Make us homepage
Add to Favorites
FAIL (the browser should render some flash content, not this).

Main page » Tag Peirce

Sort by: date | rating | most visited | comments | alphabetically


Semiotics: The Basics
7
 
 
Semiotics: The BasicsFollowing the successful Basics format, this is the  book for anyone coming to semiotics for the first time. Using jargon-free language and lively, up-to-date examples, Semiotics: The Basics  demystifies this highly interdisciplinary subject. Along the way, the reader will find out what a sign and a text are, what codes we take for granted, how semiotics can be used in textual analysis and who Saussure, Peirce, Barthes and Jakobson are and why they are important. Features include a glossary of key terms and realistic suggestions for further reading.
 
  More..
Tags: Basics, semiotics, Semiotics, Peirce, Barthes
The Philosophical Writings of Peirce
6
 
 

The Philosophical Writings of Peirce

Charles S. Peirce was a thinker of great originality and power. Although unpubliced in his lifetime, he was recognized as an equal by such men as William James and John Dewey and, since his death in1914, he has come to the forefront of American philosophy.


 
  More..
Tags: Peirce, in1914, death, Dewey, forefront
Semiotics: The Basics
11
 
 

Semiotics: The BasicsSemiotics: The BasicsFollowing the successful Basics format, this is the book for anyone coming to semiotics for the first time. Using jargon-free language and lively, up-to-date examples, Semiotics: The Basics demystifies this highly interdisciplinary subject. Along the way, the reader will find out what a sign and a text are, what codes we take for granted, how semiotics can be used in textual analysis and who Saussure, Peirce, Barthes and Jakobson are and why they are important. Features include a glossary of key terms and realistic suggestions for further reading.

 
  More..
Tags: Basics, semiotics, Semiotics, Peirce, Barthes, Jakobson
Handbook of the History of Logic: British Logic in the Nineteenth Century
10
 
 
Handbook of the History of Logic: British Logic in the Nineteenth Century

The nineteenth century is widely and rightly held to be the century in which the mathematical revolution in logic achieved its breakthrough. W.V. Quine once remarked that logic is an ancient discipline, but since 1879 it has been a great one. Of course, 1879 marks the publication of Gottlob Frege’s Begriffsschrift, and 1870 and 1883 the appearance of Charles Peirce’s “Description of a Notation for the Logic of Relatives” and “Note B: The Logic of Relatives”. Frege and Peirce are the independent co-founders of modern quantification theory. Frege (1848–1925) was a German and Peirce (1839–1914) an American (their contributions are chronicled in volume three of this Handbook, The Rise of Mathematical Logic: Leibniz to Frege). Although Frege’s work was little recognized and little appreciated by British logicians of the period — Russell was a late exception — important steps toward the mathematicization of logic were taken in Britain. Augustus De Morgan (1806–1871) made significant contributions to the logic of relatives, of which Peirce took respectful heed, and also to probability theory, an interest in which he did much to revive...
 
  More..
Tags: Logic, logic, Peirce, Frege, which