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21. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 3
STYLE GUIDE AND INFORMATION FOR AUTHORS
22. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 3
Jean Alter L’école du spectateur. Lire le theâtre 2
23. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 3
Thomas A. Sebeok Dialogue About Signs with a Nobel Laureate
24. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 3
Daniel Patte Greimas’s Model for the Generative Trajectory of Meaning in Discourses
25. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 3
Henryk Baran BOOKS RECEIVED
26. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS
27. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
Catherine Z. Elgin Israel Scheffler, Beyond the Letter: A Philosophical Inquiry into Ambiguity, Vagueness and Metaphor in Language
28. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
Jerzy Pelc Semiotic and Nonsemiotic Concepts of Meaning
29. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
Joan L. Erdman The Empty Beat: Khālī as a Sign of Time
30. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
Erratum
31. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
Tomas Venclova Soviet Semiotics on Dostoevskij
32. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
W. Enninger M. Krampen, K. Oehler, R. Posner, T. von Uexküll, eds. Die Welt als Zeichen: Klilssiker der modernen Semiotik
33. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
Christian Kloesel NEWS AND EVENTS
34. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
Henryk Baran BOOKS RECEIVED
35. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
Mark Kobernick Keir Elam, The Semiotics of Theatre and Drama
36. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
Boris Gasparov Wendy Steiner, ed. The Sign in Music and Literature
37. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
Carrol F. Coates D. Laferrière, Sign and Subject: Semiotic and Psychoanalytic Investigations Into Poetry
38. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
STYLE GUIDE AND INFORMATION FOR AUTHORS
39. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
Roberta Kevelson Comparative Legal Cultures and Semiotics: An Introduction
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Peirce defines the legal expression proximale cause and effect as an “obscure term like most of the terms of Aristotelianism.” He says that students of law and logic should be shocked by thc practicc of justifying the payment of damages in law by reference to a “term in Aristotelian logic or metaphysics.” That such practice does occur underscores and “illustrates the value of PRAGMATISM.” Peirce reminds usthat in English law the term “witness” does not mean a person who testifies to his own experience, “but to facts which he knows by the immediate testimony of others” (from Baldwin’sDictionary, vol. 2,281-282; in CP 6.391).Practical law, Peirce suggests, results from persons whose knowledge of the facts of experience are formed in dialogue with others whose experience confirms their own. The dialogue is immediate; the knowledge is mediated through signs. From the viewpoint of Peirce’s pragmatism which he sees as an integral part of his semiotic Methodology or Speculative Rhetoric (MSS 774, 775) this paper will assurne that there are distinct types of legal cultures and that each may be regarded as a method of inquiry for the purpose of realizing social values. The relation between Laws and Societies-systems of legalities and legitimacies-will be regarded as culture-specific modes of dialectic. I propose here that Peirce’s Methodology-his method of methods-may account for the way that “patterns of conceptual change retlect the presuppositional structures of conceptual systems” (Toulmin 1972 :70-71). Within the framework of a semiotics of law I will be looking at various ways the idea of the Legal System has been interpreted.
40. The American Journal of Semiotics: Volume > 1 > Issue: 4
LETTERS