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Peirce's Esthetics of Freedom: Possibility, Complexity, and Emergent Value
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Peirce's Esthetics of Freedom: Possibility, Complexity, and Emergent Value Hardcover - 1993

by Roberta Kevelson


From the publisher

According to Peirce, the value of the idea of freedom arises only to oppose the idea of necessity. Freedom emerges as a working value, a primary esthetic principle, in response to that which is perceived as fixed, determined, necessary, absolute. The idea of Freedom materializes, assumes a million appearances, wears its ten million masks...
...Freedom as the Freedom-to-Focus is a Peircean esthetic process that becomes realized through the three stages of Fragment/Fractal, Fact, Form. This triadic process corresponds to the semiotic functions of Icon, Index, Symbol. Freedom's course is nonlineal, self-corrective, dynamic, open: Freedom is the occasion for Chaos, and Chaos is the locus of Form.

Details

  • Title Peirce's Esthetics of Freedom: Possibility, Complexity, and Emergent Value
  • Author Roberta Kevelson
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Pages 360
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der W
  • Date 1993-03
  • ISBN 9780820418988 / 0820418986
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 92030633
  • Dewey Decimal Code 111.85

About the author

The Author: Roberta Kevelson received her Ph.D. from Brown University and introduced Legal Semiotics during her postdoctoral tenure at Yale University (1978-1979). She directs the Center for Semiotic Research in Law, Government and Economics at Penn State which she established in 1984. Dr. Kevelson is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy. Among her recent books are "The Law as a System of Signs, Peirce, Praxis, Paradox" and "Charles S. Peirce's Method of Methods." Kevelson is completing work on a new book, "Peirce, Science and Signs."