how plausible is it to think that grafting scholastic realism onto scientific realism will solve the problem of the objectivity of science? Has the cognitive question of how we know real generals been satisfactorily answered? It is also a fair question to ask, especially in view of the importance Peirce places on science, whether recent developments in science are in support of, neutral to, or in opposition to the main thrust of his cosmogony.

These and other questions are considered, though not with a single voice. That a varied community of inquirers has taken up the challenges posed by Peirce's questions and answers may be read as a sign that Peircean metaphysics is indeed alive and well.


Habermas and Pragmatism

Ed. Mitchell Aboulafia. Routledge, 2002, 240 pp.

The essays cover a wide range of subjects including philosophy of language, democracy, nature of rationality and social theory, as well as influences of Peirce, Mead and Dewey on Habermas.


Interpréter l’art contemporain: La sémiotique peircienne appliquée aux æuvres de Magritte, Klein, Duras, Wenders, Chávez, Parant et Corillon

Nicole Everaert-Desmedt. Brussels: De Boeck, coll. Culture & Communication, 2006, 318 pp.

The author applies Peirce’s semiotic theory to the analysis of concrete examples of contemporary art, whether pictural, sculptural, or scriptural. This varied application brings her to elaborate a descriptive model of artistic communication that takes into account the experience of art producers and art receivers alike. One of her main theses is that much of contemporary art seeks to make experiences of firstness more intelligible through iconic devices and strategies that subtly evoke forms of firstness, and that this has developed into a certain type of mental activity the author calls “iconic thinking,” which Peirce’s phaneroscopy and semiotic help describe with remarkable efficacy.


Introduction to Probability and Inductive Logic

Ian Hacking. Cambridge University Press, 2001, 320 pp.

An introductory textbook designed to offer maximal accessibility to the widest range of students (not only those majoring in philosophy) and assumes no formal training in elementary symbolic logic. The book covers all basic definitions of induction and probability, and considers such topics as decision theory, Bayesianism, frequency ideas, and the philosophical problem of induction.


Josiah Royce’s Late Writings, 2 vols.

Ed. Frank M. Oppenheim, S.J. Bristol, Thoemmes Press, 2001, 620 pp.

This excellent two-volume collection aims to reveal the late “Peirceanized” stage (1912–16) in the thought of Josiah Royce. The first volume gathers his late writings published in journals; the second volume contains a number of his unpublished writings. By including writings that were never published, this edition extends beyond the traditional Thoemmes approach of providing reprints.


Living Doubt: Essays concerning the Epistemology of Charles Sanders Peirce

Edited by Guy Debrock and Menno Hulswit. Dordrecht and Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1994. xi, 323 pp. $20.00 cloth; $9.95 paper.

Although it is often said that Peirce is one of the most important North American philosophers, the real extent of the philosophical importance of his work begins to emerge only now. Whereas it was for a long time philosophically fashionable to regard pragmatism as a typically naive and simplistic American approach to the serious problems of philosophy, there can be little doubt that recent epistemological literature points to a reversal of that trend. Indeed, pragmatism, and more specifically, Peirce's own brand of pragmaticism, a term which he invented in order to distance himself from other forms of pragmatism, may well provide the key to an epistemological theory which avoids the pitfalls of both foundationalism and relativism.

The 26 papers included in _Living Doubt_ were presented to the Charles S. Peirce Sesquicentennial International Congress held at Harvard University in the Fall of 1989. They represent a rich and cosmopolitan variety of approaches to Peirce's epistemology.


Matrizes da linguagem e pensamento: Sonora, visual, verbal

Lucia Santaella. São Paulo: Editora Iluminuras, 2001, 432 pp.

Discussing what she considers to be the three great matrices of thought (the aural, the visual, and the verbal) Santaella addresses a variety of “languages,” such as literature, music, theater, painting, sculpture, architecture, etc., as well as the increasing multiplicity of hybrid medias and hyper medias.


The Metaphysical Club: A Story of Ideas in America

Louis Menand. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2002, 568 pp.
This is a compellingly told tale about the Metaphysical Club that has landed him the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for History. Menand situates the development of pragmatism against the backdrop of the Civil War and the abolition of slavery. Ample attention is given to Oliver Wendell Homes. In contrast, the book is sparse on Peirce. Menand’s treatment extends beyond the Metaphysical Club. For instance, much attention is given to Dewey.


Modelos das relações sígnicas na semiose segundo C.S. Peirce: evidências empírico theóricas

Alvaro João Queiroz. Dissertation. Universidade Católica de São Paulo, 2002.

Queiroz addresses following five questions: “what is a sign?,” “How many kinds of signs can be conceived?,” “How are they inter-related?,” “How can these interrelations be modeled?,” “How can they be empirically investigated?.” Queiroz uses Peirce’s speculative grammar to tackle the first four questions. Queiroz’s main contribution lies mostly in his answer to the fourth question. In chapter four, Queiroz designs models to describe the classes of signs and develops an explanation of the n-trichotomic classifications in terms of  diagrammatic models. The fifth question is addressed in a neuroenthological thought experiment specifically designed to reveal the hierarchical relations among different classes of signs.


Native Pragmatism: Rethinking the Roots of American Philosophy

Scott L. Pratt. Indiana University Press, 2002, 336 pp.

In the received view pragmatism is understood as a European response to the American wilderness. Pratt argues that on closer examination the roots and central commitments of pragmatism are grounded in ways of thinking that are indigenous to North America. This throws new light on its complex origins and requires a rethinking not only of pragmatism but also of the sources and roles of African American and feminist thought in the development of the American philosophical tradition.


On Mead

Cornelis de Waal. Belmont: Wadsworth, 2001, 96 pp.

A systematic but concise account of Mead’s thought. Departing from Mead’s notion of the act, attention is given to the emergence and development of self, language, mind, and social institutions. Discussed also are Mead’s notion of role-playing, his distinction between the “I” and the “me,” and his conception of morality.


On Translating Signs: Exploring Text and Semio-Translation

Dinda L. Gorlée. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2004, 250 pp.

A semiotic approach to the problem of translation, addressing questions such as “What is a text?,” “What is meaning?,” “What is a translation?,” particular attention is given to the role of intuition in recognizing texts and in translating them.


Peirce crítico de Mill: Sobre os contextos realista e nominalista da indução

Maria de Lourdes Bacha. Dissertation. Universidade Católica de São Paulo, 1999.

In “Peirce’s Dialogue with Mill on the Realist versus Nominalist Justification of Induction,” Bacha examines Peirce’s validation of induction by examining his criticism of John Stuart Mill’s deterministic and nominalistic views. Bacha’s examination is preceded by an overview of the positions of Aristotle, Bacon, and Hume. Her third chapter contains a detailed study of Peirce’s ideas of induction as related to his turn from nominalism toward realism. According to Bacha, the ground for Peirce’s validation of induction lies in his realism with respect to continua.


Peirce and Contemporary Thought

Edited by Kenneth L. Ketner. Fordham University Press, 1995. xvi, 444 pp. $35.00 cloth.

Perhaps the seminal event for Peirce scholarship for the next century took place at Harvard University in September 1989. This was the landmark Peirce Sesquicentennial Congress that brought together hundreds of leading Peirce scholars from around the world in an intimate exchange of papers and ideas. Of the eleven books that have sprung from the Harvard Congress, Ketner's Peirce and Contemporary Thought may be expected to have the broadest impact. It contains the essays of the principal speakers at the Congress, including papers by Hilary Putnam, W. V. Quine, Isaac Levi, Nicholas Rescher, Carolyn Eisele, Joseph W. Dauben, Umberto Eco, Thomas Sebeok, JŸrgen Habermas, Risto Hilpinen, Michael Shapiro, David Savan, Charles Hartshorne, and Karl-Otto Apel. The papers by these important scholars, and powerful responses by, Randall R. Dipert, Joseph S. Ullian, Cornelius J. Delaney, Helena M. Pycior, Peter Skagestad, Klaus Oehler, Demetra Sfendoni-Mentzou, Vincent G. Potter, and Christopher Hookway, cover a wide range of interests and establish crucial links between Peirce's thought and contemporary research in many different fields of intellectual endeavor. This is the book to read for anyone seeking to learn how Peirce is relevant for contemporary thought.


Peirce and Theology: Essays in the Authentication of Doctrine

Donald L. Gelpi. University Press of America, 2001, 104 pp.

Invoking Peirce’s logic to clarify the operational procedures of dialectic, foundational, and doctrinal theology, Gelpi argues that Peirce's theory of the normative sciences casts light on three forms of conversion: affective, intellectual, and moral. From a normative account of the dynamics of five forms of conversion, he derives specific criteria for authenticating and calling into question both doctrinal statements about the content of religious faith and different theories of theological method.


Peirce and Value Theory: On Peircean Ethics and Aesthetics

Edited by Herman Parret. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1994. xv, 371 pp. $95.00 cloth.

Most of the essays collected in this book were presented at the Charles S. Peirce Sesquicentennial Congress (Harvard University, September 1989). The volume is devoted to themes within Peirce's value theory and offers a comprehensive view of less known aspects of his influential philosophy, in particular Peirce's work on ethics and aesthetics.

The book is divided in four sections. Section 1 discusses the status of ethics as a normative science and its relation with logic; some applications are presented, e.g. in the field of bioethics. Section 2 investigates the specific position of Peircean aesthetics with regard to classical American philosophy (especially Buchler), to Husserlian phenomenology, and to European structuralism (Saussure, Jakobson). Section 3 contains papers on internal aspects of Peirce's aesthetics and its place in his thought. The final section presents applications of Peirce's aesthetic theory and offers analyses of visual art (mainly paintings), of literary texts and of musical meaning. The book includes 23 articles, a preface by K. L. Ketner, and a comprehensive introduction by the Editor.


Peirce Seminar Papers, Volume 2, The

Edited by Michael Shapiro. Berghahn Books, 1994. 259 pp. $49.95 cloth.

Since the modern founding of the theory of signs by the American philosopher-scientist Charles Sanders Peirce (1839-1914), the field of semiotics has become increasingly prominent as a method of interdisciplinary research and study, bridging the humanities, the fine arts, and the natural and social sciences. This new annual, The Peirce Seminar Papers, offers a forum for applications of sign theory in its most developed and richest version--that of Charles Peirce. Volume one (Berg) appeared in 1993.

Volume two is dedicated to the memory of David Savan and the memorial preface by Michael Shapiro includes a useful bibliography of Savan's semiotic writings. This volume, which includes papers by Edna Andrews, Raimo Anttila, Jean Fisette, James Jak—b Liszka, Dan Nesher, Peter H. Salus, Marianne Shapiro, and T.L. Short, makes a substantial contribution to semiotic theory. Of special interest is the posthumously published 1991 paper by David Savan: "C.S. Peirce and American Semiotics." All students of Peirce's semiotic will want to read Savan's paper.


Peirce’s Doctrine of Signs: Theory, Applications, and Connections

Ed. Vincent Colapietro, Thomas Olshewsky. Mouton de Gruyter, 1995, 463 pp.

This is a collection of presentations given at the Peirce Sesquicentennial Congress at Harvard in 1989. The volume contains essays on a general theory of signs, Peirce’s conception of semiosis, the classification of signs, the semiosis of metaphor, aesthetics, hermeneutics and linguistics. Most of the essays included appear in print for the first time.


Peirce's Esthetics of Freedom: Possibility, Complexity, and Emergent Value

Roberta Kevelson. Peter Lang Publishers, 1993. 360 pp. $65.95 cloth.

Kevelson explores Peirce's idea of esthetics from the viewpoint that freedom is, for Peirce, the summum bonum. Her research is based, in large part, on unpublished manuscripts. This book shows that in Peirce's scheme, possibility is greater than necessity. Novelty first appears as a quality which evolves. All freedom initially arises as an idea which the investigator opposes to form. As Peirce says, what we call observables or facts are ideas, or signs, grounded in established contexts of meaning and value. The leading thesis in this book extrapolates from Peirce's assumption that we must redefine relations of real and actual phenomena in order to make a place for possibility. The idea of possibility includes all the conceivable modes of being and becoming. According to Peirce, it is the method of semiotics which is instrumental in observing the possible in its process of Becoming. As the relation between observer and observed reciprocally evolve and increase multidimensionally, expanding limits of meaning, opportunities for further inquiry, emerge. In this sense Kevelson sees Peirce's freedom as a means/end dynamical process.


Peirce's Pragmatism: The Design for Thinking

Phyllis Chiasson. Rodopi Editions, 2001, 259 pp.

Written in the style of a dialogue, Chiasson leads the reader step by step through Peirce’s 1905 Monist article “What Pragmatism Is.” The book is accessible to a general readership and could be used for undergraduate classes in philosophy.


Philosophy of Jonathan Edwards, A Study in Divine Semiotics, The

Stephen H. Daniel. Indiana University Press, 1994. ix, 224 pp. $22.95 cloth.

Stephen H. Daniel presents a comprehensive analysis and redefinition of the thought of Jonathan Edwards. Though well known in literary, historical, and religious circles, Edwards is a puzzle to philosophers. Attempts to portray him in terms of the classical modern dispute between empiricism and rationalism are inevitably frustrated by his blend of philosophy, rhetoric, history, and religious doctrine.

Daniel reveals how Edward's philosophy appeals to the tradition of Stoic logic and ontology thematized in the Renaissance by Paracelsus and Peter Ramus. Drawing on the semiotic work of Peirce, Foucault, and Kristeva, the book shows how the Renaissance theory of signatures provides Edwards and his contemporaries with a powerful alternative to the ideas of Descartes and Locke. Presenting the Stoic-Renaissance treatment of signs as an alternative to the modern dismissal of the language of nature, Daniel demonstrates the way in which this earlier model illuminates Edwards's treatment of theological themes such as creation, trinity, original sin, freedom, moral agency, and the knowledge of beauty.


Pragmatic Moral Realism: A Transcendental Defense

Sami Pihlström. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2005, 184 pp.

Pihlström examines from a pragmatic point of view the issue of moral realism, paying attention to actual practices of ethical evaluation and deliberation and arguing that ethics is and must remain beyond justification.


Pragmatism

Hilary Putnam. Blackwell Publishers, 1995. xii, 106 pp. $39.95 cloth; $15.95 paper.

Putnam writes in his introduction that "it is an open question whether an enlightened society can avoid a corrosive moral scepticism without tumbling back into moral authoritarianism. . . . It is precisely this question that has led me, in recent years, back to pragmatism--to the writings of Peirce, and James and Dewey, and also to the writings of Wittgenstein, whose work, I argue in these lectures, bears affinities to American Pragmatism even if he was not willing to be classed as a 'pragmatist'. " Putnam then outlines the chapters (lectures) that follow:

In the first of the lectures, I try to explain the importance of the thought of William James, focussing in particular on the way in which fact and value are seen as inseparable by James, but also setting the stage for the discussion of the inseparability of fact and theory and fact and interpretation in the lectures which follow. In the second lecture, I try to situate the later philosophy of Wittgenstein not only with respect to pragmatism, but also with respect to the history of philosophy, and in the third and final lecture I try to bring the legacy of Peirce, James, Dewey, and Wittgenstein to bear on some of our contemporary philosophical debates. In particular, I hope to convince you that pragmatism offers something far better than the unpalatable alternatives which too often seem to be the only possibilities today, both philosophically and politically.

The three lectures in this slim volume were delivered in Rome in March 1992 in the distinguished series "Lezione italiane" under the sponsorship of the Sigma Tau Foundation and the Laterza publishing house. The book includes a useful bibliography of Putnam's writings.


Pragmatism

Ed. Cheryl Misak. University of Calgary Press, 1999, 278 pp.

This collection brings together some of the very best new work on pragmatism, from both self-styled pragmatists and from those whose positions merely have affinities with pragmatism. The essays, which cover both classical pragmatism and contemporary approaches, focus on epistemology and moral/ political philosophy.


Pragmatism, Old and New: Selected Writings

Ed. Susan Haack and Robert Lane. Prometheus: Amherst, 2006, 741 pp.

Haack and Lane offer a solid anthology of Pragmatist’s writings, beginning with Peirce and ending with Rorty. The volume includes also a few more technical writings of Peirce , and includes texts by ramsey, Goodman, Putnam, and Quine. An excellent and inexpensive book for the classroom.


Pragmatism and Values

Ed. John Ryder and Emil Visnovsky. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2004, 248 pp.

These are twenty essays written for the first conference of the Central Pragmatist Forum, which was held in Slovakia in 2000. The essays survey contemporary thinking on classical and contemporary pragmatism, culture and society, and science and the arts.

Pragmatismo: I valori dell’esperienza: Letture di Peirce, James e Mead

Rosa M. Calcaterra. Rome: Carocci, 2003.

About half of the book is on Peirce, beginning with a semiotic treatment of the distinction between emotion and sensation in Peirce, and a comparison of Peirce and Wittgenstein on private experience, continuing with a discussion of James’s notions of sentiment and rationality, and concluding with Mead’s social realism.


Promise of Pragmatism, The

John Patrick Diggins. The University of Chicago Press, 1994. xiv, 515 pp. $29.95 cloth.

For much of our century, pragmatism has enjoyed a charmed life, holding the dominant point of view in American politics, law, education, and social thought in general. After suffering a brief eclipse in the post- World War II period, pragmatism has enjoyed a revival, especially in literary theory and such areas as poststructuralism and deconstruction. In this sweeping critique of pragmatism and neopragmatism, one of our leading intellectual historians traces the attempts of thinkers from William James to Richard Rorty to find a response to the crisis of modernism. Diggins analyzes the limitations of pragmatism from a historical perspective and dares to ask whether America's one original contribution to the world of philosophy has actually fulfilled its promise.

Diggins examines how, in different ways, William James, Charles Peirce, John Dewey, George H. Mead, and Oliver Wendell Homes, Jr., demonstrated that modernism posed no obstacle in fields such as science, education, religion, law, politics, and diplomacy. Diggins also examines the work of the neopragmatists JŸrgen Habermas and Richard Rorty and their attempt to resolve the crisis of postmodernism.

This is a magisterial account of twentieth-century intellectual life. It should be read by every one concerned about the roots of postmodernism (and its links to pragmatism) and about the forms of thought and action available for confronting a world after postmodernism.


Rethinking Metaphysics

Edited by L. Gregory Jones and Stephen E. Fowl. Blackwell Publishers, 1995. 165 pp. $21.95 paper.

Out of the ashes of the post-modern critique of metaphysics comes a series of important essays which re-think the place of metaphysics in theological and philosophical inquiry. This book ranges across a variety of philosophical and theological traditions, engaging such figures as Plato and Augustine, as well as Gillian Rose, Jacques Derrida, Donald Davidson, C.S. Peirce, and Jean Luc Marion.

Two chapters make special application of Peirce's work. Rebecca Chopp criticises a tendency among certain feminist theologians to rely upon an essentialist metaphysic. As an alternative, she argues the Peirce's work provides a more suitable metaphysic for feminist theology without compromising feminist concerns for the dismantling, naming, and transforming of current realities. Peter Ochs invites us to listen in on a conversation between a postcritical philosopher of a Peirceian sort and a postcritical scriptural theologian like George Lindbeck. Their dialogue is focussed on Exodus 3 and a variety of rabbinic interpretations of that passage. The problem driving this dialogue concerns issues about how to account for the transformative power of biblical interpretation. More generally, however, Ochs aims here both to lay out a non-foundationalist metaphysic and to argue that dialogues between postcritical theologians and philosophers will be mutually enriching.

The authors of these essays directly confront a variety of post-modern critiques of metaphysical speculation, while, nonetheless, arguing that there is still a significant future for reflection on metaphysical questions. Unified by an agreement about the urgent need to re-think metaphysics rather than a common set of answers, these essays should provoke a wide-ranging and lively discussion among philosophers and theologians.


Richard Rorty: An Annotated Bibliography of Secondary Literature

Richard Rumana. Rodopi, 2002, 135 pp.

A comprehensive bibliography of no less than 1,165 citations, this book is essential for anyone researching Rorty’s work and its impact on philosophy, literature, the arts, religion, the social sciences, politics, and education.



Sachen und Zeichen: zur Philosophie des Pragmatismus

Klaus Oehler. Vittorio Klostermann, 1995. 269 pp.

For most of this century pragmatism has been spurned in Germany as a typical expression of American utilitarianism and vulgar practicality. But as old prejudices have thawed and dissolved in the aftermath of the cold war, the resentment of German intellectuals against American pragmatism has begun to disappear. Oehler's timely book demonstrates that pragmatism offers a theory of action that is both humane and ecological, a view far removed from the opportunism before mistakenly thought to undergird American thought. The essays assembled in this volume--which have appeared in scattered places from 1968 to 1994-- originated for the most part in lectures and seminars conducted by Professor Oehler on the philosophy of pragmatism, especially in relation to its founder, C.S. Peirce. Oehler is a leading specialist on Peirce's philosophy.


Science, Knowledge, and the Mind

C. F. Delaney. Notre Dame University Press, 1993. xii, 183 pp. $28.95 cloth.

This book is a comprehensive but manageable introduction to Peirce's thought. Elegantly written in only 179 pages, it can hardly be expected to give the unabridged Peirce, yet it is remarkable how complete its picture is. By astutely selecting as Peirce's primary philosophical project his Kant-inspired quest for the conditions of the possibility of science (taken very broadly), Delaney zeroes in on the heart of Peirce's philosophy. He elaborates Peirce's project as having two facets: "first, the articulation of certain qualities of inquirers and institutions necessary to sustain the process; and secondly, the articulation or positing of certain features of our world necessary to guarantee its objective validity." _Science, Knowledge, and the Mind_ is an account of Peirce's achievement in resolving the problem he set for himself, a resolution that draws heavily from philosophy of science, epistemology, and the philosophy of mind. The book is not merely another introduction to Peirce's philosophy but is offered as an antidote to current strains of anti-rationalism and anti-scientism. Delaney believes that Peirce's brand of pragmatism provides a way to transcend many of the limitations of twentieth-century philosophy without rejecting its many genuine advances over past ways of philosophizing. Delaney remarks that it is the task of every age to undertake the speculative project of fashioning a synoptic conception of the world and of our place in it. He shows that Peirce's try at this perennial task is surprisingly relevant to current debates in the philosophy of science and culture.


The Search for Mathematical Roots, 1870-1940

I. Grattan-Guinness. Princeton University Press, 2001, 624 pp.

Ivor Grattan-Guinness provides a comprehensive overview of how people from 1870 till 1940 have tried to come to grips with mathematical logic and its relation to mathematics. Its rich detail and the inclusion of figures that are under-appreciated today make this an important and useful book.


Semantic Games in Logic and Language

Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen. Dissertation, University of Helsinki, 2002, 55 pp.

Pietarinen addresses three related questions: What kind of tools and methodologies can games provide for the study of logic and language? What is the structure of such games? What is the relation between logic, language, and games?


De Semiosis: het semiotiek van C. S. Peirce in verband gebracht met het verschijnsel (The Semiosis: C.S. Peirce's Semiotics Applied to 'Film')

Hans van Driel. Tilburg: Catholic University of Brabant, 1993 (privately printed dissertation). x, 154 pp.

Van Driel argues that Peircean semiotics offers an alternative to the object-immanent approach of structurally oriented film semiotics. According to Peirce, meaning represents itself as a process, whereby a sign is determined by an object and whereby the sign itself produces a signified sign (the interpretant). For Peircean semiotics, research into this process of meaning representation (the semiosis) is itself the domain of research. Van Driel describes this semiosis by applying two procedures derived from the writings of Charles Sanders Peirce. The first is Peirce's semiotic claim that all representation of meaning is by sign. This claim constitutes the frame of this study. The second procedure, which involves Peirce's theory of categories, functions as Van Driel's leading principle.

Semiosis in general is described as a quality which may be actualized. For this reason, semiosis in general is called semiosis 'in potentia.' Van Driel refers to an actualized semiosis as semiosis 'in actu.' This is the object of research of several forms of applied semiotics. The description of this semiosis requires an adaptation of the description of semiosis 'in potentia' because of the peculiarity of the artifact (the sign) that influences semiosis 'in actu.' In this study semiosis 'in actu,' and its specialized subset of concluded semiosis (semiosis 'in lege'), is defined in terms of the process of film analysis.

Written in Dutch, a summary in English is included.


Semiosis in Hindustani Music

Jose Luiz Martinez. New Delhi: Motilal, 2001, 396 pp.

Martinez first constructs a theory of musical semiotics, which he derives from Peirce, and then applies it to the analysis of various types of Hindustani music to examine how they generate significations. The book concludes with an extensive semiotic interpretation of Rasa theory.


Semiosis in the Postmodern Age

Floyd Merrell. Purdue University Press, 1995. xv, 374 pp. $37.95 cloth.

"Who are we to suppose we are capable of comprehending the world of which we are a part, and what is the world to suppose it can be understood by us, minuscule and insignificant spatiotemporal warps contained within it?" This provocative question opens Floyd Merrell's study of postmodernism and the thought of Charles Sanders Peirce, part of the author's ongoing effort to understand our contemporary cultural and intellectual environment.

The specific focus in this interdisciplinary study is the modernism/postmodernism dichotomy and Peirce's precocious realization that the world does not lend itself to the simplistic binarism of modernist thought. In Merrell's examination of postmodern phenomena, the reader is taken through various facets of the cognitive sciences, philosophy of science, mathematics, and literary theory.

Merrell's consideration of Peirce's complex and inadequately understood concept of the sign is enhanced through numerous charts and figures. Theories, hypothesis, and speculation in the physical sciences are then brought to bear on Peircean semiotics. The final chapter critiques the often undiscriminating acceptance of postmodern practices in today's academic world.

Throughout this work, Merrell is scrupulously aware that we are participants within, not detached spectators of, our signs. We understand them while we interact with them, during which process we, and our signs as well, invariably undergo change.


Semiotic Self, The

Norbert Wiley. The University of Chicago Press, 1994. xiii, 250 pp. $39.95 cloth; $19.95 paper.

In his preface, Wiley describes this book as "a humanist book about the self." But it is not about the selfish (narcissistic, self-centered) self. Nor is it about the good (selfless, altruistic) self. This is a book "about the generic self, apart from any qualities it might have at any given time or place."

Drawing particularly on a synthesis of the writings of Charles Sanders Peirce and George Herbert Mead, Wiley argues that the self can be seen as a "trialogue" in which the present self ("I") talks to the future self ("you") about the past self ("me"). A distinctive feature of Wiley's view is that there is a mutually supportive relation between the self and democracy, and he traces this view through American history. Ultimately, in finding a way to decenter the self without eliminating it, Wiley supplies a much-needed closure to classical pragmatism and gives new direction to neopragmatism.

Wiley's book provides a superior means of interpreting the politics of identify in relation to such issues as class, gender, ethnicity, religion, and sexual orientation.



Semiotics and the Problem of Translation: With Special Reference to the Semiotics of Charles S. Peirce

Dinda L. Gorlee. Amsterdam and Atlanta: Rodopi, 1994. 255 pp. This book presents a radically interdisciplinary account of how Charles S. Peirce's theory of signs can be made to interact meaningfully with translation theory. Gorlee shows that the various phenomena we commonly refer to as "translation" are different forms of "genuine" and "degenerate" semiosis. Drawing on insights from Ludwig Wittgenstein and Walter Benjamin (and drawing analogies between their work and Peirce's) it is argued that through the kaleidoscopic, evolutionary process of unlimited translation, signs deploy their meaning-potentialities. This enables Gorlee to throw novel light on Roman Jakobson's three kinds of translation--intralingual, interlingual, and intersemiotic translation. This pioneering study will entice translation specialists, semioticians, and (language) philosophers into expanding their views upon translation and, hopefully, into cooperative research projects.


Sign Design, ou o design dos signos: a construção de diagramas dinâmicos das classes de signos de C.S. Peirce

Priscila Lena Farias. Dissertation. Universidade Católica de São Paulo, 2002.

Farias uses computer graphic tools, supplemented with new design strategies, to overcome several problems and limitations that are related to Peirce’s diagrams for representing the different classes of signs. Using these new design strategies, which she calls “sign design,” Farias  develops an entirely new family of diagrams (dynamic diagrams) that provide more efficient tools for investigation. Farias develops in particular two new diagrammatic models, which she dubs 10cubes and 3N3.


Signos Reales del Uruguay Imaginario

Fernando Andacht. Ediciones Trilce, 1992. 160 pp. $24.00 paper.

The largest part of this book centers on the close analysis of six media episodes, both at a micro- and a macro-social level, in order to understand the working of ideology from a socio-semiotic perspective. The society chosen is contemporary Uruguay--the small Latin American country formerly known as "the Switzerland of America" because of its solid and long-standing democratic institutions, as well as for its highly educated population. Andacht's working theory is Peircean triadic semiotic, with special emphasis on the much discussed concepts of the ground and the interpretant. The interpretant is construed by the author as the fundamental social legitimation device; in this manner an attempt is made to give a semiotic account of the construction of verisimilitude in everyday life. For this task, Andacht draws from J. J. Liszka's notion of transvaluation, a crucial elaboration of some key concepts of pragmaticism. A decade of the Uruguayan transition from dictatorship to democracy is thus studied through mass media produced signs--from newspapers, television news, talk shows, and publicity. In this way we witness how the social imagination works, what the role of media is in the change and preservation of powerful modern myths. Media are never mirror-like artifacts, but are truly dialectical ones, in the spirit of triadic semiosis, participating in an endless determination process in which signs undergo unpredictable change. Socio-semiotics should be able to explain why certain beliefs endure, while others die away. The book is aimed at semioticians with an interest in social sciences, as well as at sociologists, anthropologists, and social psychologists.


Signs Solidarities and Sociology 

Blasco José Sobrinho. Rowman & Littlefield, 2001, 320 pp.

In this book the sociologist Sobrinho addresses the formation and fragmentation of identity in today's postmodern world. Combining the views of Durkheim, Peirce, Mead, and Lacan, he surveys twentieth-century sociology, addressing key concepts such as subjective meaning, personal power, and autonomous self-hood.


Song and Significance: Virtues and Vices of Vocal Translation

Ed. Dinda L. Gorlée. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2005, 311 pp.

Running from the plurisemiotic of pop song translation to discussions about Mozart’s Don Giovanni, the eight essays in this book discuss the translation of poetic discourse into a wide variety of musicopoetic forms.


Strands of System The Philosophy of Charles Peirce

Douglas R. Anderson. Purdue University Press, 1995. xiv, 204 pp. $24.95 cloth; $13.95 paper.

Anderson's book is a unique and effective introduction to Peirce's life and thought. In the first two chapters he gives a panoramic view of Peirce's life and work in a way that reflects Peirce's own style. Much of the material in these chapters is responsive to the writings of Carl Hausman, Christopher Hookway, and Beverley Kent. In chapters three and four Anderson reprints two of Peirce's signature essays: "The Fixation of Belief," and "A Neglected Argument for the Reality of God." Together these essays provide a glimpse of the continuity and the development in Peirce's thinking; in particular, they display an attempt to come to grips with the central pragmatic question of how to characterize belief. Each essay is followed by an excellent commentary which aims to situate Peirce's conception of belief within the overall context of his architectonic. Anderson's appendix on "Peirce Literature" and his bibliography will be much appreciated by students.


Tekenen van waarheid: C.S. Peirce en de hedendaagse wetenschapsifilosofie

Menno Hulswit and Herman C.D.G. de Regt. Tilburg University Press, 1993. x, 254 pp. $40.00 paper (Written in Dutch)

The following is a chapter by chapter summary of Signs of Truth:

1. Herman de Regt and Menno Hulswit: "Introduction: Some Remarks on the Significance of C.S. Peirce for Contemporary Philosophy of Science."

2. Cees Schuyt (Amsterdam): "C.S. Peirce's Pragmaticism." Schuyt gives a comprehensive treatment of Peirce's pragmaticism and compares it with the pragmatism of William James. He also explores the significance of Peirce's philosophy of science, epistemology, and semiotics for contemporary philosophy of the social sciences.

3. Ilkka Niiniluoto (Helsinki): "The Evolution of Knowledge." Niiniluoto discusses the attempts by Peirce, Popper, and Toulmin to explain scientific progress in terms of conceptions derived from theories of biological evolution.

4. Ton Derksen (Nijmegen/Tilburg). "Peirce and the Problem of Scientific Progress." Derksen discusses Peirce's three explanations of (keys to) scientific progress: (1) induction, (2) self-correction, and (3) natural instincts.

5. Herman de Regt (Tilburg). "Scientific Realism and Underdetermination: Peirce's Blind Spot?" De Regt gives a survey of the presumed Peircean abductive argument for scientific realism in the philosophy of science of this century. He concludes that this argument has nothing in common with the mature Peircean notion of abduction. De Regt further argues that Peirce overlooked the by now well known fact that the possibility of underdetermination may seriously undermine realism.

6. Guy Debrock (Nijmegen). "Naturalism and Peirce's Conception of Truth." Debrock argues that Peirce's theory of truth is highly problematic, and should be translated in terms of intersubjective certainty. He further argues that Peirce's philosophy of nature clears the way towards a new kind of naturalism which is non-dualistic, non- dogmatic, and non-relativistic.

7. Menno Hulswit (Nijmegen). "Peirce on Final Causation." After having explained Peirce's notion of final causation, a comparison is made between Peirce's and contemporary analyses of the problem of teleology. Hulswit argues that Peirce's neglected notion of final causation offers a much better understanding of natural phenomena.

8. Jaap van Brakel (Louvain). "Peirce's Pragmatic Realism." Van Brakel discusses to what extent Peirce's pragmatism can be reconciled with his scholastic realism, and whether Peirce's pragmatic realism should be interpreted as a pluralistic realism.

9. Herman Parret (Louvain/Brussels). "Peirce on the Discovery of Configurations by Abduction -- The Role of Indexicallity and Iconicity." Parret recommends the extension of the domain of Peirce's theory of abduction from philosophy of science to the question of meaning in the most general sense. Parret argues that Peirce's triadic method offers a sophisticated semiotic instrument to give a clear view of what happens when someone understands a meaning.


Thomas Albert Sebeok and Semiotics

John Deely. Sofia, 2005, 52 pp.

A small book dedicated to the late Thomas Sebeok (see obituary elsewhere in this newsletter). Following a brief introduction, the book contains two parts: a brief introduction into the development of semiotics, and a biography of Sebeok detailing his role in 20th century semiotics. 


Truth, Rationality, and Pragmatism: Themes from Peirce

Christopher Hookway. Oxford University Press, 2003, 328 pp.

In a series of essays Hookway elaborates on themes derived largely from Peirce. The focus is on how we are to investigate the world rationally. Hookway shows how Peirce’s ideas about this continue to play an important role in contemporary philosophy.


Video Mind, Earth Mind

Paul Ryan. New York: Peter Lang Publishers, 1993. 429 pp. $54.95 cloth; $39.95 paper.

The artist/author has combined an understanding of media learned from McLuhan, cybernetics learned from Bateson, and phenomenology/semiotics learned from Peirce to conceptualize a range of projects reported on in this book. The projects include a plan for an intentional video community, an art of triadic behavior, the organization of a bioregional magazine, a design for a television channel dedicated to the environment using Peirce's sixty-six-fold sign classification, a computer program for generating consensus using the sixty-six signs, an educational curriculum and a notation for interpreting ecological systems. In formulating these projects, the artist claims to have successfully "abducted" the logic of triadic relationships Peirce tried to develop but failed to produce. With reference to Murray Murphey's study of Peirce, the artist/author offers his logic for scrutiny by Peirce's scholars. The book presents 40 texts collected over 25 years in chronological order with contextual explications. Preface by Roberta Kevelson.