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    If the final sign fails to be a sign, it also fails to fu... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Allowing a terminating sign causes a regressive collapse of the entire semiotic chain.

    If the final sign fails to be a sign, it also fails to function as the interpretant of the preceding sign.

    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge
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    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge

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    Allowing a terminating sign causes a regressive collapse of the entire semiotic ...If the preceding sign fails to have a proper interpretant, that preceding sign a...Therefore, a single failed terminal sign invalidates every prior sign in the cha...

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    If the preceding sign fails to have a proper interpretant, that preced...91%Therefore, a final sign lacks the necessary condition for being a sign...88%Therefore, neither a first nor a final sign can be countenanced.84%A final sign that terminates the semiotic process has no interpretant.83%

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    SEP: peirce-semiotics
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    To see this, imagine a chain of signs with either a first or a last sign. The final sign that terminates the semiotic process will have no interpretant; if it did, that interpretant would function as a further sign and generate a further interpretant, and the final sign would, in fact, not terminate the process. However, since any sign must determine an interpretant to count as a sign, the final sign would not be a sign unless it had an interpretant. Similarly, a first sign could not be the inte

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