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The founder of both American pragmatism and semiotics, Charles Sanders Peirce (1839–1914) is widely regarded as an enormously important and pioneering theorist. In this book, scholars from around the world examine the nature and significance of Peirce’s work on perception, iconicity, and diagrammatic thinking. Abjuring any strict dichotomy between presentational and representational mental activity, Peirce’s theories transform the Aristotelian, Humean, and Kantian paradigms that continue to hold sway today and, in so doing, forge a new path for understanding the centrality of visual thinking in science, education, art, and communication. The essays in this collection cover a wide range of issues related to Peirce’s theories, including the perception of generality; the legacy of ideas being copies of impressions; imagination and its contribution to knowledge; logical graphs, diagrams, and the question of whether their iconicity distinguishes them from other sorts of symbolic notation; how images and diagrams contribute to scientific discovery and make it possible to perceive formal relations; and the importance and danger of using diagrams to convey scientific ideas. This book is a key resource for scholars interested in Perice’s philosophy and its relation to contemporary issues in mathematics, philosophy of mind, philosophy of perception, semiotics, logic, visual thinking, and cognitive science.

Recenzijos

"This book contains original, insightful, and inspiring papers on important aspects of Peirces theory of perception, the role of icons and indices in reasoning, and diagrammatic reasoning more generally. This is most certainly a must-read book for anyone interested in the most recent work on the later Peirce, theories of perception, the connection between perception and semiotics, phenomenology, visual thinking, and the constitutive role of diagrams in logic and reasoning." Cornelis de Waal, Indiana UniversityPurdue University Indianapolis, USA

Preface vii
List of Abbreviations
xi
1 What Do We Perceive? How Peirce "Expands Our Perception"
1(13)
Aaron Bruce Wilson
2 Perception as Inference
14(11)
Evelyn Vargas
3 Inferential Modeling of Percept Formation: Peirce's Fourth Cotary Proposition
25(15)
Richard Kenneth Atkins
4 Idealism Operationalized: How Peirce's Pragmatism Can Help Explicate and Motivate the Possibly Surprising Idea of Reality as Representational
40(14)
Catherine Legg
5 The Iconic Ground of Gestures: Peirce, Wittgenstein, and Foucault
54(7)
Rossella Fabbrichesi
6 Foundations for Semeiotic Aesthetics: Mimesis and Iconicity
61(13)
Kelly A. Parker
7 Semiotics, Schemata, Diagrams, and Graphs: A New Form of Diagrammatic Kantism by Peirce
74(12)
Claudio Paolucci
8 The Chemistry of Relations: Peirce, Perspicuous Representations, and Experiments with Diagrams
86(21)
Chiara Ambrosio
Chris Campbell
9 Graphs as Images vs. Graphs as Diagrams: A Problem at the Intersection of Semiotics and Didactics
107(12)
Michael May
10 C. S. Peirce and the Teaching of Drawing
119(13)
Seymour Simmons
11 What Is Behind the Logic of Scientific Discovery? Aristotle and Charles S. Peirce on Imagination
132(15)
Christos A. Pechlivanidis
12 The Iconic Peirce: Geometry, Spatial Intuition, and Visual Imagination
147(27)
Kathleen A. Hull
13 Two Dogmas of Diagrammatic Reasoning: A View from Existential Graphs
174(23)
Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen
Francesco Bellucci
References 197(15)
List of Contributors 212(5)
Index 217
Kathleen A. Hull resides in Boston and taught for over a decade at New York University and Rutgers University, New Brunswick. Her research and publications have focused on Charles Sanders Peirce and pedagogy. She has won awards for teaching excellence, creative thought, and inspiring students with a love of learning.



Richard Kenneth Atkins is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Boston College. He is the author of Peirce and the Conduct of Life: Sentiment and Instinct in Ethics and Religion (2016) and Puzzled?! An Introduction to Philosophizing (2015) as well as numerous essays.