(A Peircean definition for example does focus on triadic or hierarchical organisation - the maths of thermodynamic complexity. And it is a physicalist metaphysics in that it extends causation to formal and final cause by embracing the materiality of symbols, or sign relations. So the notion of universal habits means something specific in natural philosophy.) — apokrisis
How are you defining habits exactly? Is that an actual theory with some mathematical structure or simply vague hand waving on your part?
(A Peircean definition for example does focus on triadic or hierarchical organisation - the maths of thermodynamic complexity. And it is a physicalist metaphysics in that it extends causation to formal and final cause by embracing the materiality of symbols, or sign relations. — apokrisis
What is the 'materiality of symbols'? A symbol is effective (I had thought) because of the meaning it conveys, and the meaning it conveys (or imparts) is not dependent on the matter from which the symbol is made. — Wayfarer
'Sign relations' generally only operate in the the context of life and mind, don't they? — Wayfarer
What is the 'materiality of symbols'? — Wayfarer
'Sign relations' generally only operate in the the context of life and mind, don't they? — Wayfarer
This is a bit misleading. As you are no doubt well aware, although you have adopted and adapted many of Peirce's ideas in developing your version of physicalism, he explicitly rejected metaphysical materialism and characterized his own position as objective idealism. — aletheist
And you claim as your Peirce the non-scientist. — apokrisis
Symbols have to be physical marks. — apokrisis
And the speculative metaphysical project that most interests me is pan-semiosis, where semiosis is generalised to the non-living or physico-chemical sphere. So even the Universe is explained in terms of a sign relation. — apokrisis
What about mental arithmetic? or mental operations of any kind? — Wayfarer
And even if symbols are physical, the physical material they're made out of, is different to their meaning. — Wayfarer
But I do see anything like 'signification' in the inorganic domain. — Wayfarer
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