Re: [Fis] Answer to Soren.Re: [Fis] Answer to Soren.
From: Arne Kjellman <kjellman@dsv.su.se>
Date: Fri 07 Jul 2006 - 14:14:54 CEST
Some comments (marked AAAAA) - since I think we are agreed in principle:
Dear Arne
If you insist on calling Peirce a monist then I would like you to give you interpretation of his
triadic philosophy, where he defines his three basic categories Firstness, secondness and Thirdness,
which I think defies you classification.
His categories then counts for both inside and outside as they are connected in a common field.
But he does write that is a monist but in a very special way combined with synechism (everything is
connected), Thycism (randomness is real but with a tendency to take habits) and Agapism (love is
real and the core of evolution). Further Peirce is also a panentheist: the world is the divine, but
it is also in the divine, meaning that he operates with a creative emptiness behind and before
time-space geometry. I think you would call that dualistic!? He is further a conceptual realist.
This means that he considers signs and categories as being as real as stones and natural laws.
Again he thinks them to be connected on a deep level, which does not make him a constructivist
in the usual understanding.
Further he believe that the world is in principle knowable if we had time and dedication enough doing
idealistic science following what Merton later called the CUDOS norms.
I claim that he is a mystic who's road to enlightenment is science. This is a unique position as far
as I know. He dares to introduce life, feeling, meaning and love in a realistic world view combined
with a version of phenomenology believing in a deep connection between man and the world. Thus
Peirce sees true science and religion working side by side in understanding the world.
He des then not mean the present social systems we call religion, to a certain degree neither the
institution we call science, but some ideal version of them both that are not fundamentalistic and
conservative holding on to one general understand of science and religion or what their knowledge
out to be like. What connects all this is of course his semiotics, which is also a cognitive and
communicative theory og how meaning is formed and function. That is again connected to a threefold
theory of causation ( final, formal and efficient causation) just as his theory of evolution is
threefold of which the Agapastic is the most important; and they are again connected in a subtle
way.
This is how far I have come. I am not sure I have understood him to the bottom. I know that John has
another interpretation of him. But this is at least close to the interpretation Joseph Brent reached
in the second version of his Peirce biography and Michael Raposa in his book "Peirce's
Philosophy of Religion". Some years ago we had a conference on Peirce's religious writing in
Denver and we are still waiting for the book to come out.
Best wishes
Arne
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