Dalla parte di Cerbero. Peirce e la comunicazione
Abstract
The aim of this paper is both to focus on the role of the notion of ‘communication’ in Ch. S. Peirce’s thought, and to search for hints and contributions that Peirce’s theory can offer to the study of ordinary, interpersonal language-mediated communication. A sketchy outlook to Peirce’s texts and general statements can show that he seems not to be particularly interested in empirical communication and natural languages. He considers the application of his broad conception to everyday communication nothing more than a ‘sop to Cerberus’, and considers natural languages as a rather defective tool for thinking, which must be emendated, and possibly substituted (with a must better efficacy) by graphical systems of logic. Nonetheless, an accurate analysis of one of the few passages in which Peirce is concerned with communication shows how he considers the dialogic and communicative nature of thinking as a necessity for inquiry, allowing for the attainment of a form of social truth which gains everyday a better degree of detail and generality.References
BÜHLER, Karl (1934), Sprachtheorie, Gustav Fischer, Jena (Teoria del linguaggio. La funzione rappresentativa del linguaggio, trad. di Derossi Cattaruzza Serena, Armando Editore, Roma, 1983).
BERGMAN, Mats (2009), Peirce’s Philosophy of Communication, Continuum, Martin (Te).
DEELY, John (1994), «The Grand Vision», Transactions of the Charles Peirce’s Society, XXX/2, pp. 371-400.
FABBRICHESI, Rossella (1993), Introduzione a Peirce, Laterza, Roma/Bari.
FADDA, Emanuele (2013), Peirce, Carocci, Roma.
FADDA, Emanuele (in st.), Peirce e le lingue, in: M. A. Bonfantini, R. Fabbrichesi, S. Zingale (a cura di), Su Peirce: interpretazioni, ricerche, prospettive, Bompiani, Milano.
JAKOBSON, Roman (1960), Linguistics and poetics, in ID., Essais de linguistique générale, Paris, Minuit, 1966 (Saggi di linguistica generale, trad. di Grassi Letizia e Heilmann Luigi, Feltrinelli, Milano, 1966, pp. 185 sgg.).
JAKOBSON, Roman (1977), «A Few Remarks on Peirce, Pathfinder on the Science of Language», MLN 92, pp. 1026-1032.
PEIRCE, Charles S. (1931-58 = CP), Collected Papers of Charles S. Peirce, voll. IVI, a cura di C. Hartshorn, P. Weiss; voll. VII-VIII, a cura di A. W. Burks, Cambridge (Ma), Harvard University Press [I: Principles of Philosophy, 1931; II: Elements of Logic, 1932; III: Exact Logic (Published Papers), 1933; IV: The Simplest Mathematics, 1933; V: Pragmatism and Pragmaticism, 1934; VI: Scientific Metaphysics, 1935; VII: Science and Philosophy, 1958; VIII: Reviews, Correspondence, and Bibliography, 1958].
PEIRCE, Charles S. (1998), The Essential Peirce, vol. II (a cura del Peirce Edition Project), Bloomington, Indiana University Press.
PRONI, Giampaolo (1990), Introduzione a Peirce, Bompiani, Milano.
ROBIN, R. S. (1967 = Ms) Annotated Catalogue of the Papers of Charles S. Peirce, University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst.
SAUSSURE, Ferdinand de (19222), Cours de linguistique générale (éd. par Ch.Bally et A. Sechehaye, avec la collaboration d’A. Riedlinger), Lausanne/Paris, Payot [tr. it. Corso di linguistica generale, a cura di T. De Mauro, Roma/Bari, Laterza, 1967 e sgg.].
Salvo indicazione contraria, tutti numeri di pagina di opere di cui si segnala la traduzione italiana si riferiscono a quest’ultima. Tutte le traduzioni italiane da scritti di Peirce sono di chi scrive.
VIMERCATI, Fulvia (2005), La scrittura del pensiero. Semiotica e fenomenologia nei grafi esistenziali di C. S. Peirce, AlboVersorio, Milano.
Works published in RIFL are released under Creative Commons Licence:Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.