"Francesco Bellucci offers an erudite exposition of the fundaments of Charles S. Peirce's philosophical theory of signs. His study is both highly ambitious and rigorously delimited, seeking to reconstruct the logical character and systematic development of Peirce's semiotic grammar by means of close readings of the original texts . . . Owing to his firm focus, Bellucci succeeds in providing the most detailed account of Peirce's speculative grammar to date." Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
"Peirces Speculative Grammar is a masterful chronological reconstruction of Peirces work on logic as semiotics, or the study of signs and the purposes to which we put them . . . Patently, gaining a comprehensive overview of Peirces writings on logic is no small feat, and Bellucci is to be celebrated for his efforts." Richard Kenneth Atkins in Journal of the History of Philosophy
"Francesco Belluccis new book is great news to those many who take interest in Peirces semiotics, be they intellectual historians, Peirce scholars, logicians, philosophers, semioticians, pragmatists. It constitutes a great leap forward in understanding the intricacies, depths, problems, and possibilities of that doctrine." Frederik Stjernfelt in Sign Systems Studies
"Belluccis reconstruction of the development of Peirces conception of the foundations of his semiotic logic succeeds in accomplishing the aim it sets itself with paradigmatic erudition, impressive expository perspicuity and great care for the most minute details It, therefore, represents one of the most important contributions to this central branch of scholarship in Peirce." Alessandro R. R. Topa in Cognitio