09 March 2006

Next

I have finished Breaking the Spell and am now working on Charles Sanders Peirce. The first essay is still fuzzy after two readings, but the writing is livelier than I expected. This excerpt is from Some Consequences of Four Incapacities (1868):

"… It is sufficient to say there is no element whatever of man’s consciousness which has not something corresponding to it in the word; and the reason is obvious. It is that the word or sign which man uses is the man himself. For, as the fact that every thought is a sign, taken in conjunction with the fact that life is a train of thought, proves that man is a sign; so, that every thought is an external sign, proves that man is an external sign. That is to say, the man and the external sign are identical, in the same sense in which the words homo and man are identical. Thus my language is the sum total of myself; for the man is the thought.
It is hard for man to understand this, because he persists in identifying himself with his will, his power over the animal organism, with brute force. Now the organism is only an instrument of thought. But the identity of a man consists in the consistency of what he does and thinks, and consistency is the intellectual character of a thing; that is, is its expressing something. "

All italics from the original. Speak carefully.

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