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Charles Sanders Peirce

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Charles Sanders Peirce

  1. 1. Charles Sanders Peirce
  2. 2. About Charles Sanders Peirce. Charles Sanders Peirce was an American mathematician, philosopher and logician. He is the founder of pragmatism (the attribute of accepting the facts of life and favouring practicality and literal truth) and the father of modern semiotics (it is a theory of the functions of signs and symbols). At age 12, Charles read his older brother's copy of Richard Whately's Elements of Logic, then the leading English-language text on the subject. This is where his fascination with logic and reasoning began.
  3. 3. Main Area of Study. Though Peirce received a graduate degree in chemistry from Harvard University, he never succeeded in keeping an academic position. Eventually, he made a career as a scientist for the United States Coast Survey (1859-1891), working especially in geodesy (the science of measuring the size and shape of the earth and its gravitational field) and in pendulum determinations. From 1879 until 1884, he was also a part-time lecturer in Logic at Johns Hopkins University. In 1887, Peirce moved with his second wife to Milford, Pennsylvania, where, after 26 years of prolific writing, he died of cancer.
  4. 4. Peirce’s three stages of meaning. Logic is described by Peirce as the science of the laws of signs, and it may be divided into three areas of study: (1)"critical logic" (the study of the relations of signs to their objects) (a first) (2)"speculative grammar" (the study of the meaning of signs) (a second) (3)"speculative rhetoric" or "methodeutic" (the study of the relation of signs to their interpretants) (a third) Logic is the theory of the conditions that determine the truth of signs.
  5. 5. What impact does it have on us as Media students? “A sign depends on its object in such a way as to represent its object — the object enables and, in a sense, determines the sign.” This relates to us as Media students because when we see something (a sign), automatically we get a denotation and then from that, we can make connotations which are endless. This is what determines the signs meaning. People can interpret a sign in many different ways, eg when you hear/see the word love, someone may think of their family or someone else could think of God as part of their religion.
  6. 6. Bibliography of Charles Sanders Peirce. PEIRCE, Ch.S., Collected Papers, Vol. 1-6, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1931-1935. PEIRCE, Ch.S., Collected Papers, Vol. 7-8, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1958. PEIRCE, Ch.S., Collected Papers, electronic version, InteLex (http://www.nlx.com) PEIRCE, Ch. S., Writings of Ch.S. Peirce: A chronological Edition, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1982-1999 (6 volumes to date). PEIRCE, Ch.S., Reasoning and the Logic of Things. The Cambridge Conferences Lectures of 1898, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1992. PEIRCE, Ch.S., The essential Peirce: selected philosophical Writings, Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1992. PEIRCE, Ch.S., The essential Peirce: selected philosophical Writings. Vol. 2, Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1998.

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