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Charles Sanders Peirce

Charles Sanders Peirce (/pɜːrs/[8][9] PURSS; September 10, 1839 – April 19, 1914) was an American philosopher, logician, mathematician and scientist who is sometimes known as "the father of pragmatism".[10][11]

Charles Sanders Peirce
Born(1839-09-10)September 10, 1839
Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedApril 19, 1914(1914-04-19) (aged 74)
Milford, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Alma materHarvard University
RelativesBenjamin Peirce (father)
EraLate modern philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolPragmatism
Pragmaticism
InstitutionsJohns Hopkins University
Notable students
List
Main interests
Signature

Educated as a chemist and employed as a scientist for thirty years, Peirce made major contributions to logic, a subject that, for him, encompassed much of what is now called epistemology and the philosophy of science. He saw logic as the formal branch of semiotics, of which he is a founder, which foreshadowed the debate among logical positivists and proponents of philosophy of language that dominated 20th-century Western philosophy. Additionally, he defined the concept of abductive reasoning, as well as rigorously formulated mathematical induction and deductive reasoning. As early as 1886, he saw that logical operations could be carried out by electrical switching circuits. The same idea was used decades later to produce digital computers.[12]

In 1934, the philosopher Paul Weiss called Peirce "the most original and versatile of America's philosophers and America's greatest logician".[13]

Life

 
Peirce's birthplace. Now part of Lesley University's Graduate School of Arts and Social Sciences.

Peirce was born at 3 Phillips Place in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He was the son of Sarah Hunt Mills and Benjamin Peirce, himself a professor of astronomy and mathematics at Harvard University. At age 12, Charles read his older brother's copy of Richard Whately's Elements of Logic, then the leading English-language text on the subject. So began his lifelong fascination with logic and reasoning.[14] He went on to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree and a Master of Arts degree (1862) from Harvard. In 1863 the Lawrence Scientific School awarded him a Bachelor of Science degree, Harvard's first summa cum laude chemistry degree.[15] His academic record was otherwise undistinguished.[16] At Harvard, he began lifelong friendships with Francis Ellingwood Abbot, Chauncey Wright, and William James.[17] One of his Harvard instructors, Charles William Eliot, formed an unfavorable opinion of Peirce. This proved fateful, because Eliot, while President of Harvard (1869–1909—a period encompassing nearly all of Peirce's working life), repeatedly vetoed Peirce's employment at the university.[18]

Peirce suffered from his late teens onward from a nervous condition then known as "facial neuralgia", which would today be diagnosed as trigeminal neuralgia. His biographer, Joseph Brent, says that when in the throes of its pain "he was, at first, almost stupefied, and then aloof, cold, depressed, extremely suspicious, impatient of the slightest crossing, and subject to violent outbursts of temper".[19] Its consequences may have led to the social isolation of his later life.

Early employment

Between 1859 and 1891, Peirce was intermittently employed in various scientific capacities by the United States Coast Survey and its successor, the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey,[20] where he enjoyed his highly influential father's protection until the latter's death in 1880.[21] That employment exempted Peirce from having to take part in the American Civil War; it would have been very awkward for him to do so, as the Boston Brahmin Peirces sympathized with the Confederacy.[22] At the Survey, he worked mainly in geodesy and gravimetry, refining the use of pendulums to determine small local variations in the Earth's gravity.[20] He was elected a resident fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in January 1867.[23] The Survey sent him to Europe five times,[24] first in 1871 as part of a group sent to observe a solar eclipse. There, he sought out Augustus De Morgan, William Stanley Jevons, and William Kingdon Clifford,[25] British mathematicians and logicians whose turn of mind resembled his own. From 1869 to 1872, he was employed as an assistant in Harvard's astronomical observatory, doing important work on determining the brightness of stars and the shape of the Milky Way.[26] On April 20, 1877, he was elected a member of the National Academy of Sciences.[27] Also in 1877, he proposed measuring the meter as so many wavelengths of light of a certain frequency,[28] the kind of definition employed from 1960 to 1983.

During the 1880s, Peirce's indifference to bureaucratic detail waxed while his Survey work's quality and timeliness waned. Peirce took years to write reports that he should have completed in months.[according to whom?] Meanwhile, he wrote entries, ultimately thousands, during 1883–1909 on philosophy, logic, science, and other subjects for the encyclopedic Century Dictionary.[29] In 1885, an investigation by the Allison Commission exonerated Peirce, but led to the dismissal of Superintendent Julius Hilgard and several other Coast Survey employees for misuse of public funds.[30] In 1891, Peirce resigned from the Coast Survey at Superintendent Thomas Corwin Mendenhall's request.[31]

Johns Hopkins University

In 1879, Peirce was appointed lecturer in logic at Johns Hopkins University, which had strong departments in areas that interested him, such as philosophy (Royce and Dewey completed their Ph.D.s at Hopkins), psychology (taught by G. Stanley Hall and studied by Joseph Jastrow, who coauthored a landmark empirical study with Peirce), and mathematics (taught by J. J. Sylvester, who came to admire Peirce's work on mathematics and logic). His Studies in Logic by Members of the Johns Hopkins University (1883) contained works by himself and Allan Marquand, Christine Ladd, Benjamin Ives Gilman, and Oscar Howard Mitchell,[32] several of whom were his graduate students.[7] Peirce's nontenured position at Hopkins was the only academic appointment he ever held.

Brent documents something Peirce never suspected, namely that his efforts to obtain academic employment, grants, and scientific respectability were repeatedly frustrated by the covert opposition of a major Canadian-American scientist of the day, Simon Newcomb.[33] Peirce's efforts may also have been hampered by what Brent characterizes as "his difficult personality".[34] In contrast, Keith Devlin believes that Peirce's work was too far ahead of his time to be appreciated by the academic establishment of the day and that this played a large role in his inability to obtain a tenured position.[35]

Peirce's personal life undoubtedly worked against his professional success. After his first wife, Harriet Melusina Fay ("Zina"), left him in 1875,[36] Peirce, while still legally married, became involved with Juliette, whose last name, given variously as Froissy and Pourtalai,[37] and nationality (she spoke French)[38] remains uncertain.[39] When his divorce from Zina became final in 1883, he married Juliette.[40] That year, Newcomb pointed out to a Johns Hopkins trustee that Peirce, while a Hopkins employee, had lived and traveled with a woman to whom he was not married; the ensuing scandal led to his dismissal in January 1884.[41] Over the years Peirce sought academic employment at various universities without success.[42] He had no children by either marriage.[43]

Poverty

 
Arisbe in 2011
 
Cambridge, where Peirce was born and raised, New York City, where he often visited and sometimes lived, and Milford, where he spent the later years of his life with his second wife Juliette
 
Juliette and Charles by a well at their home Arisbe in 1907
 
Charles and Juliette Peirce's grave

In 1887, Peirce spent part of his inheritance from his parents to buy 2,000 acres (8 km2) of rural land near Milford, Pennsylvania, which never yielded an economic return.[44] There he had an 1854 farmhouse remodeled to his design.[45] The Peirces named the property "Arisbe". There they lived with few interruptions for the rest of their lives,[46] Charles writing prolifically, much of it unpublished to this day (see Works). Living beyond their means soon led to grave financial and legal difficulties.[47] He spent much of his last two decades unable to afford heat in winter and subsisting on old bread donated by the local baker. Unable to afford new stationery, he wrote on the verso side of old manuscripts. An outstanding warrant for assault and unpaid debts led to his being a fugitive in New York City for a while.[48] Several people, including his brother James Mills Peirce[49] and his neighbors, relatives of Gifford Pinchot, settled his debts and paid his property taxes and mortgage.[50]

Peirce did some scientific and engineering consulting and wrote much for meager pay, mainly encyclopedic dictionary entries, and reviews for The Nation (with whose editor, Wendell Phillips Garrison, he became friendly). He did translations for the Smithsonian Institution, at its director Samuel Langley's instigation. Peirce also did substantial mathematical calculations for Langley's research on powered flight. Hoping to make money, Peirce tried inventing.[51] He began but did not complete several books.[52] In 1888, President Grover Cleveland appointed him to the Assay Commission.[53]

From 1890 on, he had a friend and admirer in Judge Francis C. Russell of Chicago,[54] who introduced Peirce to editor Paul Carus and owner Edward C. Hegeler of the pioneering American philosophy journal The Monist, which eventually published at least 14 articles by Peirce.[55] He wrote many texts in James Mark Baldwin's Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology (1901–1905); half of those credited to him appear to have been written actually by Christine Ladd-Franklin under his supervision.[56] He applied in 1902 to the newly formed Carnegie Institution for a grant to write a systematic book describing his life's work. The application was doomed; his nemesis, Newcomb, served on the Carnegie Institution executive committee, and its president had been president of Johns Hopkins at the time of Peirce's dismissal.[57]

The one who did the most to help Peirce in these desperate times was his old friend William James, dedicating his Will to Believe (1897) to Peirce, and arranging for Peirce to be paid to give two series of lectures at or near Harvard (1898 and 1903).[58] Most important, each year from 1907 until James's death in 1910, James wrote to his friends in the Boston intelligentsia to request financial aid for Peirce; the fund continued even after James died. Peirce reciprocated by designating James's eldest son as his heir should Juliette predecease him.[59] It has been believed that this was also why Peirce used "Santiago" ("St. James" in English) as a middle name, but he appeared in print as early as 1890 as Charles Santiago Peirce. (See Charles Santiago Sanders Peirce for discussion and references).

Peirce died destitute in Milford, Pennsylvania, twenty years before his widow. Juliette Peirce kept the urn with Peirce's ashes at Arisbe. In 1934, Pennsylvania Governor Gifford Pinchot arranged for Juliette's burial in Milford Cemetery. The urn with Peirce's ashes was interred with Juliette.[60]

Slavery, the American Civil War, and racism

Peirce grew up in a home where white supremacy was taken for granted, and Southern slavery was considered natural.[61]

Until the outbreak of the Civil War, his father described himself as a secessionist, but after the outbreak of the war, this stopped and he became a Union partisan, providing donations to the Sanitary Commission, the leading Northern war charity. No members of the Peirce family volunteered or enlisted. Peirce shared his father's views and liked to use the following syllogism to illustrate the unreliability of traditional forms of logic, if one doesn't keep the meaning of the words, phrases, and sentences consistent throughout an argument:[62]

All Men are equal in their political rights.
Negroes are Men.
Therefore, negroes are equal in political rights to whites.

Reception

Bertrand Russell (1959) wrote "Beyond doubt [...] he was one of the most original minds of the later nineteenth century and certainly the greatest American thinker ever".[63] Russell and Whitehead's Principia Mathematica, published from 1910 to 1913, does not mention Peirce (Peirce's work was not widely known until later).[64] A. N. Whitehead, while reading some of Peirce's unpublished manuscripts soon after arriving at Harvard in 1924, was struck by how Peirce had anticipated his own "process" thinking. (On Peirce and process metaphysics, see Lowe 1964.[26]) Karl Popper viewed Peirce as "one of the greatest philosophers of all times".[65] Yet Peirce's achievements were not immediately recognized. His imposing contemporaries William James and Josiah Royce[66] admired him and Cassius Jackson Keyser, at Columbia and C. K. Ogden, wrote about Peirce with respect but to no immediate effect.

The first scholar to give Peirce his considered professional attention was Royce's student Morris Raphael Cohen, the editor of an anthology of Peirce's writings entitled Chance, Love, and Logic (1923), and the author of the first bibliography of Peirce's scattered writings.[67] John Dewey studied under Peirce at Johns Hopkins.[7] From 1916 onward, Dewey's writings repeatedly mention Peirce with deference. His 1938 Logic: The Theory of Inquiry is much influenced by Peirce.[68] The publication of the first six volumes of Collected Papers (1931–1935), the most important event to date in Peirce studies and one that Cohen made possible by raising the needed funds,[69] did not prompt an outpouring of secondary studies. The editors of those volumes, Charles Hartshorne and Paul Weiss, did not become Peirce specialists. Early landmarks of the secondary literature include the monographs by Buchler (1939), Feibleman (1946), and Goudge (1950), the 1941 PhD thesis by Arthur W. Burks (who went on to edit volumes 7 and 8), and the studies edited by Wiener and Young (1952). The Charles S. Peirce Society was founded in 1946. Its Transactions, an academic quarterly specializing in Peirce's pragmatism and American philosophy has appeared since 1965.[70] (See Phillips 2014, 62 for discussion of Peirce and Dewey relative to transactionalism.)

By 1943 such was Peirce's reputation, in the US at least, that Webster's Biographical Dictionary said that Peirce was "now regarded as the most original thinker and greatest logician of his time".[71]

In 1949, while doing unrelated archival work, the historian of mathematics Carolyn Eisele (1902–2000) chanced on an autograph letter by Peirce. So began her forty years of research on Peirce, “the mathematician and scientist,” culminating in Eisele (1976, 1979, 1985). Beginning around 1960, the philosopher and historian of ideas Max Fisch (1900–1995) emerged as an authority on Peirce (Fisch, 1986).[72] He includes many of his relevant articles in a survey (Fisch 1986: 422–48) of the impact of Peirce's thought through 1983.

Peirce has gained an international following, marked by university research centers devoted to Peirce studies and pragmatism in Brazil (CeneP/CIEP), Finland (HPRC and Commens), Germany (Wirth's group, Hoffman's and Otte's group, and Deuser's and Härle's group[73]), France (L'I.R.S.C.E.), Spain (GEP), and Italy (CSP). His writings have been translated into several languages, including German, French, Finnish, Spanish, and Swedish. Since 1950, there have been French, Italian, Spanish, British, and Brazilian Peirce scholars of note. For many years, the North American philosophy department most devoted to Peirce was the University of Toronto, thanks in part to the leadership of Thomas Goudge and David Savan. In recent years, U.S. Peirce scholars have clustered at Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis, home of the Peirce Edition Project (PEP) –, and Pennsylvania State University.

Currently, considerable interest is being taken in Peirce's ideas by researchers wholly outside the arena of academic philosophy. The interest comes from industry, business, technology, intelligence organizations, and the military; and it has resulted in the existence of a substantial number of agencies, institutes, businesses, and laboratories in which ongoing research into and development of Peircean concepts are being vigorously undertaken.

— Robert Burch, 2001, updated 2010[20]

In recent years, Peirce's trichotomy of signs is exploited by a growing number of practitioners for marketing and design tasks.

John Deely writes that Peirce was the last of the "moderns" and "first of the postmoderns". He lauds Peirce's doctrine of signs as a contribution to the dawn of the Postmodern epoch. Dewey additionally comments that "Peirce stands...in a position analogous to the position occupied by Augustine as last of the Western Fathers and first of the medievals".[74]

Works

Peirce's reputation rests largely on academic papers published in American scientific and scholarly journals such as Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Journal of Speculative Philosophy, The Monist, Popular Science Monthly, the American Journal of Mathematics, Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences, The Nation, and others. See Articles by Peirce, published in his lifetime for an extensive list with links to them online. The only full-length book (neither extract nor pamphlet) that Peirce authored and saw published in his lifetime[75] was Photometric Researches (1878), a 181-page monograph on the applications of spectrographic methods to astronomy. While at Johns Hopkins, he edited Studies in Logic (1883), containing chapters by himself and his graduate students. Besides lectures during his years (1879–1884) as lecturer in Logic at Johns Hopkins, he gave at least nine series of lectures, many now published; see Lectures by Peirce.

After Peirce's death, Harvard University obtained from Peirce's widow the papers found in his study, but did not microfilm them until 1964. Only after Richard Robin (1967)[76] catalogued this Nachlass did it become clear that Peirce had left approximately 1,650 unpublished manuscripts, totaling over 100,000 pages,[77] mostly still unpublished except on microfilm. On the vicissitudes of Peirce's papers, see Houser (1989).[78] Reportedly the papers remain in unsatisfactory condition.[79]

The first published anthology of Peirce's articles was the one-volume Chance, Love and Logic: Philosophical Essays, edited by Morris Raphael Cohen, 1923, still in print. Other one-volume anthologies were published in 1940, 1957, 1958, 1972, 1994, and 2009, most still in print. The main posthumous editions[80] of Peirce's works in their long trek to light, often multi-volume, and some still in print, have included:

1931–1958: Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce (CP), 8 volumes, includes many published works, along with a selection of previously unpublished work and a smattering of his correspondence. This long-time standard edition drawn from Peirce's work from the 1860s to 1913 remains the most comprehensive survey of his prolific output from 1893 to 1913. It is organized thematically, but texts (including lecture series) are often split up across volumes, while texts from various stages in Peirce's development are often combined, requiring frequent visits to editors' notes.[81] Edited (1–6) by Charles Hartshorne and Paul Weiss and (7–8) by Arthur Burks, in print and online.

1975–1987: Charles Sanders Peirce: Contributions to The Nation, 4 volumes, includes Peirce's more than 300 reviews and articles published 1869–1908 in The Nation. Edited by Kenneth Laine Ketner and James Edward Cook, online.

1976: The New Elements of Mathematics by Charles S. Peirce, 4 volumes in 5, included many previously unpublished Peirce manuscripts on mathematical subjects, along with Peirce's important published mathematical articles. Edited by Carolyn Eisele, back in print.

1977: Semiotic and Significs: The Correspondence between C. S. Peirce and Victoria Lady Welby (2nd edition 2001), included Peirce's entire correspondence (1903–1912) with Victoria, Lady Welby. Peirce's other published correspondence is largely limited to the 14 letters included in volume 8 of the Collected Papers, and the 20-odd pre-1890 items included so far in the Writings. Edited by Charles S. Hardwick with James Cook, out of print.

1982–now: Writings of Charles S. Peirce, A Chronological Edition (W), Volumes 1–6 & 8, of a projected 30. The limited coverage, and defective editing and organization, of the Collected Papers led Max Fisch and others in the 1970s to found the Peirce Edition Project (PEP), whose mission is to prepare a more complete critical chronological edition. Only seven volumes have appeared to date, but they cover the period from 1859 to 1892, when Peirce carried out much of his best-known work. Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 8 was published in November 2010; and work continues on Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 7, 9, and 11. In print and online.

1985: Historical Perspectives on Peirce's Logic of Science: A History of Science, 2 volumes. Auspitz has said,[82] "The extent of Peirce's immersion in the science of his day is evident in his reviews in the Nation [...] and in his papers, grant applications, and publishers' prospectuses in the history and practice of science", referring latterly to Historical Perspectives. Edited by Carolyn Eisele, back in print.

1992: Reasoning and the Logic of Things collects in one place Peirce's 1898 series of lectures invited by William James. Edited by Kenneth Laine Ketner, with commentary by Hilary Putnam, in print.

1992–1998: The Essential Peirce (EP), 2 volumes, is an important recent sampler of Peirce's philosophical writings. Edited (1) by Nathan Hauser and Christian Kloesel and (2) by Peirce Edition Project editors, in print.

1997: Pragmatism as a Principle and Method of Right Thinking collects Peirce's 1903 Harvard "Lectures on Pragmatism" in a study edition, including drafts, of Peirce's lecture manuscripts, which had been previously published in abridged form; the lectures now also appear in The Essential Peirce, 2. Edited by Patricia Ann Turisi, in print.

2010: Philosophy of Mathematics: Selected Writings collects important writings by Peirce on the subject, many not previously in print. Edited by Matthew E. Moore, in print.

Mathematics

 
"The World on a Quincuncial Projection", 1879.[83] Peirce’s projection of a sphere onto a square keeps angles true except at four isolated points on the equator, and has less scale variation than the Mercator projection. It can be tessellated; that is, multiple copies can be joined together continuously edge-to-edge.

Peirce's most important work in pure mathematics was in logical and foundational areas. He also worked on linear algebra, matrices, various geometries, topology and Listing numbers, Bell numbers, graphs, the four-color problem, and the nature of continuity.

He worked on applied mathematics in economics, engineering, and map projections (such as the Peirce quincuncial projection), and was especially active in probability and statistics.[84]

Discoveries

Peirce made a number of striking discoveries in formal logic and foundational mathematics, nearly all of which came to be appreciated only long after he died:

In 1860[85] he suggested a cardinal arithmetic for infinite numbers, years before any work by Georg Cantor (who completed his dissertation in 1867) and without access to Bernard Bolzano's 1851 (posthumous) Paradoxien des Unendlichen.

The Peirce arrow,
symbol for "(neither) ... nor ...", also called the Quine dagger

In 1880–1881[86] he showed how Boolean algebra could be done via a repeated sufficient single binary operation (logical NOR), anticipating Henry M. Sheffer by 33 years. (See also De Morgan's Laws.)

In 1881[87] he set out the axiomatization of natural number arithmetic, a few years before Richard Dedekind and Giuseppe Peano. In the same paper Peirce gave, years before Dedekind, the first purely cardinal definition of a finite set in the sense now known as "Dedekind-finite", and implied by the same stroke an important formal definition of an infinite set (Dedekind-infinite), as a set that can be put into a one-to-one correspondence with one of its proper subsets.

In 1885[88] he distinguished between first-order and second-order quantification.[89][90] In the same paper he set out what can be read as the first (primitive) axiomatic set theory, anticipating Zermelo by about two decades (Brady 2000,[91] pp. 132–33).

In 1886, he saw that Boolean calculations could be carried out via electrical switches,[12] anticipating Claude Shannon by more than 50 years.

 
Existential graphs: Alpha graphs

By the later 1890s[92] he was devising existential graphs, a diagrammatic notation for the predicate calculus. Based on them are John F. Sowa's conceptual graphs and Sun-Joo Shin's diagrammatic reasoning.

The New Elements of Mathematics

Peirce wrote drafts for an introductory textbook, with the working title The New Elements of Mathematics, that presented mathematics from an original standpoint. Those drafts and many other of his previously unpublished mathematical manuscripts finally appeared[84] in The New Elements of Mathematics by Charles S. Peirce (1976), edited by mathematician Carolyn Eisele.

Nature of mathematics

Peirce agreed with Auguste Comte in regarding mathematics as more basic than philosophy and the special sciences (of nature and mind). Peirce classified mathematics into three subareas: (1) mathematics of logic, (2) discrete series, and (3) pseudo-continua (as he called them, including the real numbers) and continua. Influenced by his father Benjamin, Peirce argued that mathematics studies purely hypothetical objects and is not just the science of quantity but is more broadly the science which draws necessary conclusions; that mathematics aids logic, not vice versa; and that logic itself is part of philosophy and is the science about drawing conclusions necessary and otherwise.[93]

Mathematics of logic

Mathematical logic and foundations, some noted articles
  • "On an Improvement in Boole's Calculus of Logic" (1867)
  • "Description of a Notation for the Logic of Relatives" (1870)
  • "On the Algebra of Logic" (1880)
  • "A Boolean Algebra with One Constant" (1880 MS)
  • "On the Logic of Number" (1881)
  • "Note B: The Logic of Relatives" (1883)
  • "On the Algebra of Logic: A Contribution to the Philosophy of Notation" (1884/1885)
  • "The Logic of Relatives" (1897)
  • "The Simplest Mathematics" (1902 MS)
  • "Prolegomena to an Apology for Pragmaticism" (1906, on existential graphs)

Beginning with his first paper on the "Logic of Relatives" (1870), Peirce extended the theory of relations that Augustus De Morgan had just recently awakened from its Cinderella slumbers. Much of the mathematics of relations now taken for granted was "borrowed" from Peirce, not always with all due credit; on that and on how the young Bertrand Russell, especially his Principles of Mathematics and Principia Mathematica, did not do Peirce justice, see Anellis (1995).[64] In 1918 the logician C. I. Lewis wrote, "The contributions of C.S. Peirce to symbolic logic are more numerous and varied than those of any other writer—at least in the nineteenth century."[94] Beginning in 1940, Alfred Tarski and his students rediscovered aspects of Peirce's larger vision of relational logic, developing the perspective of relation algebra.

Relational logic gained applications. In mathematics, it influenced the abstract analysis of E. H. Moore and the lattice theory of Garrett Birkhoff. In computer science, the relational model for databases was developed with Peircean ideas in work of Edgar F. Codd, who was a doctoral student[95] of Arthur W. Burks, a Peirce scholar. In economics, relational logic was used by Frank P. Ramsey, John von Neumann, and Paul Samuelson to study preferences and utility and by Kenneth J. Arrow in Social Choice and Individual Values, following Arrow's association with Tarski at City College of New York.

On Peirce and his contemporaries Ernst Schröder and Gottlob Frege, Hilary Putnam (1982)[89] documented that Frege's work on the logic of quantifiers had little influence on his contemporaries, although it was published four years before the work of Peirce and his student Oscar Howard Mitchell. Putnam found that mathematicians and logicians learned about the logic of quantifiers through the independent work of Peirce and Mitchell, particularly through Peirce's "On the Algebra of Logic: A Contribution to the Philosophy of Notation"[88] (1885), published in the premier American mathematical journal of the day, and cited by Peano and Schröder, among others, who ignored Frege. They also adopted and modified Peirce's notations, typographical variants of those now used. Peirce apparently was ignorant of Frege's work, despite their overlapping achievements in logic, philosophy of language, and the foundations of mathematics.

Peirce's work on formal logic had admirers besides Ernst Schröder:

  • Philosophical algebraist William Kingdon Clifford[96] and logician William Ernest Johnson, both British;
  • The Polish school of logic and foundational mathematics, including Alfred Tarski;
  • Arthur Prior, who praised and studied Peirce's logical work in a 1964 paper[26] and in Formal Logic (saying on page 4 that Peirce "perhaps had a keener eye for essentials than any other logician before or since").

A philosophy of logic, grounded in his categories and semiotic, can be extracted from Peirce's writings and, along with Peirce's logical work more generally, is exposited and defended in Hilary Putnam (1982);[89] the Introduction in Nathan Houser et al. (1997);[97] and Randall Dipert's chapter in Cheryl Misak (2004).[98]

Continua

Continuity and synechism are central in Peirce's philosophy: "I did not at first suppose that it was, as I gradually came to find it, the master-Key of philosophy".[99]

From a mathematical point of view, he embraced infinitesimals and worked long on the mathematics of continua. He long held that the real numbers constitute a pseudo-continuum;[100] that a true continuum is the real subject matter of analysis situs (topology); and that a true continuum of instants exceeds—and within any lapse of time has room for—any Aleph number (any infinite multitude as he called it) of instants.[101]

In 1908 Peirce wrote that he found that a true continuum might have or lack such room. Jérôme Havenel (2008): "It is on 26 May 1908, that Peirce finally gave up his idea that in every continuum there is room for whatever collection of any multitude. From now on, there are different kinds of continua, which have different properties."[102]

Probability and statistics

Peirce held that science achieves statistical probabilities, not certainties, and that spontaneity (absolute chance) is real (see Tychism on his view). Most of his statistical writings promote the frequency interpretation of probability (objective ratios of cases), and many of his writings express skepticism about (and criticize the use of) probability when such models are not based on objective randomization.[103] Though Peirce was largely a frequentist, his possible world semantics introduced the "propensity" theory of probability before Karl Popper.[104][105] Peirce (sometimes with Joseph Jastrow) investigated the probability judgments of experimental subjects, "perhaps the very first" elicitation and estimation of subjective probabilities in experimental psychology and (what came to be called) Bayesian statistics.[2]

Peirce was one of the founders of statistics. He formulated modern statistics in "Illustrations of the Logic of Science" (1877–1878) and "A Theory of Probable Inference" (1883). With a repeated measures design, Charles Sanders Peirce and Joseph Jastrow introduced blinded, controlled randomized experiments in 1884[106] (Hacking 1990:205)[1] (before Ronald A. Fisher).[2] He invented optimal design for experiments on gravity, in which he "corrected the means". He used correlation and smoothing. Peirce extended the work on outliers by Benjamin Peirce, his father.[2] He introduced terms "confidence" and "likelihood" (before Jerzy Neyman and Fisher). (See Stephen Stigler's historical books and Ian Hacking 1990.[1])

Philosophy

It is not sufficiently recognized that Peirce's career was that of a scientist, not a philosopher; and that during his lifetime he was known and valued chiefly as a scientist, only secondarily as a logician, and scarcely at all as a philosopher. Even his work in philosophy and logic will not be understood until this fact becomes a standing premise of Peircean studies.

— Max Fisch 1964, p. 486.[26]
 
Charles Sanders Peirce in 1859

Peirce was a working scientist for 30 years, and arguably was a professional philosopher only during the five years he lectured at Johns Hopkins. He learned philosophy mainly by reading, each day, a few pages of Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, in the original German, while a Harvard undergraduate. His writings bear on a wide array of disciplines, including mathematics, logic, philosophy, statistics, astronomy,[26] metrology,[3] geodesy, experimental psychology,[4] economics,[5] linguistics,[6] and the history and philosophy of science. This work has enjoyed renewed interest and approval, a revival inspired not only by his anticipations of recent scientific developments but also by his demonstration of how philosophy can be applied effectively to human problems.

Peirce's philosophy includes (see below in related sections) a pervasive three-category system: belief that truth is immutable and is both independent from actual opinion (fallibilism) and discoverable (no radical skepticism), logic as formal semiotic on signs, on arguments, and on inquiry's ways—including philosophical pragmatism (which he founded), critical common-sensism, and scientific method—and, in metaphysics: Scholastic realism, e.g. John Duns Scotus, belief in God, freedom, and at least an attenuated immortality, objective idealism, and belief in the reality of continuity and of absolute chance, mechanical necessity, and creative love. In his work, fallibilism and pragmatism may seem to work somewhat like skepticism and positivism, respectively, in others' work. However, for Peirce, fallibilism is balanced by an anti-skepticism and is a basis for belief in the reality of absolute chance and of continuity,[107] and pragmatism commits one to anti-nominalist belief in the reality of the general (CP 5.453–57).

For Peirce, First Philosophy, which he also called cenoscopy, is less basic than mathematics and more basic than the special sciences (of nature and mind). It studies positive phenomena in general, phenomena available to any person at any waking moment, and does not settle questions by resorting to special experiences.[108] He divided such philosophy into (1) phenomenology (which he also called phaneroscopy or categorics), (2) normative sciences (esthetics, ethics, and logic), and (3) metaphysics; his views on them are discussed in order below.

Theory of categories

On May 14, 1867, the 27-year-old Peirce presented a paper entitled "On a New List of Categories" to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, which published it the following year. The paper outlined a theory of predication, involving three universal categories that Peirce developed in response to reading Aristotle, Immanuel Kant, and G. W. F. Hegel, categories that Peirce applied throughout his work for the rest of his life.[20] Peirce scholars generally regard the "New List" as foundational or breaking the ground for Peirce's "architectonic", his blueprint for a pragmatic philosophy. In the categories one will discern, concentrated, the pattern that one finds formed by the three grades of clearness in "How To Make Our Ideas Clear" (1878 paper foundational to pragmatism), and in numerous other trichotomies in his work.

"On a New List of Categories" is cast as a Kantian deduction; it is short but dense and difficult to summarize. The following table is compiled from that and later works.[109] In 1893, Peirce restated most of it for a less advanced audience.[110]

Peirce's categories (technical name: the cenopythagorean categories)[111]
Name Typical characterizaton As universe of experience As quantity Technical definition Valence, "adicity"
Firstness[112] Quality of feeling Ideas, chance, possibility Vagueness, "some" Reference to a ground (a ground is a pure abstraction of a quality)[113] Essentially monadic (the quale, in the sense of the such,[114] which has the quality)
Secondness[115] Reaction, resistance, (dyadic) relation Brute facts, actuality Singularity, discreteness, "this" Reference to a correlate (by its relate) Essentially dyadic (the relate and the correlate)
Thirdness[116] Representation, mediation Habits, laws, necessity Generality, continuity, "all" Reference to an interpretant* Essentially triadic (sign, object, interpretant*)

 *Note: An interpretant is an interpretation (human or otherwise) in the sense of the product of an interpretive process.

Aesthetics and ethics

Peirce did not write extensively in aesthetics and ethics,[117] but came by 1902 to hold that aesthetics, ethics, and logic, in that order, comprise the normative sciences.[118] He characterized aesthetics as the study of the good (grasped as the admirable), and thus of the ends governing all conduct and thought.[119]

Philosophy: logic, or semiotic

Logic as philosophical

Peirce regarded logic per se as a division of philosophy, as a normative science based on esthetics and ethics, as more basic than metaphysics,[120] and as "the art of devising methods of research".[121] More generally, as inference, "logic is rooted in the social principle", since inference depends on a standpoint that, in a sense, is unlimited.[122] Peirce called (with no sense of deprecation) "mathematics of logic" much of the kind of thing which, in current research and applications, is called simply "logic". He was productive in both (philosophical) logic and logic's mathematics, which were connected deeply in his work and thought.

Peirce argued that logic is formal semiotic: the formal study of signs in the broadest sense, not only signs that are artificial, linguistic, or symbolic, but also signs that are semblances or are indexical such as reactions. Peirce held that "all this universe is perfused with signs, if it is not composed exclusively of signs",[123] along with their representational and inferential relations. He argued that, since all thought takes time, all thought is in signs[124] and sign processes ("semiosis") such as the inquiry process. He divided logic into: (1) speculative grammar, or stechiology, on how signs can be meaningful and, in relation to that, what kinds of signs there are, how they combine, and how some embody or incorporate others; (2) logical critic, or logic proper, on the modes of inference; and (3) speculative or universal rhetoric, or methodeutic,[125] the philosophical theory of inquiry, including pragmatism.

Presuppositions of logic

In his "F.R.L." [First Rule of Logic] (1899), Peirce states that the first, and "in one sense, the sole", rule of reason is that, to learn, one needs to desire to learn and desire it without resting satisfied with that which one is inclined to think.[120] So, the first rule is, to wonder. Peirce proceeds to a critical theme in research practices and the shaping of theories:

...there follows one corollary which itself deserves to be inscribed upon every wall of the city of philosophy:
Do not block the way of inquiry.

Peirce adds, that method and economy are best in research but no outright sin inheres in trying any theory in the sense that the investigation via its trial adoption can proceed unimpeded and undiscouraged, and that "the one unpardonable offence" is a philosophical barricade against truth's advance, an offense to which "metaphysicians in all ages have shown themselves the most addicted". Peirce in many writings holds that logic precedes metaphysics (ontological, religious, and physical).

Peirce goes on to list four common barriers to inquiry: (1) Assertion of absolute certainty; (2) maintaining that something is absolutely unknowable; (3) maintaining that something is absolutely inexplicable because absolutely basic or ultimate; (4) holding that perfect exactitude is possible, especially such as to quite preclude unusual and anomalous phenomena. To refuse absolute theoretical certainty is the heart of fallibilism, which Peirce unfolds into refusals to set up any of the listed barriers. Peirce elsewhere argues (1897) that logic's presupposition of fallibilism leads at length to the view that chance and continuity are very real (tychism and synechism).[107]

The First Rule of Logic pertains to the mind's presuppositions in undertaking reason and logic; presuppositions, for instance, that truth and the real do not depend on yours or my opinion of them but do depend on representational relation and consist in the destined end in investigation taken far enough (see below). He describes such ideas as, collectively, hopes which, in particular cases, one is unable seriously to doubt.[126]

Four incapacities

The Journal of Speculative Philosophy series (1868–1869), including
  • Questions concerning certain Faculties claimed for Man (1868)
  • Some Consequences of Four Incapacities (1868)
  • Grounds of Validity of the Laws of Logic:
    Further Consequences of Four Incapacities (1869)

In three articles in 1868–1869,[124][127][128] Peirce rejected mere verbal or hyperbolic doubt and first or ultimate principles, and argued that we have (as he numbered them[127]):

  1. No power of Introspection. All knowledge of the internal world comes by hypothetical reasoning from known external facts.
  2. No power of Intuition (cognition without logical determination by previous cognitions). No cognitive stage is absolutely first in a process. All mental action has the form of inference.
  3. No power of thinking without signs. A cognition must be interpreted in a subsequent cognition in order to be a cognition at all.
  4. No conception of the absolutely incognizable.

(The above sense of the term "intuition" is almost Kant's, said Peirce. It differs from the current looser sense that encompasses instinctive or anyway half-conscious inference.)

Peirce argued that those incapacities imply the reality of the general and of the continuous, the validity of the modes of reasoning,[128] and the falsity of philosophical Cartesianism (see below).

Peirce rejected the conception (usually ascribed to Kant) of the unknowable thing-in-itself[127] and later said that to "dismiss make-believes" is a prerequisite for pragmatism.[129]

Logic as formal semiotic

Peirce sought, through his wide-ranging studies through the decades, formal philosophical ways to articulate thought's processes, and also to explain the workings of science. These inextricably entangled questions of a dynamics of inquiry rooted in nature and nurture led him to develop his semiotic with very broadened conceptions of signs and inference, and, as its culmination, a theory of inquiry for the task of saying 'how science works' and devising research methods. This would be logic by the medieval definition taught for centuries: art of arts, science of sciences, having the way to the principles of all methods.[121] Influences radiate from points on parallel lines of inquiry in Aristotle's work, in such loci as: the basic terminology of psychology in On the Soul; the founding description of sign relations in On Interpretation; and the differentiation of inference into three modes that are commonly translated into English as abduction, deduction, and induction, in the Prior Analytics, as well as inference by analogy (called paradeigma by Aristotle), which Peirce regarded as involving the other three modes.

Peirce began writing on semiotic in the 1860s, around the time when he devised his system of three categories. He called it both semiotic and semeiotic. Both are current in singular and plural. He based it on the conception of a triadic sign relation, and defined semiosis as "action, or influence, which is, or involves, a cooperation of three subjects, such as a sign, its object, and its interpretant, this tri-relative influence not being in any way resolvable into actions between pairs".[130] As to signs in thought, Peirce emphasized the reverse: "To say, therefore, that thought cannot happen in an instant, but requires a time, is but another way of saying that every thought must be interpreted in another, or that all thought is in signs."[124]

Peirce held that all thought is in signs, issuing in and from interpretation, where sign is the word for the broadest variety of conceivable semblances, diagrams, metaphors, symptoms, signals, designations, symbols, texts, even mental concepts and ideas, all as determinations of a mind or quasi-mind, that which at least functions like a mind, as in the work of crystals or bees[131]—the focus is on sign action in general rather than on psychology, linguistics, or social studies (fields which he also pursued).

Inquiry is a kind of inference process, a manner of thinking and semiosis. Global divisions of ways for phenomena to stand as signs, and the subsumption of inquiry and thinking within inference as a sign process, enable the study of inquiry on semiotics' three levels:

  1. Conditions for meaningfulness. Study of significatory elements and combinations, their grammar.
  2. Validity, conditions for true representation. Critique of arguments in their various separate modes.
  3. Conditions for determining interpretations. Methodology of inquiry in its mutually interacting modes.

Peirce uses examples often from common experience, but defines and discusses such things as assertion and interpretation in terms of philosophical logic. In a formal vein, Peirce said:

On the Definition of Logic. Logic is formal semiotic. A sign is something, A, which brings something, B, its interpretant sign, determined or created by it, into the same sort of correspondence (or a lower implied sort) with something, C, its object, as that in which itself stands to C. This definition no more involves any reference to human thought than does the definition of a line as the place within which a particle lies during a lapse of time. It is from this definition that I deduce the principles of logic by mathematical reasoning, and by mathematical reasoning that, I aver, will support criticism of Weierstrassian severity, and that is perfectly evident. The word "formal" in the definition is also defined.[132]

Signs

Sign relation

Peirce's theory of signs is known to be one of the most complex semiotic theories due to its generalistic claim. Anything is a sign—not absolutely as itself, but instead in some relation or other. The sign relation is the key. It defines three roles encompassing (1) the sign, (2) the sign's subject matter, called its object, and (3) the sign's meaning or ramification as formed into a kind of effect called its interpretant (a further sign, for example a translation). It is an irreducible triadic relation, according to Peirce. The roles are distinct even when the things that fill those roles are not. The roles are but three; a sign of an object leads to one or more interpretants, and, as signs, they lead to further interpretants.

Extension × intension = information. Two traditional approaches to sign relation, necessary though insufficient, are the way of extension (a sign's objects, also called breadth, denotation, or application) and the way of intension (the objects' characteristics, qualities, attributes referenced by the sign, also called depth, comprehension, significance, or connotation). Peirce adds a third, the way of information, including change of information, to integrate the other two approaches into a unified whole.[133] For example, because of the equation above, if a term's total amount of information stays the same, then the more that the term 'intends' or signifies about objects, the fewer are the objects to which the term 'extends' or applies.

Determination. A sign depends on its object in such a way as to represent its object—the object enables and, in a sense, determines the sign. A physically causal sense of this stands out when a sign consists in an indicative reaction. The interpretant depends likewise on both the sign and the object—an object determines a sign to determine an interpretant. But this determination is not a succession of dyadic events, like a row of toppling dominoes; sign determination is triadic. For example, an interpretant does not merely represent something which represented an object; instead an interpretant represents something as a sign representing the object. The object (be it a quality or fact or law or even fictional) determines the sign to an interpretant through one's collateral experience[134] with the object, in which the object is found or from which it is recalled, as when a sign consists in a chance semblance of an absent object. Peirce used the word "determine" not in a strictly deterministic sense, but in a sense of "specializes", bestimmt,[135] involving variable amount, like an influence.[136] Peirce came to define representation and interpretation in terms of (triadic) determination.[137] The object determines the sign to determine another sign—the interpretant—to be related to the object as the sign is related to the object, hence the interpretant, fulfilling its function as sign of the object, determines a further interpretant sign. The process is logically structured to perpetuate itself, and is definitive of sign, object, and interpretant in general.[136]

Semiotic elements

Peirce held there are exactly three basic elements in semiosis (sign action):

  1. A sign (or representamen)[138] represents, in the broadest possible sense of "represents". It is something interpretable as saying something about something. It is not necessarily symbolic, linguistic, or artificial—a cloud might be a sign of rain for instance, or ruins the sign of ancient civilization.[139] As Peirce sometimes put it (he defined sign at least 76 times[136]), the sign stands for the object to the interpretant. A sign represents its object in some respect, which respect is the sign's ground.[113]
  2. An object (or semiotic object) is a subject matter of a sign and an interpretant. It can be anything thinkable, a quality, an occurrence, a rule, etc., even fictional, such as Prince Hamlet.[140] All of those are special or partial objects. The object most accurately is the universe of discourse to which the partial or special object belongs.[140] For instance, a perturbation of Pluto's orbit is a sign about Pluto but ultimately not only about Pluto. An object either (i) is immediate to a sign and is the object as represented in the sign or (ii) is a dynamic object, the object as it really is, on which the immediate object is founded "as on bedrock".[141]
  3. An interpretant (or interpretant sign) is a sign's meaning or ramification as formed into a kind of idea or effect, an interpretation, human or otherwise. An interpretant is a sign (a) of the object and (b) of the interpretant's "predecessor" (the interpreted sign) as a sign of the same object. An interpretant either (i) is immediate to a sign and is a kind of quality or possibility such as a word's usual meaning, or (ii) is a dynamic interpretant, such as a state of agitation, or (iii) is a final or normal interpretant, a sum of the lessons which a sufficiently considered sign would have as effects on practice, and with which an actual interpretant may at most coincide.

Some of the understanding needed by the mind depends on familiarity with the object. To know what a given sign denotes, the mind needs some experience of that sign's object, experience outside of, and collateral to, that sign or sign system. In that context Peirce speaks of collateral experience, collateral observation, collateral acquaintance, all in much the same terms.[134]

Classes of signs

Lines of joint classification of signs.
Every sign is:[142]
1. 2. 3.
I. Qualisign or Sinsign or Legisign
and  
II. Icon or Index or Symbol
and  
III. Rheme or Dicisign or Argument

Among Peirce's many sign typologies, three stand out, interlocked. The first typology depends on the sign itself, the second on how the sign stands for its denoted object, and the third on how the sign stands for its object to its interpretant. Also, each of the three typologies is a three-way division, a trichotomy, via Peirce's three phenomenological categories: (1) quality of feeling, (2) reaction, resistance, and (3) representation, mediation.[142]

I. Qualisign, sinsign, legisign (also called tone, token, type, and also called potisign, actisign, famisign):[143] This typology classifies every sign according to the sign's own phenomenological category—the qualisign is a quality, a possibility, a "First"; the sinsign is a reaction or resistance, a singular object, an actual event or fact, a "Second"; and the legisign is a habit, a rule, a representational relation, a "Third".

II. Icon, index, symbol: This typology, the best known one, classifies every sign according to the category of the sign's way of denoting its object—the icon (also called semblance or likeness) by a quality of its own, the index by factual connection to its object, and the symbol by a habit or rule for its interpretant.

III. Rheme, dicisign, argument (also called sumisign, dicisign, suadisign, also seme, pheme, delome,[143] and regarded as very broadened versions of the traditional term, proposition, argument): This typology classifies every sign according to the category which the interpretant attributes to the sign's way of denoting its object—the rheme, for example a term, is a sign interpreted to represent its object in respect of quality; the dicisign, for example a proposition, is a sign interpreted to represent its object in respect of fact; and the argument is a sign interpreted to represent its object in respect of habit or law. This is the culminating typology of the three, where the sign is understood as a structural element of inference.

Every sign belongs to one class or another within (I) and within (II) and within (III). Thus each of the three typologies is a three-valued parameter for every sign. The three parameters are not independent of each other; many co-classifications are absent, for reasons pertaining to the lack of either habit-taking or singular reaction in a quality, and the lack of habit-taking in a singular reaction. The result is not 27 but instead ten classes of signs fully specified at this level of analysis.

Modes of inference

Borrowing a brace of concepts from Aristotle, Peirce examined three basic modes of inferenceabduction, deduction, and induction—in his "critique of arguments" or "logic proper". Peirce also called abduction "retroduction", "presumption", and, earliest of all, "hypothesis". He characterized it as guessing and as inference to an explanatory hypothesis. He sometimes expounded the modes of inference by transformations of the categorical syllogism Barbara (AAA), for example in "Deduction, Induction, and Hypothesis" (1878).[144] He does this by rearranging the rule (Barbara's major premise), the case (Barbara's minor premise), and the result (Barbara's conclusion):

Peirce 1883 in "A Theory of Probable Inference" (Studies in Logic) equated hypothetical inference with the induction of characters of objects (as he had done in effect before[127]). Eventually dissatisfied, by 1900 he distinguished them once and for all and also wrote that he now took the syllogistic forms and the doctrine of logical extension and comprehension as being less basic than he had thought. In 1903 he presented the following logical form for abductive inference:[145]

The surprising fact, C, is observed;

But if A were true, C would be a matter of course,
Hence, there is reason to suspect that A is true.

The logical form does not also cover induction, since induction neither depends on surprise nor proposes a new idea for its conclusion. Induction seeks facts to test a hypothesis; abduction seeks a hypothesis to account for facts. "Deduction proves that something must be; Induction shows that something actually is operative; Abduction merely suggests that something may be."[146] Peirce did not remain quite convinced that one logical form covers all abduction.[147] In his methodeutic or theory of inquiry (see below), he portrayed abduction as an economic initiative to further inference and study, and portrayed all three modes as clarified by their coordination in essential roles in inquiry: hypothetical explanation, deductive prediction, inductive testing.

Pragmatism

Some noted articles and lectures
  • Illustrations of the Logic of Science (1877–1878):
    inquiry, pragmatism, statistics, inference
  1. The Fixation of Belief (1877)
  2. How to Make Our Ideas Clear (1878)
  3. The Doctrine of Chances (1878)
  4. The Probability of Induction (1878)
  5. The Order of Nature (1878)
  6. Deduction, Induction, and Hypothesis (1878)
  • The Harvard lectures on pragmatism (1903)
  • What Pragmatism Is (1905)
  • Issues of Pragmaticism (1905)
  • Pragmatism (1907 MS in The Essential Peirce, 2)

Peirce's recipe for pragmatic thinking, which he called pragmatism and, later, pragmaticism, is recapitulated in several versions of the so-called pragmatic maxim. Here is one of his more emphatic reiterations of it:

Consider what effects that might conceivably have practical bearings you conceive the objects of your conception to have. Then, your conception of those effects is the whole of your conception of the object.

As a movement, pragmatism began in the early 1870s in discussions among Peirce, William James, and others in the Metaphysical Club. James among others regarded some articles by Peirce such as "The Fixation of Belief" (1877) and especially "How to Make Our Ideas Clear" (1878) as foundational to pragmatism.[148] Peirce (CP 5.11–12), like James (Pragmatism: A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking, 1907), saw pragmatism as embodying familiar attitudes, in philosophy and elsewhere, elaborated into a new deliberate method for fruitful thinking about problems. Peirce differed from James and the early John Dewey, in some of their tangential enthusiasms, in being decidedly more rationalistic and realistic, in several senses of those terms, throughout the preponderance of his own philosophical moods.

In 1905 Peirce coined the new name pragmaticism "for the precise purpose of expressing the original definition", saying that "all went happily" with James's and F.C.S. Schiller's variant uses of the old name "pragmatism" and that he coined the new name because of the old name's growing use in "literary journals, where it gets abused". Yet he cited as causes, in a 1906 manuscript, his differences with James and Schiller and, in a 1908 publication, his differences with James as well as literary author Giovanni Papini's declaration of pragmatism's indefinability. Peirce in any case regarded his views that truth is immutable and infinity is real, as being opposed by the other pragmatists, but he remained allied with them on other issues.[149]

Pragmatism begins with the idea that belief is that on which one is prepared to act. Peirce's pragmatism is a method of clarification of conceptions of objects. It equates any conception of an object to a conception of that object's effects to a general extent of the effects' conceivable implications for informed practice. It is a method of sorting out conceptual confusions occasioned, for example, by distinctions that make (sometimes needed) formal yet not practical differences. He formulated both pragmatism and statistical principles as aspects of scientific logic, in his "Illustrations of the Logic of Science" series of articles. In the second one, "How to Make Our Ideas Clear", Peirce discussed three grades of clearness of conception:

  1. Clearness of a conception familiar and readily used, even if unanalyzed and undeveloped.
  2. Clearness of a conception in virtue of clearness of its parts, in virtue of which logicians called an idea "distinct", that is, clarified by analysis of just what makes it applicable. Elsewhere, echoing Kant, Peirce called a likewise distinct definition "nominal" (CP 5.553).
  3. Clearness in virtue of clearness of conceivable practical implications of the object's conceived effects, such that fosters fruitful reasoning, especially on difficult problems. Here he introduced that which he later called the pragmatic maxim.

By way of example of how to clarify conceptions, he addressed conceptions about truth and the real as questions of the presuppositions of reasoning in general. In clearness's second grade (the "nominal" grade), he defined truth as a sign's correspondence to its object, and the real as the object of such correspondence, such that truth and the real are independent of that which you or I or any actual, definite community of inquirers think. After that needful but confined step, next in clearness's third grade (the pragmatic, practice-oriented grade) he defined truth as that opinion which would be reached, sooner or later but still inevitably, by research taken far enough, such that the real does depend on that ideal final opinion—a dependence to which he appeals in theoretical arguments elsewhere, for instance for the long-run validity of the rule of induction.[150] Peirce argued that even to argue against the independence and discoverability of truth and the real is to presuppose that there is, about that very question under argument, a truth with just such independence and discoverability.

Peirce said that a conception's meaning consists in "all general modes of rational conduct" implied by "acceptance" of the conception—that is, if one were to accept, first of all, the conception as true, then what could one conceive to be consequent general modes of rational conduct by all who accept the conception as true?—the whole of such consequent general modes is the whole meaning. His pragmatism does not equate a conception's meaning, its intellectual purport, with the conceived benefit or cost of the conception itself, like a meme (or, say, propaganda), outside the perspective of its being true, nor, since a conception is general, is its meaning equated with any definite set of actual consequences or upshots corroborating or undermining the conception or its worth. His pragmatism also bears no resemblance to "vulgar" pragmatism, which misleadingly connotes a ruthless and Machiavellian search for mercenary or political advantage. Instead the pragmatic maxim is the heart of his pragmatism as a method of experimentational mental reflection[151] arriving at conceptions in terms of conceivable confirmatory and disconfirmatory circumstances—a method hospitable to the formation of explanatory hypotheses, and conducive to the use and improvement of verification.[152]

Peirce's pragmatism, as method and theory of definitions and conceptual clearness, is part of his theory of inquiry,[153] which he variously called speculative, general, formal or universal rhetoric or simply methodeutic.[125] He applied his pragmatism as a method throughout his work.

Theory of inquiry

In "The Fixation of Belief" (1877), Peirce gives his take on the psychological origin and aim of inquiry. On his view, individuals are motivated to inquiry by desire to escape the feelings of anxiety and unease which Peirce takes to be characteristic of the state of doubt. Doubt is described by Peirce as an "uneasy and dissatisfied state from which we struggle to free ourselves and pass into the state of belief." Peirce uses words like “irritation” to describe the experience of being in doubt and to explain why he thinks we find such experiences to be motivating. The irritating feeling of doubt is appeased, Peirce says, through our efforts to achieve a settled state of satisfaction with what we land on as our answer to the question which led to that doubt in the first place. This settled state, namely, belief, is described by Peirce as “a calm and satisfactory state which we do not wish to avoid.” Our efforts to achieve the satisfaction of belief, by whichever methods we may pursue, are what Peirce calls “inquiry”. Four methods which Peirce describes as having been actually pursued throughout the history of thought are summarized below in the section after next.

Critical common-sensism

Critical common-sensism,[154] treated by Peirce as a consequence of his pragmatism, is his combination of Thomas Reid's common-sense philosophy with a fallibilism that recognizes that propositions of our more or less vague common sense now indubitable may later come into question, for example because of transformations of our world through science. It includes efforts to work up in tests genuine doubts for a core group of common indubitables that vary slowly if at all.

Rival methods of inquiry

In "The Fixation of Belief" (1877), Peirce described inquiry in general not as the pursuit of truth per se but as the struggle to move from irritating, inhibitory doubt born of surprise, disagreement, and the like, and to reach a secure belief, belief being that on which one is prepared to act. That let Peirce frame scientific inquiry as part of a broader spectrum and as spurred, like inquiry generally, by actual doubt, not mere verbal, quarrelsome, or hyperbolic doubt, which he held to be fruitless. Peirce sketched four methods of settling opinion, ordered from least to most successful:

  1. The method of tenacity (policy of sticking to initial belief) – which brings comforts and decisiveness but leads to trying to ignore contrary information and others' views as if truth were intrinsically private, not public. The method goes against the social impulse and easily falters since one may well notice when another's opinion seems as good as one's own initial opinion. Its successes can be brilliant but tend to be transitory.
  2. The method of authority – which overcomes disagreements but sometimes brutally. Its successes can be majestic and long-lasting, but it cannot regulate people thoroughly enough to withstand doubts indefinitely, especially when people learn about other societies present and past.
  3. The method of the a priori – which promotes conformity less brutally but fosters opinions as something like tastes, arising in conversation and comparisons of perspectives in terms of "what is agreeable to reason". Thereby it depends on fashion in paradigms and goes in circles over time. It is more intellectual and respectable but, like the first two methods, sustains accidental and capricious beliefs, destining some minds to doubt it.
  4. The method of science – wherein inquiry supposes that the real is discoverable but independent of particular opinion, such that, unlike in the other methods, inquiry can, by its own account, go wrong (fallibilism), not only right, and thus purposely tests itself and criticizes, corrects, and improves itself.

Peirce held that, in practical affairs, slow and stumbling ratiocination is often dangerously inferior to instinct and traditional sentiment, and that the scientific method is best suited to theoretical research,[155] which in turn should not be trammeled by the other methods and practical ends; reason's "first rule"[120] is that, in order to learn, one must desire to learn and, as a corollary, must not block the way of inquiry. Scientific method excels over the others finally by being deliberately designed to arrive—eventually—at the most secure beliefs, upon which the most successful practices can be based. Starting from the idea that people seek not truth per se but instead to subdue irritating, inhibitory doubt, Peirce showed how, through the struggle, some can come to submit to truth for the sake of belief's integrity, seek as truth the guidance of potential conduct correctly to its given goal, and wed themselves to the scientific method.

Scientific method

Insofar as clarification by pragmatic reflection suits explanatory hypotheses and fosters predictions and testing, pragmatism points beyond the usual duo of foundational alternatives: deduction from self-evident truths, or rationalism; and induction from experiential phenomena, or empiricism.

Based on his critique of three modes of argument and different from either foundationalism or coherentism, Peirce's approach seeks to justify claims by a three-phase dynamic of inquiry:

  1. Active, abductive genesis of theory, with no prior assurance of truth;
  2. Deductive application of the contingent theory so as to clarify its practical implications;
  3. Inductive testing and evaluation of the utility of the provisional theory in anticipation of future experience, in both senses: prediction and control.

Thereby, Peirce devised an approach to inquiry far more solid than the flatter image of inductive generalization simpliciter, which is a mere re-labeling of phenomenological patterns. Peirce's pragmatism was the first time the scientific method was proposed as an epistemology for philosophical questions.

A theory that succeeds better than its rivals in predicting and controlling our world is said to be nearer the truth. This is an operational notion of truth used by scientists.

Peirce extracted the pragmatic model or theory of inquiry from its raw materials in classical logic and refined it in parallel with the early development of symbolic logic to address problems about the nature of scientific reasoning.

Abduction, deduction, and induction make incomplete sense in isolation from one another but comprise a cycle understandable as a whole insofar as they collaborate toward the common end of inquiry. In the pragmatic way of thinking about conceivable practical implications, every thing has a purpose, and, as possible, its purpose should first be denoted. Abduction hypothesizes an explanation for deduction to clarify into implications to be tested so that induction can evaluate the hypothesis, in the struggle to move from troublesome uncertainty to more secure belief. No matter how traditional and needful it is to study the modes of inference in abstraction from one another, the integrity of inquiry strongly limits the effective modularity of its principal components.

Peirce's outline of the scientific method in §III–IV of "A Neglected Argument"[156] is summarized below (except as otherwise noted). There he also reviewed plausibility and inductive precision (issues of critique of arguments).

1. Abductive (or retroductive) phase. Guessing, inference to explanatory hypotheses for selection of those best worth trying. From abduction, Peirce distinguishes induction as inferring, on the basis of tests, the proportion of truth in the hypothesis. Every inquiry, whether into ideas, brute facts, or norms and laws, arises from surprising observations in one or more of those realms (and for example at any stage of an inquiry already underway). All explanatory content of theories comes from abduction, which guesses a new or outside idea so as to account in a simple, economical way for a surprising or complicated phenomenon. The modicum of success in our guesses far exceeds that of random luck, and seems born of attunement to nature by developed or inherent instincts, especially insofar as best guesses are optimally plausible and simple in the sense of the "facile and natural", as by Galileo's natural light of reason and as distinct from "logical simplicity".[157] Abduction is the most fertile but least secure mode of inference. Its general rationale is inductive: it succeeds often enough and it has no substitute in expediting us toward new truths.[158] In 1903, Peirce called pragmatism "the logic of abduction".[159] Coordinative method leads from abducting a plausible hypothesis to judging it for its testability[160] and for how its trial would economize inquiry itself.[161] The hypothesis, being insecure, needs to have practical implications leading at least to mental tests and, in science, lending themselves to scientific tests. A simple but unlikely guess, if not costly to test for falsity, may belong first in line for testing. A guess is intrinsically worth testing if it has plausibility or reasoned objective probability, while subjective likelihood, though reasoned, can be misleadingly seductive. Guesses can be selected for trial strategically, for their caution (for which Peirce gave as example the game of Twenty Questions), breadth, or incomplexity.[162] One can discover only that which would be revealed through their sufficient experience anyway, and so the point is to expedite it; economy of research demands the leap, so to speak, of abduction and governs its art.[161]

2. Deductive phase. Two stages:

i. Explication. Not clearly premised, but a deductive analysis of the hypothesis so as to render its parts as clear as possible.
ii. Demonstration: Deductive Argumentation, Euclidean in procedure. Explicit deduction of consequences of the hypothesis as predictions about evidence to be found. Corollarial or, if needed, Theorematic.

3. Inductive phase. Evaluation of the hypothesis, inferring from observational or experimental tests of its deduced consequences. The long-run validity of the rule of induction is deducible from the principle (presuppositional to reasoning in general) that the real "is only the object of the final opinion to which sufficient investigation would lead";[150] in other words, anything excluding such a process would never be real. Induction involving the ongoing accumulation of evidence follows "a method which, sufficiently persisted in", will "diminish the error below any predesignate degree". Three stages:

i. Classification. Not clearly premised, but an inductive classing of objects of experience under general ideas.
ii. Probation: direct Inductive Argumentation. Crude or Gradual in procedure. Crude Induction, founded on experience in one mass (CP 2.759), presumes that future experience on a question will not differ utterly from all past experience (CP 2.756). Gradual Induction makes a new estimate of the proportion of truth in the hypothesis after each test, and is Qualitative or Quantitative. Qualitative Gradual Induction depends on estimating the relative evident weights of the various qualities of the subject class under investigation (CP 2.759; see also Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 7.114–20). Quantitative Gradual Induction depends on how often, in a fair sample of instances of S, S is found actually accompanied by P that was predicted for S (CP 2.758). It depends on measurements, or statistics, or counting.
iii. Sentential Induction. "...which, by Inductive reasonings, appraises the different Probations singly, then their combinations, then makes self-appraisal of these very appraisals themselves, and passes final judgment on the whole result".
Against Cartesianism

Peirce drew on the methodological implications of the four incapacities—no genuine introspection, no intuition in the sense of non-inferential cognition, no thought but in signs, and no conception of the absolutely incognizable—to attack philosophical Cartesianism, of which he said that:[127]

  1. "It teaches that philosophy must begin in universal doubt" – when, instead, we start with preconceptions, "prejudices [...] which it does not occur to us can be questioned", though we may find reason to question them later. "Let us not pretend to doubt in philosophy what we do not doubt in our hearts."
  2. "It teaches that the ultimate test of certainty is...in the individual consciousness" – when, instead, in science a theory stays on probation till agreement is reached, then it has no actual doubters left. No lone individual can reasonably hope to fulfill philosophy's multi-generational dream. When "candid and disciplined minds" continue to disagree on a theoretical issue, even the theory's author should feel doubts about it.
  3. It trusts to "a single thread of inference depending often upon inconspicuous premisses" – when, instead, philosophy should, "like the successful sciences", proceed only from tangible, scrutinizable premisses and trust not to any one argument but instead to "the multitude and variety of its arguments" as forming, not a chain at least as weak as its weakest link, but "a cable whose fibers", soever "slender, are sufficiently numerous and intimately connected".
  4. It renders many facts "absolutely inexplicable, unless to say that 'God makes them so' is to be regarded as an explanation"[163] – when, instead, philosophy should avoid being "unidealistic",[164] misbelieving that something real can defy or evade all possible ideas, and supposing, inevitably, "some absolutely inexplicable, unanalyzable ultimate", which explanatory surmise explains nothing and so is inadmissible.

Philosophy: metaphysics

Some noted articles
  • The Monist Metaphysical Series (1891–1893)
    • The Architecture of Theories (1891)
    • The Doctrine of Necessity Examined (1892)
    • The Law of Mind (1892)
    • Man's Glassy Essence (1892)
    • Evolutionary Love (1893)
  • Immortality in the Light of Synechism (1893 MS)

Peirce divided metaphysics into (1) ontology or general metaphysics, (2) psychical or religious metaphysics, and (3) physical metaphysics.

Ontology

Peirce was a scholastic realist, declaring for the reality of generals as early as 1868.[165] Regarding modalities (possibility, necessity, etc.), he came in later years to regard himself as having wavered earlier as to just how positively real the modalities are. In his 1897 "The Logic of Relatives" he wrote:

I formerly defined the possible as that which in a given state of information (real or feigned) we do not know not to be true. But this definition today seems to me only a twisted phrase which, by means of two negatives, conceals an anacoluthon. We know in advance of experience that certain things are not true, because we see they are impossible.

Peirce retained, as useful for some purposes, the definitions in terms of information states, but insisted that the pragmaticist is committed to a strong modal realism by conceiving of objects in terms of predictive general conditional propositions about how they would behave under certain circumstances.[166]

Psychical or religious metaphysics

Peirce believed in God, and characterized such belief as founded in an instinct explorable in musing over the worlds of ideas, brute facts, and evolving habits—and it is a belief in God not as an actual or existent being (in Peirce's sense of those words), but all the same as a real being.[167] In "A Neglected Argument for the Reality of God" (1908),[156] Peirce sketches, for God's reality, an argument to a hypothesis of God as the Necessary Being, a hypothesis which he describes in terms of how it would tend to develop and become compelling in musement and inquiry by a normal person who is led, by the hypothesis, to consider as being purposed the features of the worlds of ideas, brute facts, and evolving habits (for example scientific progress), such that the thought of such purposefulness will "stand or fall with the hypothesis"; meanwhile, according to Peirce, the hypothesis, in supposing an "infinitely incomprehensible" being, starts off at odds with its own nature as a purportively true conception, and so, no matter how much the hypothesis grows, it both (A) inevitably regards itself as partly true, partly vague, and as continuing to define itself without limit, and (B) inevitably has God appearing likewise vague but growing, though God as the Necessary Being is not vague or growing; but the hypothesis will hold it to be more false to say the opposite, that God is purposeless. Peirce also argued that the will is free[168] and (see Synechism) that there is at least an attenuated kind of immortality.

Physical metaphysics

Peirce held the view, which he called objective idealism, that "matter is effete mind, inveterate habits becoming physical laws".[169] Peirce asserted the reality of (1) absolute chance (his tychist view), (2) mechanical necessity (anancist view), and (3) that which he called the law of love (agapist view), echoing his categories Firstness, Secondness, and Thirdness, respectively. He held that fortuitous variation (which he also called "sporting"), mechanical necessity, and creative love are the three modes of evolution (modes called "tychasm", "anancasm", and "agapasm")[170] of the cosmos and its parts. He found his conception of agapasm embodied in Lamarckian evolution; the overall idea in any case is that of evolution tending toward an end or goal, and it could also be the evolution of a mind or a society; it is the kind of evolution which manifests workings of mind in some general sense. He said that overall he was a synechist, holding with reality of continuity,[171] especially of space, time, and law.[172]

Science of review

Peirce outlined two fields, "Cenoscopy" and "Science of Review", both of which he called philosophy. Both included philosophy about science. In 1903 he arranged them, from more to less theoretically basic, thus:[108]

  1. Science of Discovery.
    1. Mathematics.
    2. Cenoscopy (philosophy as discussed earlier in this article – categorial, normative, metaphysical), as First Philosophy, concerns positive phenomena in general, does not rely on findings from special sciences, and includes the general study of inquiry and scientific method.
    3. Idioscopy, or the Special Sciences (of nature and mind).
  2. Science of Review, as Ultimate Philosophy, arranges "... the results of discovery, beginning with digests, and going on to endeavor to form a philosophy of science". His examples included Humboldt's Cosmos, Comte's Philosophie positive, and Spencer's Synthetic Philosophy.
  3. Practical Science, or the Arts.

Peirce placed, within Science of Review, the work and theory of classifying the sciences (including mathematics and philosophy). His classifications, on which he worked for many years, draw on argument and wide knowledge, and are of interest both as a map for navigating his philosophy and as an accomplished polymath's survey of research in his time.

See also

Contemporaries associated with Peirce

References

  1. ^ a b c Hacking, Ian (1990). The Taming of Chance. A Universe of Chance. Cambridge University Press. pp. 200–15.
  2. ^ a b c d Stigler, Stephen M. (1978). "Mathematical statistics in the early States". Annals of Statistics. 6 (2): 239–65 [248]. doi:10.1214/aos/1176344123. JSTOR 2958876. MR 0483118.
  3. ^ a b Crease, Robert P. (2009). "Charles Sanders Peirce and the first absolute measurement standard". Physics Today. 62 (12): 39–44. Bibcode:2009PhT....62l..39C. doi:10.1063/1.3273015. S2CID 121338356. Archived from the original on January 12, 2013. In his brilliant but troubled life, Peirce was a pioneer in both metrology and philosophy.
  4. ^ a b Cadwallader, Thomas C. (1974). "Charles S. Peirce (1839–1914): The first American experimental psychologist". Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences. 10 (3): 291–98. doi:10.1002/1520-6696(197407)10:3<291::AID-JHBS2300100304>3.0.CO;2-N. PMID 11609224.
  5. ^ a b Wible, James R. (December 2008). "The economic mind of Charles Sanders Peirce". Contemporary Pragmatism. Vol. 5, no. 2. pp. 39–67.
  6. ^ a b Nöth, Winfried (2000). "Charles Sanders Peirce, Pathfinder in Linguistics".
    Nöth, Winfried (2000). "Digital Encyclopedia of Charles S. Peirce".
  7. ^ a b c d Houser, Nathan (1989), "Introduction", Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 4:xxxviii, find "Eighty-nine".
  8. ^ "Peirce", in the case of C. S. Peirce, always rhymes with the English-language word "terse" and so, in most dialects, is pronounced exactly like the English-language word " purse ".
  9. ^ "Note on the Pronunciation of 'Peirce'". Peirce Project Newsletter. Vol. 1, no. 3–4. December 1994.
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  12. ^ a b Peirce, C. S. (1886). "Letter, Peirce to A. Marquand". Writings of Charles S. Peirce. pp. 5:541–43. ISBN 978-0253372017. See Burks, Arthur W. (1978). "Charles S. Peirce, The new elements of mathematics" (PDF). Book Review. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. Eprint. 84 (5): 913–918. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1978-14533-9. Also Houser, Nathan. "Introduction". Writings of Charles S. Peirce. Vol. 5. p. xliv.
  13. ^ Weiss, Paul (1934). "Peirce, Charles Sanders". Dictionary of American Biography. Internet Archive.
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  15. ^ "Peirce, Charles Sanders" (1898), The National Cyclopedia of American Biography, v. 8, p. 409.
  16. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 54–56
  17. ^ Brent, Josep (1998). Charles Sanders Peirce: A Life (2nd ed.). Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press. pp. 363–64. ISBN 9780253211613.
  18. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 19–20, 53, 75, 245
  19. ^ Brent 1998, p. 40
  20. ^ a b c d Burch, Robert (2001, 2010), "Charles Sanders Peirce", Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  21. ^ Brent 1998, p. 139
  22. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 61–62
  23. ^ Brent 1998, p. 69
  24. ^ Brent 1998, p. 368
  25. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 79–81
  26. ^ a b c d e Moore, Edward C., and Robin, Richard S., eds., (1964), Studies in the Philosophy of Charles Sanders Peirce, Second Series, Amherst: U. of Massachusetts Press. On Peirce the astronomer, see Lenzen's chapter.
  27. ^ Brent 1998, p. 367
  28. ^ Fisch, Max (1983), "Peirce as Scientist, mathematician, historian, Logician, and Philosopher", Studies in Logic (new edition), see p. x.
  29. ^ See "Peirce Edition Project (UQÀM) – in short 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine" from PEP-UQÀM.
  30. ^ Houser, Nathan, "Introduction", Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 5:xxviii–xxix, find "Allison".
  31. ^ Brent 1998, p. 202
  32. ^ Randall R. Dipert (1994) The Life and Logical Contributions of O. H. Mitchell, Peirce's Gifted Student
  33. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 150–54, 195, 279–80, 289
  34. ^ Brent 1998, p. xv
  35. ^ Devlin, Keith (2000). The Math Gene. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0465016198.
  36. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 98–101
  37. ^ Brent 1998, p. 141
  38. ^ Brent 1998, p. 148
  39. ^ Houser, Nathan, "Introduction", Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 6, first paragraph.
  40. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 123, 368
  41. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 150–51, 368
  42. ^ In 1885 (Brent 1998, p. 369); in 1890 and 1900 (p. 273); in 1891 (pp. 215–16); and in 1892 (pp. 151–52, 222).
  43. ^ Brent 1998, p. 77
  44. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 191–92, 217, 270, 318, 321, 337.
  45. ^ Brent 1998, p. 13
  46. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 369–74
  47. ^ Brent 1998, p. 191
  48. ^ Brent 1998, p. 246
  49. ^ Brent 1998, p. 242
  50. ^ Brent 1998, p. 271
  51. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 249–55
  52. ^ Brent 1998, p. 371
  53. ^ Brent 1998, p. 189
  54. ^ Brent 1998, p. 370
  55. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 205–06
  56. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 374–76
  57. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 279–89
  58. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 261–64, 290–92, 324
  59. ^ Brent 1998, pp. 306–07, 315–16
  60. ^ In 2018, plans have been made to erect a memorial monument for Peirce at the site of burial – see: Justin Weinberg, 'A Proper Memorial Monument for Peirce', website Daily Nous, March 14, 2018.
  61. ^ Brent 1998, p. 34
  62. ^ Menand, Louis (2001). The Metaphysical Club. London: Flamingo. pp. 161–62. ISBN 978-0007126903.
  63. ^ Russell, Bertrand (1959), Wisdom of the West, p. 276
  64. ^ a b Anellis, Irving H. (1995), "Peirce Rustled, Russell Pierced: How Charles Peirce and Bertrand Russell Viewed Each Other's Work in Logic, and an Assessment of Russell's Accuracy and Role in the Historiography of Logic", Modern Logic 5, 270–328. Arisbe Eprint
  65. ^ Popper, Karl (1972), Objective Knowledge: An Evolutionary Approach, p. 212
  66. ^ See Royce, Josiah, and Kernan, W. Fergus (1916), "Charles Sanders Peirce", The Journal of Philosophy, Psychology, and Scientific Method v. 13, pp. 701–09. Arisbe Eprint
  67. ^ Ketner et al. (1986), Comprehensive Bibliography, p. iii
  68. ^ Hookway, Christopher (2008), "Pragmatism", Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  69. ^ Brent 1998, p. 8
  70. ^ . Indiana University Press Journals. Archived from the original on December 4, 2015. Retrieved June 17, 2017.
  71. ^ "Peirce, Benjamin: Charles Sanders". Webster's Biographical Dictionary. Springfield, Massachusetts. 1960 [1943].
  72. ^ Fisch, Max (1986), Peirce, Semeiotic, and Pragmatism, Kenneth Laine Ketner and Christian J. W. Kloesel, eds., Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana U. Press.
  73. ^ Theological Research Group in C.S. Peirce's Philosophy (Hermann Deuser, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen; Wilfred Härle, Philipps-Universität Marburg, Germany).
  74. ^ Postmodernism and Christian Philosophy. Quid Sit Postmodernismus?, p. 93,
  75. ^ Burks, Arthur, Introduction, Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 7, p. xi.
  76. ^ Robin, Richard S. (1967), Annotated Catalogue of the Papers of Charles S. Peirce. Amherst MA: University of Massachusetts Press.
  77. ^ "The manuscript material now (1997) comes to more than a hundred thousand pages. These contain many pages of no philosophical interest, but the number of pages on philosophy certainly number much more than half of that. Also, a significant but unknown number of manuscripts have been lost." – Joseph Ransdell (1997), "Some Leading Ideas of Peirce's Semiotic", end note 2, 1997 light revision of 1977 version in Semiotica 19:157–78.
  78. ^ Houser, Nathan, "The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Peirce Papers", Fourth Congress of the IASS, Perpignan, France, 1989. Signs of Humanity, v. 3, 1992, pp. 1259–68. Eprint
  79. ^ Memorandum to the President of Charles S. Peirce Society by Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen, U. of Helsinki, March 29, 2012. Eprint.
  80. ^ See for example "Collections of Peirce's Writings" at Commens, U. of Helsinki.
  81. ^ See 1987 review by B. Kuklick (of Peirce by Christopher Hookway), in British Journal for the Philosophy of Sciencev. 38, n. 1, pp. 117–19. First page.
  82. ^ Auspitz, Josiah Lee (1994), "The Wasp Leaves the Bottle: Charles Sanders Peirce", The American Scholar, v. 63, n. 4, Autumn 1994, 602–18. Arisbe Eprint.
  83. ^ Peirce (1879). "A Quincuncial Projection of the Sphere". American Journal of Mathematics. 2 (4): 394–397. doi:10.2307/2369491. JSTOR 2369491.
  84. ^ a b Burks, Arthur W., "Review: Charles S. Peirce, The new elements of mathematics", Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society v. 84, n. 5 (1978), pp. 913–18 (PDF).
  85. ^ Peirce (1860 MS), "Orders of Infinity", News from the Peirce Edition Project, September 2010 (PDF), p. 6, with the manuscript's text. Also see logic historian Irving Anellis's November 11, 2010 comment April 23, 2017, at the Wayback Machine at peirce-l.
  86. ^ Peirce (MS, winter of 1880–81), "A Boolean Algebra with One Constant", Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 4.12–20, Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 4:218–21. Google Preview. See Roberts, Don D. (1973), The Existential Graphs of Charles S. Peirce, p. 131.
  87. ^ Peirce (1881), "On the Logic of Number", American Journal of Mathematics v. 4, pp. 85–95. Reprinted (CP 3.252–88), (Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 4:299–309). See Shields, Paul (1997), "Peirce's Axiomatization of Arithmetic", in Houser et al., eds., Studies in the Logic of Charles S. Peirce.
  88. ^ a b Peirce (1885), "On the Algebra of Logic: A Contribution to the Philosophy of Notation", American Journal of Mathematics 7, two parts, first part published 1885, pp. 180–202 (see Houser in linked paragraph in "Introduction" in Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 4). Presented, National Academy of Sciences, Newport, RI, October 14–17, 1884 (see The Essential Peirce, 1, Headnote 16). 1885 is the year usually given for this work. Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 3.359–403, Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 5:162–90, The Essential Peirce, 1:225–28, in part.
  89. ^ a b c Putnam, Hilary (1982), "Peirce the Logician", Historia Mathematica 9, 290–301. Reprinted, pp. 252–60 in Putnam (1990), Realism with a Human Face, Harvard. Excerpt with article's last five pages.
  90. ^ It was in Peirce's 1885 "On the Algebra of Logic". See Byrnes, John (1998), "Peirce's First-Order Logic of 1885", Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society v. 34, n. 4, pp. 949–76.
  91. ^ Brady, Geraldine (2000), From Peirce to Skolem: A Neglected Chapter in the History of Logic, North-Holland/Elsevier Science BV, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
  92. ^ See Peirce (1898), Lecture 3, "The Logic of Relatives" (not the 1897 Monist article), Reasoning and the Logic of Things, pp. 146–64 [151]
  93. ^ Peirce (1898), "The Logic of Mathematics in Relation to Education" in Educational Review v. 15, pp. 209–16 (via Internet Archive). Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 3.553–62. See also his "The Simplest Mathematics" (1902 MS), Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 4.227–323.
  94. ^ Lewis, Clarence Irving (1918), A Survey of Symbolic Logic, see ch. 1, §7 "Peirce", pp. 79–106, see p. 79 (Internet Archive). Note that Lewis's bibliography lists works by Frege, tagged with asterisks as important.
  95. ^ Avery, John (2003) Information theory and evolution, p. 167; also Mitchell, Melanie, "My Scientific Ancestry October 8, 2014, at the Wayback Machine".
  96. ^ Beil, Ralph G. and Ketner, Kenneth (2003), "Peirce, Clifford, and Quantum Theory", International Journal of Theoretical Physics v. 42, n. 9, pp. 1957–72.
  97. ^ Houser, Roberts, and Van Evra, eds. (1997), Studies in the Logic of Charles Sanders Peirce, Indiana U., Bloomington, IN.
  98. ^ Misak, ed. (2004), The Cambridge Companion to Peirce, Cambridge U., UK.
  99. ^ Peirce (1893–1894, MS 949, p. 1)
  100. ^ Peirce (1903 MS), Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 6.176: "But I now define a pseudo-continuum as that which modern writers on the theory of functions call a continuum. But this is fully represented by [...] the totality of real values, rational and irrational [...]."
  101. ^ Peirce (1902 MS) and Ransdell, Joseph, ed. (1998), "Analysis of the Methods of Mathematical Demonstration", Memoir 4, Draft C, MS L75.90–102, see 99–100. (Once there, scroll down).
  102. ^ See:
    • Peirce (1908), "Some Amazing Mazes (Conclusion), Explanation of Curiosity the First", The Monist, v. 18, n. 3, pp. 416–44, see 463-64. Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 4.594–642, see 642.
    • Havenel, Jérôme (2008), "Peirce's Clarifications on Continuity", Transactions Winter 2008 pp. 68–133, see 119. Abstract.
  103. ^ Peirce condemned the use of "certain likelihoods" (The Essential Peirce, 2:108–09) even more strongly than he criticized Bayesian methods. Indeed Peirce used a bit of Bayesian inference in criticizing parapsychology (Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 6:76).
  104. ^ Miller, Richard W. (1975), "Propensity: Popper or Peirce?", British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, v. 26, n. 2, pp. 123–32. doi:10.1093/bjps/26.2.123. Eprint.
  105. ^ Haack, Susan and Kolenda, Konstantin (1977), "Two Fallibilists in Search of the Truth", Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Supplementary Volumes, v. 51, pp. 63–104. JSTOR 4106816
  106. ^ Peirce CS, Jastrow J. On Small Differences in Sensation. Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences 1885; 3:73–83.
  107. ^ a b Peirce (1897) "Fallibilism, Continuity, and Evolution", Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 1.141–75 (Eprint), placed by the Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, editors directly after "F.R.L." (1899, Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 1.135–40).
  108. ^ a b Peirce (1903), Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 1.180–202 and (1906) "The Basis of Pragmaticism", The Essential Peirce, 2:372–73, see "Philosophy" at Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  109. ^ See in "Firstness", "Secondness", and "Thirdness" in Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  110. ^ Peirce (1893), "The Categories" MS 403. Arisbe Eprint, edited by Joseph Ransdell, with information on the re-write, and interleaved with the 1867 "New List" for comparison.
  111. ^ "Minute Logic", CP 2.87, c.1902 and A Letter to Lady Welby, CP 8.329, 1904. See relevant quotes under "Categories, Cenopythagorean Categories" in Commens Dictionary of Peirce's Terms (CDPT), Bergman & Paalova, eds., U. of Helsinki.
  112. ^ See quotes under "Firstness, First [as a category]" in CDPT.
  113. ^ a b The ground blackness is the pure abstraction of the quality black. Something black is something embodying blackness, pointing us back to the abstraction. The quality black amounts to reference to its own pure abstraction, the ground blackness. The question is not merely of noun (the ground) versus adjective (the quality), but rather of whether we are considering the black(ness) as abstracted away from application to an object, or instead as so applied (for instance to a stove). Yet note that Peirce's distinction here is not that between a property-general and a property-individual (a trope). See "On a New List of Categories" (1867), in the section appearing in CP 1.551. Regarding the ground, cf. the Scholastic conception of a relation's foundation, Google limited preview Deely 1982, p. 61
  114. ^ A quale in this sense is a such, just as a quality is a suchness. Cf. under "Use of Letters" in §3 of Peirce's "Description of a Notation for the Logic of Relatives", Memoirs of the American Academy, v. 9, pp. 317–78 (1870), separately reprinted (1870), from which see p. 6 via Google books, also reprinted in CP 3.63:

    Now logical terms are of three grand classes. The first embraces those whose logical form involves only the conception of quality, and which therefore represent a thing simply as "a —." These discriminate objects in the most rudimentary way, which does not involve any consciousness of discrimination. They regard an object as it is in itself as such (quale); for example, as horse, tree, or man. These are absolute terms. (Peirce, 1870. But also see "Quale-Consciousness", 1898, in CP 6.222–37.)

  115. ^ See quotes under "Secondness, Second [as a category]" in CDPT.
  116. ^ See quotes under "Thirdness, Third [as a category]" in CDPT.
  117. ^ "Charles S. Peirce on Esthetics and Ethics: A Bibliography 6 April 2003 at the Wayback Machine" (PDF) by Kelly A. Parker in 1999.
  118. ^ Peirce (1902 MS), Carnegie Application, edited by Joseph Ransdell, Memoir 2, see table.
  119. ^ See Esthetics at Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  120. ^ a b c Peirce (1899 MS), "F.R.L." [First Rule of Logic], Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 1.135–40,
  121. ^ a b Peirce (1882), "Introductory Lecture on the Study of Logic" delivered September 1882, Johns Hopkins University Circulars, v. 2, n. 19, pp. 11–12 (via Google), November 1882. Reprinted (The Essential Peirce, 1:210–14; Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 4:378–82; Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 7.59–76). The definition of logic quoted by Peirce is by Peter of Spain.
  122. ^ Peirce (1878), "The Doctrine of Chances", Popular Science Monthly, v. 12, pp. 604–15 (CP 2.645–68, Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 3:276–90, The Essential Peirce, 1:142–54).

    ... death makes the number of our risks, the number of our inferences, finite, and so makes their mean result uncertain. The very idea of probability and of reasoning rests on the assumption that this number is indefinitely great. ... logicality inexorably requires that our interests shall not be limited. ... Logic is rooted in the social principle.

  123. ^ Peirce, Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.448 footnote, from "The Basis of Pragmaticism" in 1906.
  124. ^ a b c Peirce, (1868), "Questions concerning certain Faculties claimed for Man", Journal of Speculative Philosophy v. 2, n. 2, pp. 103–14. On thought in signs, see p. 112. Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.213–63 (on thought in signs, see 253), Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 2:193–211, The Essential Peirce, 2:11–27. Arisbe Eprint.
  125. ^ a b See rhetoric definitions at Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  126. ^ Peirce (1902), The Carnegie Institute Application, Memoir 10, MS L75.361–62, Arisbe Eprint.
  127. ^ a b c d e Peirce (1868), "Some Consequences of Four Incapacities", Journal of Speculative Philosophy v. 2, n. 3, pp. 140–57. Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.264–317, Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 2:211–42, The Essential Peirce, 1:28–55. Arisbe Eprint.
  128. ^ a b Peirce, "Grounds of Validity of the Laws of Logic: Further Consequences of Four Incapacities", Journal of Speculative Philosophy v. II, n. 4, pp. 193–208. Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.318–57, Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 2:242–72 (Peirce Edition Project, Eprint), The Essential Peirce, 1:56–82.
  129. ^ Peirce (1905), "What Pragmatism Is", The Monist, v. XV, n. 2, pp. 161–81, see 167. Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.411–37, see 416. Arisbe Eprint.
  130. ^ Peirce 1907, Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.484. Reprinted, The Essential Peirce, 2:411 in "Pragmatism" (398–433).
  131. ^ See "Quasi-mind" in Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  132. ^ Peirce, "Carnegie Application", The New Elements of Mathematics v. 4, p. 54.
  133. ^ Peirce (1867), "Upon Logical Comprehension and Extension" (CP 2.391–426), (Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 2:70–86).
  134. ^ a b See pp. 404–09 in "Pragmatism" in The Essential Peirce, 2. Ten quotes on collateral experience from Peirce provided by Joseph Ransdell can be viewed here at peirce-l's Lyris archive. Note: Ransdell's quotes from Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 8.178–79 are also in The Essential Peirce, 2:493–94, which gives their date as 1909; and his quote from Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 8.183 is also in The Essential Peirce, 2:495–96, which gives its date as 1909.
  135. ^ Peirce, letter to William James, dated 1909, see The Essential Peirce, 2:492.
  136. ^ a b c See "76 definitions of the sign by C.S.Peirce", collected by Robert Marty (U. of Perpignan, France).
  137. ^ Peirce, A Letter to Lady Welby (1908), Semiotic and Significs, pp. 80–81:

    I define a Sign as anything which is so determined by something else, called its Object, and so determines an effect upon a person, which effect I call its Interpretant, that the latter is thereby mediately determined by the former. My insertion of "upon a person" is a sop to Cerberus, because I despair of making my own broader conception understood.

  138. ^ Representamen (/ˌrɛprɪzɛnˈtmən/ REP-ri-zen-TAY-mən) was adopted (not coined) by Peirce as his technical term for the sign as covered in his theory, in case a divergence should come to light between his theoretical version and the popular senses of the word "sign". He eventually stopped using "representamen". See The Essential Peirce, 2:272–73 and Semiotic and Significs p. 193, quotes in "Representamen" at Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  139. ^ Eco, Umberto (1984). Semiotics and the Philosophy of Language. Bloomington & Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. p. 15. ISBN 978-0253203984.
  140. ^ a b Peirce (1909), A Letter to William James, The Essential Peirce, 2:492–502. Fictional object, 498. Object as universe of discourse, 492. See "Dynamical Object" at Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  141. ^ See "Immediate Object", etc., at Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  142. ^ a b Peirce (1903 MS), "Nomenclature and Divisions of Triadic Relations, as Far as They Are Determined", under other titles in Collected Papers (CP) v. 2, paragraphs 233–72, and reprinted under the original title in Essential Peirce (EP) v. 2, pp. 289–99. Also see image of MS 339 (August 7, 1904) supplied to peirce-l by Bernard Morand of the Institut Universitaire de Technologie (France), Département Informatique.
  143. ^ a b On the varying terminology, look up in Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  144. ^ Popular Science Monthly, v. 13, pp. 470–82, see 472 or the book at Wikisource. Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 2.619–44 [623]
  145. ^ See, under "Abduction" at Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce, the following quotes:
    • On correction of "A Theory of Probable Inference", see quotes from "Minute Logic", Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 2.102, c. 1902, and from the Carnegie Application (L75), 1902, Historical Perspectives on Peirce's Logic of Science v. 2, pp. 1031–32.
    • On new logical form for abduction, see quote from Harvard Lectures on Pragmatism, 1903, Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.188–89.
    See also Santaella, Lucia (1997) "The Development of Peirce's Three Types of Reasoning: Abduction, Deduction, and Induction", 6th Congress of the IASS. Eprint.
  146. ^ "Lectures on Pragmatism", 1903, Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.171.
  147. ^ A Letter to J. H. Kehler (dated 1911), The New Elements of Mathematics v. 3, pp. 203–04, see in "Retroduction" at Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  148. ^ James, William (1897), The Will to Believe, see p. 124.
  149. ^ See Pragmaticism#Pragmaticism's name for discussion and references.
  150. ^ a b "That the rule of induction will hold good in the long run may be deduced from the principle that reality is only the object of the final opinion to which sufficient investigation would lead", in Peirce (1878 April), "The Probability of Induction", p. 718 (via Internet Archive ) in Popular Science Monthly, v. 12, pp. 705–18. Reprinted in Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 2.669–93, Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 3:290–305, The Essential Peirce, 1:155–69, elsewhere.
  151. ^ Peirce (1902), Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.13 note 1.
  152. ^ See Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 1.34 Eprint (in "The Spirit of Scholasticism"), where Peirce ascribed the success of modern science less to a novel interest in verification than to the improvement of verification.
  153. ^ See Joseph Ransdell's comments and his tabular list of titles of Peirce's proposed list of memoirs in 1902 for his Carnegie application, Eprint
  154. ^ Peirce (1905), "Issues of Pragmaticism", The Monist, v. XV, n. 4, pp. 481–99. Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.438–63. Also important: Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.497–525.
  155. ^ Peirce, "Philosophy and the Conduct of Life", Lecture 1 of the 1898 Cambridge (MA) Conferences Lectures, Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 1.616–48 in part and Reasoning and the Logic of Things, 105–22, reprinted in The Essential Peirce, 2:27–41.
  156. ^ a b Peirce (1908), "A Neglected Argument for the Reality of God", published in large part, Hibbert Journal v. 7, 90–112. Reprinted with an unpublished part, Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 6.452–85, Selected Writings pp. 358–79, The Essential Peirce, 2:434–50, Peirce on Signs 260–78.
  157. ^ See also Nubiola, Jaime (2004), "Il Lume Naturale: Abduction and God", Semiotiche I/2, 91–102.
  158. ^ Peirce (c. 1906), "PAP (Prolegomena to an Apology for Pragmatism)" (MS 293), The New Elements of Mathematics v. 4, pp. 319–20, first quote under "Abduction" at Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  159. ^ Peirce (1903), "Pragmatism – The Logic of Abduction", Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 5.195–205, especially 196. Eprint.
  160. ^ Peirce, Carnegie application, MS L75.279–80: Memoir 27, Draft B.
  161. ^ a b See MS L75.329–30, from Draft D of Memoir 27 of Peirce's application to the Carnegie Institution:

    Consequently, to discover is simply to expedite an event that would occur sooner or later, if we had not troubled ourselves to make the discovery. Consequently, the art of discovery is purely a question of economics. The economics of research is, so far as logic is concerned, the leading doctrine with reference to the art of discovery. Consequently, the conduct of abduction, which is chiefly a question of heuretic and is the first question of heuretic, is to be governed by economical considerations.

  162. ^ Peirce, C. S., "On the Logic of Drawing Ancient History from Documents", The Essential Peirce, 2, see pp. 107–09. On Twenty Questions, see 109:

    Thus, twenty skillful hypotheses will ascertain what 200,000 stupid ones might fail to do.

  163. ^ Peirce believed in God. See section #Philosophy: metaphysics.
  164. ^ However, Peirce disagreed with Hegelian absolute idealism. See for example Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 8.131.
  165. ^ Peirce (1868), "Nominalism versus Realism", Journal of Speculative Philosophy v. 2, n. 1, pp. 57–61. Reprinted (CP 6.619–24), (Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 2:144–53).
  166. ^ On developments in Peirce's realism, see:
    • Peirce (1897), "The Logic of Relatives", The Monist v. VII, n. 2 pp. 161–217, see 206 (via Google). Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 3.456–552.
    • Peirce (1905), "Issues of Pragmaticism", The Monist v. XV, n. 4, pp. 481–99, see 495–96 (via Google). Reprinted (CP 5.438–63, see 453–57).
    • Peirce (c. 1905), Letter to Signor Calderoni, Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 8.205–13, see 208.
    • Lane, Robert (2007), "Peirce's Modal Shift: From Set Theory to Pragmaticism", Journal of the History of Philosophy, v. 45, n. 4.
  167. ^ Peirce in his 1906 "Answers to Questions concerning my Belief in God", Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 6.495, Eprint February 23, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, reprinted in part as "The Concept of God" in Philosophical Writings of Peirce, J. Buchler, ed., 1940, pp. 375–78:

    I will also take the liberty of substituting "reality" for "existence." This is perhaps overscrupulosity; but I myself always use exist in its strict philosophical sense of "react with the other like things in the environment." Of course, in that sense, it would be fetichism to say that God "exists." The word "reality," on the contrary, is used in ordinary parlance in its correct philosophical sense. [....] I define the real as that which holds its characters on such a tenure that it makes not the slightest difference what any man or men may have thought them to be, or ever will have thought them to be, here using thought to include, imagining, opining, and willing (as long as forcible means are not used); but the real thing's characters will remain absolutely untouched.

  168. ^ See his "The Doctrine of Necessity Examined" (1892) and "Reply to the Necessitarians" (1893), to both of which editor Paul Carus responded.
  169. ^ Peirce (1891), "The Architecture of Theories", The Monist v. 1, pp. 161–76, see p. 170, via Internet Archive. Reprinted (CP 6.7–34) and (The Essential Peirce, 1:285–97, see p. 293).
  170. ^ See "tychism", "tychasm", "tychasticism", and the rest, at http://www.helsinki.fi/science/commens/dictionary.html August 22, 2010, at the Wayback Machine Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  171. ^ Peirce (1893), "Evolutionary Love", The Monist v. 3, pp. 176–200. Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, 6.278–317, The Essential Peirce, 1:352–72. Arisbe Eprint May 20, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  172. ^ See p. 115 in Reasoning and the Logic of Things (Peirce's 1898 lectures).

External links

  • Arisbe: The Peirce Gateway, Joseph Ransdell, ed. Over 100 online writings by Peirce as of November 24, 2010, with annotations. Hundreds of online papers on Peirce. The peirce-l e-forum. Much else.
  • (1998–2003), Donald Cunningham & Jean Umiker-Sebeok, Indiana U.
  • Centro Internacional de Estudos Peirceanos (CIEP) and previously (CeneP), Lucia Santaella et al., Pontifical Catholic U. of São Paulo (PUC-SP), Brazil. In Portuguese, some English.
  • Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce, Mats Bergman, Sami Paavola, & João Queiroz, formerly . Includes Commens Dictionary of Peirce's Terms with Peirce's definitions, often many per term across the decades, and the Digital Encyclopedia of Charles S. Peirce (old edition still at old website).
  • Centro Studi Peirce September 8, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, Carlo Sini, Rossella Fabbrichesi, et al., U. of Milan, Italy. In Italian and English. Part of Pragma.
  • Charles S. Peirce Foundation. Co-sponsoring the 2014 Peirce International Centennial Congress (100th anniversary of Peirce's death).
  • Charles S. Peirce Society
    . Quarterly journal of Peirce studies since spring 1965. of all issues.
  • Charles S. Peirce Studies, Brian Kariger, ed.
  • Charles Sanders Peirce at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • Collegium for the Advanced Study of Picture Act and Embodiment: The Peirce Archive. Humboldt U, Berlin, Germany. Cataloguing Peirce's innumerable drawings & graphic materials. (Prof. Aud Sissel Hoel).
  • Digital Encyclopedia of Charles S. Peirce, João Queiroz (now at UFJF) & Ricardo Gudwin (at Unicamp), eds., [[Universidade Estadual de Campinas|U. of Campinas]], Brazil, in English. 84 authors listed, 51 papers online & more listed, as of January 31, 2009. Newer edition now at Commens Digital Companion to C.S. Peirce.
  • , Jay Zeman, ed., U. of Florida. Has 4 Peirce texts.
  • Grupo de Estudios Peirceanos (GEP) / Peirce Studies Group, Jaime Nubiola, ed., U. of Navarra, Spain. Big study site, Peirce & others in Spanish & English, bibliography, more.
  • Helsinki Peirce Research Center (HPRC), Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen et al., U. of Helsinki.
  • His Glassy Essence. Autobiographical Peirce. Kenneth Laine Ketner.
  • Institute for Studies in Pragmaticism, Kenneth Laine Ketner, Clyde Hendrick, et al., Texas Tech U. Peirce's life and works.
  • , Uwe Wirth et al., eds., Goethe U., Frankfurt, Germany. Uses frames. Click on link at bottom of its home page for English. Moved to U. of Gießen, Germany, not in English but see Artikel section there.
  • (1974–2003) – Institut de Recherche en Sémiotique, Communication et Éducation, Gérard Deledalle, Joëlle Réthoré, U. of Perpignan, France.
  • , Vinicius Romanini, U. of São Paulo, Brazil. English, Portuguese.
  • at Signo: Theoretical Semiotics on the Web, Louis Hébert, director, supported by U. of Québec. Theory, application, exercises of Peirce's and . English, French.
  • Peirce Edition Project (PEP), Indiana U.–Purdue U. Indianapolis (IUPUI). André De Tienne, Nathan Houser, et al. Editors of the Writings of Charles S. Peirce (W) and The Essential Peirce (EP) v. 2. Many study aids such as the Robin Catalog of Peirce's manuscripts & letters and:
    Biographical introductions to EP 1–2 and W 1–6 & 8
    Most of Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 2 readable online.
    . Working on Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 7: Peirce's work on the Century Dictionary. .
  • Peirce's Existential Graphs, Frithjof Dau, Germany
  • Peirce Research Group, Department of Philosophy "Piero Martinetti" – University of Milan, Italy.
  • Pragmatism Cybrary, David Hildebrand & John Shook.
  • (late 1990s), Institut für Didaktik der Mathematik (Michael Hoffman, Michael Otte, Universität Bielefeld, Germany). See Peirce Project Newsletter v. 3, n. 1, p. 13.
  • Semiotics according to Robert Marty, with 76 definitions of the sign by C. S. Peirce.
  • Works by Charles Sanders Peirce at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

charles, sanders, peirce, ɜːr, purss, september, 1839, april, 1914, american, philosopher, logician, mathematician, scientist, sometimes, known, father, pragmatism, born, 1839, september, 1839cambridge, massachusetts, diedapril, 1914, 1914, aged, milford, penn. Charles Sanders Peirce p ɜːr s 8 9 PURSS September 10 1839 April 19 1914 was an American philosopher logician mathematician and scientist who is sometimes known as the father of pragmatism 10 11 Charles Sanders PeirceBorn 1839 09 10 September 10 1839Cambridge Massachusetts U S DiedApril 19 1914 1914 04 19 aged 74 Milford Pennsylvania U S Alma materHarvard UniversityRelativesBenjamin Peirce father EraLate modern philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolPragmatismPragmaticismInstitutionsJohns Hopkins UniversityNotable studentsList John DeweyFabian Franklin 7 Benjamin Ives GilmanJoseph JastrowChristine LaddAllan MarquandJosiah RoyceThorstein Veblen 7 Main interestsLogicmathematicsstatistics 1 2 philosophymetrology 3 chemistryexperimental psychology 4 economics 5 linguistics 6 history of sciencePhilosophical logicmetaphysicsepistemologyInfluences George BooleGeorg CantorDuns ScotusG W F HegelImmanuel KantBenjamin PeirceThomas ReidHerbert SpencerThomas von ErfurtRichard WhatelyInfluenced Louis CouturatJohn DeelyGilles DeleuzeJohn DeweyUmberto EcoWilliam JamesAlfred KorzybskiChristine LaddC W MillsErnst SchroderAlfred TarskiRichard SwedbergJosiah RoyceKarl Otto ApelSignatureEducated as a chemist and employed as a scientist for thirty years Peirce made major contributions to logic a subject that for him encompassed much of what is now called epistemology and the philosophy of science He saw logic as the formal branch of semiotics of which he is a founder which foreshadowed the debate among logical positivists and proponents of philosophy of language that dominated 20th century Western philosophy Additionally he defined the concept of abductive reasoning as well as rigorously formulated mathematical induction and deductive reasoning As early as 1886 he saw that logical operations could be carried out by electrical switching circuits The same idea was used decades later to produce digital computers 12 In 1934 the philosopher Paul Weiss called Peirce the most original and versatile of America s philosophers and America s greatest logician 13 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early employment 1 2 Johns Hopkins University 1 3 Poverty 1 4 Slavery the American Civil War and racism 2 Reception 3 Works 4 Mathematics 4 1 Mathematics of logic 4 2 Continua 4 3 Probability and statistics 5 Philosophy 5 1 Theory of categories 5 2 Aesthetics and ethics 6 Philosophy logic or semiotic 6 1 Logic as philosophical 6 1 1 Presuppositions of logic 6 1 2 Four incapacities 6 1 3 Logic as formal semiotic 6 2 Signs 6 2 1 Sign relation 6 2 2 Semiotic elements 6 2 3 Classes of signs 6 3 Modes of inference 6 4 Pragmatism 6 4 1 Theory of inquiry 6 4 1 1 Critical common sensism 6 4 1 2 Rival methods of inquiry 6 4 1 3 Scientific method 6 4 1 4 Against Cartesianism 7 Philosophy metaphysics 7 1 Ontology 7 2 Psychical or religious metaphysics 7 3 Physical metaphysics 8 Science of review 9 See also 9 1 Contemporaries associated with Peirce 10 References 11 External linksLife Edit Peirce s birthplace Now part of Lesley University s Graduate School of Arts and Social Sciences Peirce was born at 3 Phillips Place in Cambridge Massachusetts He was the son of Sarah Hunt Mills and Benjamin Peirce himself a professor of astronomy and mathematics at Harvard University At age 12 Charles read his older brother s copy of Richard Whately s Elements of Logic then the leading English language text on the subject So began his lifelong fascination with logic and reasoning 14 He went on to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree and a Master of Arts degree 1862 from Harvard In 1863 the Lawrence Scientific School awarded him a Bachelor of Science degree Harvard s first summa cum laude chemistry degree 15 His academic record was otherwise undistinguished 16 At Harvard he began lifelong friendships with Francis Ellingwood Abbot Chauncey Wright and William James 17 One of his Harvard instructors Charles William Eliot formed an unfavorable opinion of Peirce This proved fateful because Eliot while President of Harvard 1869 1909 a period encompassing nearly all of Peirce s working life repeatedly vetoed Peirce s employment at the university 18 Peirce suffered from his late teens onward from a nervous condition then known as facial neuralgia which would today be diagnosed as trigeminal neuralgia His biographer Joseph Brent says that when in the throes of its pain he was at first almost stupefied and then aloof cold depressed extremely suspicious impatient of the slightest crossing and subject to violent outbursts of temper 19 Its consequences may have led to the social isolation of his later life Early employment Edit Between 1859 and 1891 Peirce was intermittently employed in various scientific capacities by the United States Coast Survey and its successor the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey 20 where he enjoyed his highly influential father s protection until the latter s death in 1880 21 That employment exempted Peirce from having to take part in the American Civil War it would have been very awkward for him to do so as the Boston Brahmin Peirces sympathized with the Confederacy 22 At the Survey he worked mainly in geodesy and gravimetry refining the use of pendulums to determine small local variations in the Earth s gravity 20 He was elected a resident fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in January 1867 23 The Survey sent him to Europe five times 24 first in 1871 as part of a group sent to observe a solar eclipse There he sought out Augustus De Morgan William Stanley Jevons and William Kingdon Clifford 25 British mathematicians and logicians whose turn of mind resembled his own From 1869 to 1872 he was employed as an assistant in Harvard s astronomical observatory doing important work on determining the brightness of stars and the shape of the Milky Way 26 On April 20 1877 he was elected a member of the National Academy of Sciences 27 Also in 1877 he proposed measuring the meter as so many wavelengths of light of a certain frequency 28 the kind of definition employed from 1960 to 1983 During the 1880s Peirce s indifference to bureaucratic detail waxed while his Survey work s quality and timeliness waned Peirce took years to write reports that he should have completed in months according to whom Meanwhile he wrote entries ultimately thousands during 1883 1909 on philosophy logic science and other subjects for the encyclopedic Century Dictionary 29 In 1885 an investigation by the Allison Commission exonerated Peirce but led to the dismissal of Superintendent Julius Hilgard and several other Coast Survey employees for misuse of public funds 30 In 1891 Peirce resigned from the Coast Survey at Superintendent Thomas Corwin Mendenhall s request 31 Johns Hopkins University Edit In 1879 Peirce was appointed lecturer in logic at Johns Hopkins University which had strong departments in areas that interested him such as philosophy Royce and Dewey completed their Ph D s at Hopkins psychology taught by G Stanley Hall and studied by Joseph Jastrow who coauthored a landmark empirical study with Peirce and mathematics taught by J J Sylvester who came to admire Peirce s work on mathematics and logic His Studies in Logic by Members of the Johns Hopkins University 1883 contained works by himself and Allan Marquand Christine Ladd Benjamin Ives Gilman and Oscar Howard Mitchell 32 several of whom were his graduate students 7 Peirce s nontenured position at Hopkins was the only academic appointment he ever held Brent documents something Peirce never suspected namely that his efforts to obtain academic employment grants and scientific respectability were repeatedly frustrated by the covert opposition of a major Canadian American scientist of the day Simon Newcomb 33 Peirce s efforts may also have been hampered by what Brent characterizes as his difficult personality 34 In contrast Keith Devlin believes that Peirce s work was too far ahead of his time to be appreciated by the academic establishment of the day and that this played a large role in his inability to obtain a tenured position 35 Peirce s personal life undoubtedly worked against his professional success After his first wife Harriet Melusina Fay Zina left him in 1875 36 Peirce while still legally married became involved with Juliette whose last name given variously as Froissy and Pourtalai 37 and nationality she spoke French 38 remains uncertain 39 When his divorce from Zina became final in 1883 he married Juliette 40 That year Newcomb pointed out to a Johns Hopkins trustee that Peirce while a Hopkins employee had lived and traveled with a woman to whom he was not married the ensuing scandal led to his dismissal in January 1884 41 Over the years Peirce sought academic employment at various universities without success 42 He had no children by either marriage 43 Poverty Edit Arisbe in 2011 Cambridge where Peirce was born and raised New York City where he often visited and sometimes lived and Milford where he spent the later years of his life with his second wife Juliette Juliette and Charles by a well at their home Arisbe in 1907 Charles and Juliette Peirce s grave In 1887 Peirce spent part of his inheritance from his parents to buy 2 000 acres 8 km2 of rural land near Milford Pennsylvania which never yielded an economic return 44 There he had an 1854 farmhouse remodeled to his design 45 The Peirces named the property Arisbe There they lived with few interruptions for the rest of their lives 46 Charles writing prolifically much of it unpublished to this day see Works Living beyond their means soon led to grave financial and legal difficulties 47 He spent much of his last two decades unable to afford heat in winter and subsisting on old bread donated by the local baker Unable to afford new stationery he wrote on the verso side of old manuscripts An outstanding warrant for assault and unpaid debts led to his being a fugitive in New York City for a while 48 Several people including his brother James Mills Peirce 49 and his neighbors relatives of Gifford Pinchot settled his debts and paid his property taxes and mortgage 50 Peirce did some scientific and engineering consulting and wrote much for meager pay mainly encyclopedic dictionary entries and reviews for The Nation with whose editor Wendell Phillips Garrison he became friendly He did translations for the Smithsonian Institution at its director Samuel Langley s instigation Peirce also did substantial mathematical calculations for Langley s research on powered flight Hoping to make money Peirce tried inventing 51 He began but did not complete several books 52 In 1888 President Grover Cleveland appointed him to the Assay Commission 53 From 1890 on he had a friend and admirer in Judge Francis C Russell of Chicago 54 who introduced Peirce to editor Paul Carus and owner Edward C Hegeler of the pioneering American philosophy journal The Monist which eventually published at least 14 articles by Peirce 55 He wrote many texts in James Mark Baldwin s Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology 1901 1905 half of those credited to him appear to have been written actually by Christine Ladd Franklin under his supervision 56 He applied in 1902 to the newly formed Carnegie Institution for a grant to write a systematic book describing his life s work The application was doomed his nemesis Newcomb served on the Carnegie Institution executive committee and its president had been president of Johns Hopkins at the time of Peirce s dismissal 57 The one who did the most to help Peirce in these desperate times was his old friend William James dedicating his Will to Believe 1897 to Peirce and arranging for Peirce to be paid to give two series of lectures at or near Harvard 1898 and 1903 58 Most important each year from 1907 until James s death in 1910 James wrote to his friends in the Boston intelligentsia to request financial aid for Peirce the fund continued even after James died Peirce reciprocated by designating James s eldest son as his heir should Juliette predecease him 59 It has been believed that this was also why Peirce used Santiago St James in English as a middle name but he appeared in print as early as 1890 as Charles Santiago Peirce See Charles Santiago Sanders Peirce for discussion and references Peirce died destitute in Milford Pennsylvania twenty years before his widow Juliette Peirce kept the urn with Peirce s ashes at Arisbe In 1934 Pennsylvania Governor Gifford Pinchot arranged for Juliette s burial in Milford Cemetery The urn with Peirce s ashes was interred with Juliette 60 Slavery the American Civil War and racism Edit Peirce grew up in a home where white supremacy was taken for granted and Southern slavery was considered natural 61 Until the outbreak of the Civil War his father described himself as a secessionist but after the outbreak of the war this stopped and he became a Union partisan providing donations to the Sanitary Commission the leading Northern war charity No members of the Peirce family volunteered or enlisted Peirce shared his father s views and liked to use the following syllogism to illustrate the unreliability of traditional forms of logic if one doesn t keep the meaning of the words phrases and sentences consistent throughout an argument 62 All Men are equal in their political rights Negroes are Men Therefore negroes are equal in political rights to whites Reception EditBertrand Russell 1959 wrote Beyond doubt he was one of the most original minds of the later nineteenth century and certainly the greatest American thinker ever 63 Russell and Whitehead s Principia Mathematica published from 1910 to 1913 does not mention Peirce Peirce s work was not widely known until later 64 A N Whitehead while reading some of Peirce s unpublished manuscripts soon after arriving at Harvard in 1924 was struck by how Peirce had anticipated his own process thinking On Peirce and process metaphysics see Lowe 1964 26 Karl Popper viewed Peirce as one of the greatest philosophers of all times 65 Yet Peirce s achievements were not immediately recognized His imposing contemporaries William James and Josiah Royce 66 admired him and Cassius Jackson Keyser at Columbia and C K Ogden wrote about Peirce with respect but to no immediate effect The first scholar to give Peirce his considered professional attention was Royce s student Morris Raphael Cohen the editor of an anthology of Peirce s writings entitled Chance Love and Logic 1923 and the author of the first bibliography of Peirce s scattered writings 67 John Dewey studied under Peirce at Johns Hopkins 7 From 1916 onward Dewey s writings repeatedly mention Peirce with deference His 1938 Logic The Theory of Inquiry is much influenced by Peirce 68 The publication of the first six volumes of Collected Papers 1931 1935 the most important event to date in Peirce studies and one that Cohen made possible by raising the needed funds 69 did not prompt an outpouring of secondary studies The editors of those volumes Charles Hartshorne and Paul Weiss did not become Peirce specialists Early landmarks of the secondary literature include the monographs by Buchler 1939 Feibleman 1946 and Goudge 1950 the 1941 PhD thesis by Arthur W Burks who went on to edit volumes 7 and 8 and the studies edited by Wiener and Young 1952 The Charles S Peirce Society was founded in 1946 Its Transactions an academic quarterly specializing in Peirce s pragmatism and American philosophy has appeared since 1965 70 See Phillips 2014 62 for discussion of Peirce and Dewey relative to transactionalism By 1943 such was Peirce s reputation in the US at least that Webster s Biographical Dictionary said that Peirce was now regarded as the most original thinker and greatest logician of his time 71 In 1949 while doing unrelated archival work the historian of mathematics Carolyn Eisele 1902 2000 chanced on an autograph letter by Peirce So began her forty years of research on Peirce the mathematician and scientist culminating in Eisele 1976 1979 1985 Beginning around 1960 the philosopher and historian of ideas Max Fisch 1900 1995 emerged as an authority on Peirce Fisch 1986 72 He includes many of his relevant articles in a survey Fisch 1986 422 48 of the impact of Peirce s thought through 1983 Peirce has gained an international following marked by university research centers devoted to Peirce studies and pragmatism in Brazil CeneP CIEP Finland HPRC and Commens Germany Wirth s group Hoffman s and Otte s group and Deuser s and Harle s group 73 France L I R S C E Spain GEP and Italy CSP His writings have been translated into several languages including German French Finnish Spanish and Swedish Since 1950 there have been French Italian Spanish British and Brazilian Peirce scholars of note For many years the North American philosophy department most devoted to Peirce was the University of Toronto thanks in part to the leadership of Thomas Goudge and David Savan In recent years U S Peirce scholars have clustered at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis home of the Peirce Edition Project PEP and Pennsylvania State University Currently considerable interest is being taken in Peirce s ideas by researchers wholly outside the arena of academic philosophy The interest comes from industry business technology intelligence organizations and the military and it has resulted in the existence of a substantial number of agencies institutes businesses and laboratories in which ongoing research into and development of Peircean concepts are being vigorously undertaken Robert Burch 2001 updated 2010 20 In recent years Peirce s trichotomy of signs is exploited by a growing number of practitioners for marketing and design tasks John Deely writes that Peirce was the last of the moderns and first of the postmoderns He lauds Peirce s doctrine of signs as a contribution to the dawn of the Postmodern epoch Dewey additionally comments that Peirce stands in a position analogous to the position occupied by Augustine as last of the Western Fathers and first of the medievals 74 Works EditSee also Charles Sanders Peirce bibliography Peirce s reputation rests largely on academic papers published in American scientific and scholarly journals such as Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences the Journal of Speculative Philosophy The Monist Popular Science Monthly the American Journal of Mathematics Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences The Nation and others See Articles by Peirce published in his lifetime for an extensive list with links to them online The only full length book neither extract nor pamphlet that Peirce authored and saw published in his lifetime 75 was Photometric Researches 1878 a 181 page monograph on the applications of spectrographic methods to astronomy While at Johns Hopkins he edited Studies in Logic 1883 containing chapters by himself and his graduate students Besides lectures during his years 1879 1884 as lecturer in Logic at Johns Hopkins he gave at least nine series of lectures many now published see Lectures by Peirce After Peirce s death Harvard University obtained from Peirce s widow the papers found in his study but did not microfilm them until 1964 Only after Richard Robin 1967 76 catalogued this Nachlass did it become clear that Peirce had left approximately 1 650 unpublished manuscripts totaling over 100 000 pages 77 mostly still unpublished except on microfilm On the vicissitudes of Peirce s papers see Houser 1989 78 Reportedly the papers remain in unsatisfactory condition 79 The first published anthology of Peirce s articles was the one volume Chance Love and Logic Philosophical Essays edited by Morris Raphael Cohen 1923 still in print Other one volume anthologies were published in 1940 1957 1958 1972 1994 and 2009 most still in print The main posthumous editions 80 of Peirce s works in their long trek to light often multi volume and some still in print have included 1931 1958 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce CP 8 volumes includes many published works along with a selection of previously unpublished work and a smattering of his correspondence This long time standard edition drawn from Peirce s work from the 1860s to 1913 remains the most comprehensive survey of his prolific output from 1893 to 1913 It is organized thematically but texts including lecture series are often split up across volumes while texts from various stages in Peirce s development are often combined requiring frequent visits to editors notes 81 Edited 1 6 by Charles Hartshorne and Paul Weiss and 7 8 by Arthur Burks in print and online 1975 1987 Charles Sanders Peirce Contributions to The Nation 4 volumes includes Peirce s more than 300 reviews and articles published 1869 1908 in The Nation Edited by Kenneth Laine Ketner and James Edward Cook online 1976 The New Elements of Mathematics by Charles S Peirce 4 volumes in 5 included many previously unpublished Peirce manuscripts on mathematical subjects along with Peirce s important published mathematical articles Edited by Carolyn Eisele back in print 1977 Semiotic and Significs The Correspondence between C S Peirce and Victoria Lady Welby 2nd edition 2001 included Peirce s entire correspondence 1903 1912 with Victoria Lady Welby Peirce s other published correspondence is largely limited to the 14 letters included in volume 8 of the Collected Papers and the 20 odd pre 1890 items included so far in the Writings Edited by Charles S Hardwick with James Cook out of print 1982 now Writings of Charles S Peirce A Chronological Edition W Volumes 1 6 amp 8 of a projected 30 The limited coverage and defective editing and organization of the Collected Papers led Max Fisch and others in the 1970s to found the Peirce Edition Project PEP whose mission is to prepare a more complete critical chronological edition Only seven volumes have appeared to date but they cover the period from 1859 to 1892 when Peirce carried out much of his best known work Writings of Charles S Peirce 8 was published in November 2010 and work continues on Writings of Charles S Peirce 7 9 and 11 In print and online 1985 Historical Perspectives on Peirce s Logic of Science A History of Science 2 volumes Auspitz has said 82 The extent of Peirce s immersion in the science of his day is evident in his reviews in the Nation and in his papers grant applications and publishers prospectuses in the history and practice of science referring latterly to Historical Perspectives Edited by Carolyn Eisele back in print 1992 Reasoning and the Logic of Things collects in one place Peirce s 1898 series of lectures invited by William James Edited by Kenneth Laine Ketner with commentary by Hilary Putnam in print 1992 1998 The Essential Peirce EP 2 volumes is an important recent sampler of Peirce s philosophical writings Edited 1 by Nathan Hauser and Christian Kloesel and 2 by Peirce Edition Project editors in print 1997 Pragmatism as a Principle and Method of Right Thinking collects Peirce s 1903 Harvard Lectures on Pragmatism in a study edition including drafts of Peirce s lecture manuscripts which had been previously published in abridged form the lectures now also appear in The Essential Peirce 2 Edited by Patricia Ann Turisi in print 2010 Philosophy of Mathematics Selected Writings collects important writings by Peirce on the subject many not previously in print Edited by Matthew E Moore in print Mathematics Edit The World on a Quincuncial Projection 1879 83 Peirce s projection of a sphere onto a square keeps angles true except at four isolated points on the equator and has less scale variation than the Mercator projection It can be tessellated that is multiple copies can be joined together continuously edge to edge Peirce s most important work in pure mathematics was in logical and foundational areas He also worked on linear algebra matrices various geometries topology and Listing numbers Bell numbers graphs the four color problem and the nature of continuity He worked on applied mathematics in economics engineering and map projections such as the Peirce quincuncial projection and was especially active in probability and statistics 84 DiscoveriesPeirce made a number of striking discoveries in formal logic and foundational mathematics nearly all of which came to be appreciated only long after he died In 1860 85 he suggested a cardinal arithmetic for infinite numbers years before any work by Georg Cantor who completed his dissertation in 1867 and without access to Bernard Bolzano s 1851 posthumous Paradoxien des Unendlichen The Peirce arrow symbol for neither nor also called the Quine dagger In 1880 1881 86 he showed how Boolean algebra could be done via a repeated sufficient single binary operation logical NOR anticipating Henry M Sheffer by 33 years See also De Morgan s Laws In 1881 87 he set out the axiomatization of natural number arithmetic a few years before Richard Dedekind and Giuseppe Peano In the same paper Peirce gave years before Dedekind the first purely cardinal definition of a finite set in the sense now known as Dedekind finite and implied by the same stroke an important formal definition of an infinite set Dedekind infinite as a set that can be put into a one to one correspondence with one of its proper subsets In 1885 88 he distinguished between first order and second order quantification 89 90 In the same paper he set out what can be read as the first primitive axiomatic set theory anticipating Zermelo by about two decades Brady 2000 91 pp 132 33 In 1886 he saw that Boolean calculations could be carried out via electrical switches 12 anticipating Claude Shannon by more than 50 years Existential graphs Alpha graphs By the later 1890s 92 he was devising existential graphs a diagrammatic notation for the predicate calculus Based on them are John F Sowa s conceptual graphs and Sun Joo Shin s diagrammatic reasoning The New Elements of MathematicsPeirce wrote drafts for an introductory textbook with the working title The New Elements of Mathematics that presented mathematics from an original standpoint Those drafts and many other of his previously unpublished mathematical manuscripts finally appeared 84 in The New Elements of Mathematics by Charles S Peirce 1976 edited by mathematician Carolyn Eisele Nature of mathematicsPeirce agreed with Auguste Comte in regarding mathematics as more basic than philosophy and the special sciences of nature and mind Peirce classified mathematics into three subareas 1 mathematics of logic 2 discrete series and 3 pseudo continua as he called them including the real numbers and continua Influenced by his father Benjamin Peirce argued that mathematics studies purely hypothetical objects and is not just the science of quantity but is more broadly the science which draws necessary conclusions that mathematics aids logic not vice versa and that logic itself is part of philosophy and is the science about drawing conclusions necessary and otherwise 93 Mathematics of logic Edit Mathematical logic and foundations some noted articles On an Improvement in Boole s Calculus of Logic 1867 Description of a Notation for the Logic of Relatives 1870 On the Algebra of Logic 1880 A Boolean Algebra with One Constant 1880 MS On the Logic of Number 1881 Note B The Logic of Relatives 1883 On the Algebra of Logic A Contribution to the Philosophy of Notation 1884 1885 The Logic of Relatives 1897 The Simplest Mathematics 1902 MS Prolegomena to an Apology for Pragmaticism 1906 on existential graphs Beginning with his first paper on the Logic of Relatives 1870 Peirce extended the theory of relations that Augustus De Morgan had just recently awakened from its Cinderella slumbers Much of the mathematics of relations now taken for granted was borrowed from Peirce not always with all due credit on that and on how the young Bertrand Russell especially his Principles of Mathematics and Principia Mathematica did not do Peirce justice see Anellis 1995 64 In 1918 the logician C I Lewis wrote The contributions of C S Peirce to symbolic logic are more numerous and varied than those of any other writer at least in the nineteenth century 94 Beginning in 1940 Alfred Tarski and his students rediscovered aspects of Peirce s larger vision of relational logic developing the perspective of relation algebra Relational logic gained applications In mathematics it influenced the abstract analysis of E H Moore and the lattice theory of Garrett Birkhoff In computer science the relational model for databases was developed with Peircean ideas in work of Edgar F Codd who was a doctoral student 95 of Arthur W Burks a Peirce scholar In economics relational logic was used by Frank P Ramsey John von Neumann and Paul Samuelson to study preferences and utility and by Kenneth J Arrow in Social Choice and Individual Values following Arrow s association with Tarski at City College of New York On Peirce and his contemporaries Ernst Schroder and Gottlob Frege Hilary Putnam 1982 89 documented that Frege s work on the logic of quantifiers had little influence on his contemporaries although it was published four years before the work of Peirce and his student Oscar Howard Mitchell Putnam found that mathematicians and logicians learned about the logic of quantifiers through the independent work of Peirce and Mitchell particularly through Peirce s On the Algebra of Logic A Contribution to the Philosophy of Notation 88 1885 published in the premier American mathematical journal of the day and cited by Peano and Schroder among others who ignored Frege They also adopted and modified Peirce s notations typographical variants of those now used Peirce apparently was ignorant of Frege s work despite their overlapping achievements in logic philosophy of language and the foundations of mathematics Peirce s work on formal logic had admirers besides Ernst Schroder Philosophical algebraist William Kingdon Clifford 96 and logician William Ernest Johnson both British The Polish school of logic and foundational mathematics including Alfred Tarski Arthur Prior who praised and studied Peirce s logical work in a 1964 paper 26 and in Formal Logic saying on page 4 that Peirce perhaps had a keener eye for essentials than any other logician before or since A philosophy of logic grounded in his categories and semiotic can be extracted from Peirce s writings and along with Peirce s logical work more generally is exposited and defended in Hilary Putnam 1982 89 the Introduction in Nathan Houser et al 1997 97 and Randall Dipert s chapter in Cheryl Misak 2004 98 Continua Edit Continuity and synechism are central in Peirce s philosophy I did not at first suppose that it was as I gradually came to find it the master Key of philosophy 99 From a mathematical point of view he embraced infinitesimals and worked long on the mathematics of continua He long held that the real numbers constitute a pseudo continuum 100 that a true continuum is the real subject matter of analysis situs topology and that a true continuum of instants exceeds and within any lapse of time has room for any Aleph number any infinite multitude as he called it of instants 101 In 1908 Peirce wrote that he found that a true continuum might have or lack such room Jerome Havenel 2008 It is on 26 May 1908 that Peirce finally gave up his idea that in every continuum there is room for whatever collection of any multitude From now on there are different kinds of continua which have different properties 102 Probability and statistics Edit Peirce held that science achieves statistical probabilities not certainties and that spontaneity absolute chance is real see Tychism on his view Most of his statistical writings promote the frequency interpretation of probability objective ratios of cases and many of his writings express skepticism about and criticize the use of probability when such models are not based on objective randomization 103 Though Peirce was largely a frequentist his possible world semantics introduced the propensity theory of probability before Karl Popper 104 105 Peirce sometimes with Joseph Jastrow investigated the probability judgments of experimental subjects perhaps the very first elicitation and estimation of subjective probabilities in experimental psychology and what came to be called Bayesian statistics 2 Peirce was one of the founders of statistics He formulated modern statistics in Illustrations of the Logic of Science 1877 1878 and A Theory of Probable Inference 1883 With a repeated measures design Charles Sanders Peirce and Joseph Jastrow introduced blinded controlled randomized experiments in 1884 106 Hacking 1990 205 1 before Ronald A Fisher 2 He invented optimal design for experiments on gravity in which he corrected the means He used correlation and smoothing Peirce extended the work on outliers by Benjamin Peirce his father 2 He introduced terms confidence and likelihood before Jerzy Neyman and Fisher See Stephen Stigler s historical books and Ian Hacking 1990 1 Philosophy EditIt is not sufficiently recognized that Peirce s career was that of a scientist not a philosopher and that during his lifetime he was known and valued chiefly as a scientist only secondarily as a logician and scarcely at all as a philosopher Even his work in philosophy and logic will not be understood until this fact becomes a standing premise of Peircean studies Max Fisch 1964 p 486 26 Charles Sanders Peirce in 1859 Peirce was a working scientist for 30 years and arguably was a professional philosopher only during the five years he lectured at Johns Hopkins He learned philosophy mainly by reading each day a few pages of Immanuel Kant s Critique of Pure Reason in the original German while a Harvard undergraduate His writings bear on a wide array of disciplines including mathematics logic philosophy statistics astronomy 26 metrology 3 geodesy experimental psychology 4 economics 5 linguistics 6 and the history and philosophy of science This work has enjoyed renewed interest and approval a revival inspired not only by his anticipations of recent scientific developments but also by his demonstration of how philosophy can be applied effectively to human problems Peirce s philosophy includes see below in related sections a pervasive three category system belief that truth is immutable and is both independent from actual opinion fallibilism and discoverable no radical skepticism logic as formal semiotic on signs on arguments and on inquiry s ways including philosophical pragmatism which he founded critical common sensism and scientific method and in metaphysics Scholastic realism e g John Duns Scotus belief in God freedom and at least an attenuated immortality objective idealism and belief in the reality of continuity and of absolute chance mechanical necessity and creative love In his work fallibilism and pragmatism may seem to work somewhat like skepticism and positivism respectively in others work However for Peirce fallibilism is balanced by an anti skepticism and is a basis for belief in the reality of absolute chance and of continuity 107 and pragmatism commits one to anti nominalist belief in the reality of the general CP 5 453 57 For Peirce First Philosophy which he also called cenoscopy is less basic than mathematics and more basic than the special sciences of nature and mind It studies positive phenomena in general phenomena available to any person at any waking moment and does not settle questions by resorting to special experiences 108 He divided such philosophy into 1 phenomenology which he also called phaneroscopy or categorics 2 normative sciences esthetics ethics and logic and 3 metaphysics his views on them are discussed in order below Theory of categories Edit Main article Categories Peirce On May 14 1867 the 27 year old Peirce presented a paper entitled On a New List of Categories to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences which published it the following year The paper outlined a theory of predication involving three universal categories that Peirce developed in response to reading Aristotle Immanuel Kant and G W F Hegel categories that Peirce applied throughout his work for the rest of his life 20 Peirce scholars generally regard the New List as foundational or breaking the ground for Peirce s architectonic his blueprint for a pragmatic philosophy In the categories one will discern concentrated the pattern that one finds formed by the three grades of clearness in How To Make Our Ideas Clear 1878 paper foundational to pragmatism and in numerous other trichotomies in his work On a New List of Categories is cast as a Kantian deduction it is short but dense and difficult to summarize The following table is compiled from that and later works 109 In 1893 Peirce restated most of it for a less advanced audience 110 Peirce s categories technical name the cenopythagorean categories 111 Name Typical characterizaton As universe of experience As quantity Technical definition Valence adicity Firstness 112 Quality of feeling Ideas chance possibility Vagueness some Reference to a ground a ground is a pure abstraction of a quality 113 Essentially monadic the quale in the sense of the such 114 which has the quality Secondness 115 Reaction resistance dyadic relation Brute facts actuality Singularity discreteness this Reference to a correlate by its relate Essentially dyadic the relate and the correlate Thirdness 116 Representation mediation Habits laws necessity Generality continuity all Reference to an interpretant Essentially triadic sign object interpretant Note An interpretant is an interpretation human or otherwise in the sense of the product of an interpretive process Aesthetics and ethics Edit Peirce did not write extensively in aesthetics and ethics 117 but came by 1902 to hold that aesthetics ethics and logic in that order comprise the normative sciences 118 He characterized aesthetics as the study of the good grasped as the admirable and thus of the ends governing all conduct and thought 119 Philosophy logic or semiotic EditLogic as philosophical Edit Peirce regarded logic per se as a division of philosophy as a normative science based on esthetics and ethics as more basic than metaphysics 120 and as the art of devising methods of research 121 More generally as inference logic is rooted in the social principle since inference depends on a standpoint that in a sense is unlimited 122 Peirce called with no sense of deprecation mathematics of logic much of the kind of thing which in current research and applications is called simply logic He was productive in both philosophical logic and logic s mathematics which were connected deeply in his work and thought Peirce argued that logic is formal semiotic the formal study of signs in the broadest sense not only signs that are artificial linguistic or symbolic but also signs that are semblances or are indexical such as reactions Peirce held that all this universe is perfused with signs if it is not composed exclusively of signs 123 along with their representational and inferential relations He argued that since all thought takes time all thought is in signs 124 and sign processes semiosis such as the inquiry process He divided logic into 1 speculative grammar or stechiology on how signs can be meaningful and in relation to that what kinds of signs there are how they combine and how some embody or incorporate others 2 logical critic or logic proper on the modes of inference and 3 speculative or universal rhetoric or methodeutic 125 the philosophical theory of inquiry including pragmatism Presuppositions of logic Edit In his F R L First Rule of Logic 1899 Peirce states that the first and in one sense the sole rule of reason is that to learn one needs to desire to learn and desire it without resting satisfied with that which one is inclined to think 120 So the first rule is to wonder Peirce proceeds to a critical theme in research practices and the shaping of theories there follows one corollary which itself deserves to be inscribed upon every wall of the city of philosophy Do not block the way of inquiry Peirce adds that method and economy are best in research but no outright sin inheres in trying any theory in the sense that the investigation via its trial adoption can proceed unimpeded and undiscouraged and that the one unpardonable offence is a philosophical barricade against truth s advance an offense to which metaphysicians in all ages have shown themselves the most addicted Peirce in many writings holds that logic precedes metaphysics ontological religious and physical Peirce goes on to list four common barriers to inquiry 1 Assertion of absolute certainty 2 maintaining that something is absolutely unknowable 3 maintaining that something is absolutely inexplicable because absolutely basic or ultimate 4 holding that perfect exactitude is possible especially such as to quite preclude unusual and anomalous phenomena To refuse absolute theoretical certainty is the heart of fallibilism which Peirce unfolds into refusals to set up any of the listed barriers Peirce elsewhere argues 1897 that logic s presupposition of fallibilism leads at length to the view that chance and continuity are very real tychism and synechism 107 The First Rule of Logic pertains to the mind s presuppositions in undertaking reason and logic presuppositions for instance that truth and the real do not depend on yours or my opinion of them but do depend on representational relation and consist in the destined end in investigation taken far enough see below He describes such ideas as collectively hopes which in particular cases one is unable seriously to doubt 126 Four incapacities Edit The Journal of Speculative Philosophy series 1868 1869 including Questions concerning certain Faculties claimed for Man 1868 Some Consequences of Four Incapacities 1868 Grounds of Validity of the Laws of Logic Further Consequences of Four Incapacities 1869 In three articles in 1868 1869 124 127 128 Peirce rejected mere verbal or hyperbolic doubt and first or ultimate principles and argued that we have as he numbered them 127 No power of Introspection All knowledge of the internal world comes by hypothetical reasoning from known external facts No power of Intuition cognition without logical determination by previous cognitions No cognitive stage is absolutely first in a process All mental action has the form of inference No power of thinking without signs A cognition must be interpreted in a subsequent cognition in order to be a cognition at all No conception of the absolutely incognizable The above sense of the term intuition is almost Kant s said Peirce It differs from the current looser sense that encompasses instinctive or anyway half conscious inference Peirce argued that those incapacities imply the reality of the general and of the continuous the validity of the modes of reasoning 128 and the falsity of philosophical Cartesianism see below Peirce rejected the conception usually ascribed to Kant of the unknowable thing in itself 127 and later said that to dismiss make believes is a prerequisite for pragmatism 129 Logic as formal semiotic Edit Peirce sought through his wide ranging studies through the decades formal philosophical ways to articulate thought s processes and also to explain the workings of science These inextricably entangled questions of a dynamics of inquiry rooted in nature and nurture led him to develop his semiotic with very broadened conceptions of signs and inference and as its culmination a theory of inquiry for the task of saying how science works and devising research methods This would be logic by the medieval definition taught for centuries art of arts science of sciences having the way to the principles of all methods 121 Influences radiate from points on parallel lines of inquiry in Aristotle s work in such loci as the basic terminology of psychology in On the Soul the founding description of sign relations in On Interpretation and the differentiation of inference into three modes that are commonly translated into English as abduction deduction and induction in the Prior Analytics as well as inference by analogy called paradeigma by Aristotle which Peirce regarded as involving the other three modes Peirce began writing on semiotic in the 1860s around the time when he devised his system of three categories He called it both semiotic and semeiotic Both are current in singular and plural He based it on the conception of a triadic sign relation and defined semiosis as action or influence which is or involves a cooperation of three subjects such as a sign its object and its interpretant this tri relative influence not being in any way resolvable into actions between pairs 130 As to signs in thought Peirce emphasized the reverse To say therefore that thought cannot happen in an instant but requires a time is but another way of saying that every thought must be interpreted in another or that all thought is in signs 124 Peirce held that all thought is in signs issuing in and from interpretation where sign is the word for the broadest variety of conceivable semblances diagrams metaphors symptoms signals designations symbols texts even mental concepts and ideas all as determinations of a mind or quasi mind that which at least functions like a mind as in the work of crystals or bees 131 the focus is on sign action in general rather than on psychology linguistics or social studies fields which he also pursued Inquiry is a kind of inference process a manner of thinking and semiosis Global divisions of ways for phenomena to stand as signs and the subsumption of inquiry and thinking within inference as a sign process enable the study of inquiry on semiotics three levels Conditions for meaningfulness Study of significatory elements and combinations their grammar Validity conditions for true representation Critique of arguments in their various separate modes Conditions for determining interpretations Methodology of inquiry in its mutually interacting modes Peirce uses examples often from common experience but defines and discusses such things as assertion and interpretation in terms of philosophical logic In a formal vein Peirce said On the Definition of Logic Logic is formal semiotic A sign is something A which brings something B its interpretant sign determined or created by it into the same sort of correspondence or a lower implied sort with something C its object as that in which itself stands to C This definition no more involves any reference to human thought than does the definition of a line as the place within which a particle lies during a lapse of time It is from this definition that I deduce the principles of logic by mathematical reasoning and by mathematical reasoning that I aver will support criticism of Weierstrassian severity and that is perfectly evident The word formal in the definition is also defined 132 Signs Edit Main article Semiotic theory of Charles Sanders Peirce See also Representation arts Peirce and representation and Sign semiotics Triadic signs A list of noted writings by Peirce on signs and sign relations is at Semiotic theory of Charles Sanders Peirce References and further reading Sign relation Edit Peirce s theory of signs is known to be one of the most complex semiotic theories due to its generalistic claim Anything is a sign not absolutely as itself but instead in some relation or other The sign relation is the key It defines three roles encompassing 1 the sign 2 the sign s subject matter called its object and 3 the sign s meaning or ramification as formed into a kind of effect called its interpretant a further sign for example a translation It is an irreducible triadic relation according to Peirce The roles are distinct even when the things that fill those roles are not The roles are but three a sign of an object leads to one or more interpretants and as signs they lead to further interpretants Extension intension information Two traditional approaches to sign relation necessary though insufficient are the way of extension a sign s objects also called breadth denotation or application and the way of intension the objects characteristics qualities attributes referenced by the sign also called depth comprehension significance or connotation Peirce adds a third the way of information including change of information to integrate the other two approaches into a unified whole 133 For example because of the equation above if a term s total amount of information stays the same then the more that the term intends or signifies about objects the fewer are the objects to which the term extends or applies Determination A sign depends on its object in such a way as to represent its object the object enables and in a sense determines the sign A physically causal sense of this stands out when a sign consists in an indicative reaction The interpretant depends likewise on both the sign and the object an object determines a sign to determine an interpretant But this determination is not a succession of dyadic events like a row of toppling dominoes sign determination is triadic For example an interpretant does not merely represent something which represented an object instead an interpretant represents something as a sign representing the object The object be it a quality or fact or law or even fictional determines the sign to an interpretant through one s collateral experience 134 with the object in which the object is found or from which it is recalled as when a sign consists in a chance semblance of an absent object Peirce used the word determine not in a strictly deterministic sense but in a sense of specializes bestimmt 135 involving variable amount like an influence 136 Peirce came to define representation and interpretation in terms of triadic determination 137 The object determines the sign to determine another sign the interpretant to be related to the object as the sign is related to the object hence the interpretant fulfilling its function as sign of the object determines a further interpretant sign The process is logically structured to perpetuate itself and is definitive of sign object and interpretant in general 136 Semiotic elements Edit Peirce held there are exactly three basic elements in semiosis sign action A sign or representamen 138 represents in the broadest possible sense of represents It is something interpretable as saying something about something It is not necessarily symbolic linguistic or artificial a cloud might be a sign of rain for instance or ruins the sign of ancient civilization 139 As Peirce sometimes put it he defined sign at least 76 times 136 the sign stands for the object to the interpretant A sign represents its object in some respect which respect is the sign s ground 113 An object or semiotic object is a subject matter of a sign and an interpretant It can be anything thinkable a quality an occurrence a rule etc even fictional such as Prince Hamlet 140 All of those are special or partial objects The object most accurately is the universe of discourse to which the partial or special object belongs 140 For instance a perturbation of Pluto s orbit is a sign about Pluto but ultimately not only about Pluto An object either i is immediate to a sign and is the object as represented in the sign or ii is a dynamic object the object as it really is on which the immediate object is founded as on bedrock 141 An interpretant or interpretant sign is a sign s meaning or ramification as formed into a kind of idea or effect an interpretation human or otherwise An interpretant is a sign a of the object and b of the interpretant s predecessor the interpreted sign as a sign of the same object An interpretant either i is immediate to a sign and is a kind of quality or possibility such as a word s usual meaning or ii is a dynamic interpretant such as a state of agitation or iii is a final or normal interpretant a sum of the lessons which a sufficiently considered sign would have as effects on practice and with which an actual interpretant may at most coincide Some of the understanding needed by the mind depends on familiarity with the object To know what a given sign denotes the mind needs some experience of that sign s object experience outside of and collateral to that sign or sign system In that context Peirce speaks of collateral experience collateral observation collateral acquaintance all in much the same terms 134 Classes of signs Edit Lines of joint classification of signs Every sign is 142 1 2 3 I Qualisign or Sinsign or Legisignand II Icon or Index or Symboland III Rheme or Dicisign or ArgumentAmong Peirce s many sign typologies three stand out interlocked The first typology depends on the sign itself the second on how the sign stands for its denoted object and the third on how the sign stands for its object to its interpretant Also each of the three typologies is a three way division a trichotomy via Peirce s three phenomenological categories 1 quality of feeling 2 reaction resistance and 3 representation mediation 142 I Qualisign sinsign legisign also calledtone token type and also called potisign actisign famisign 143 This typology classifies every sign according to the sign s own phenomenological category the qualisign is a quality a possibility a First the sinsign is a reaction or resistance a singular object an actual event or fact a Second and the legisign is a habit a rule a representational relation a Third II Icon index symbol This typology the best known one classifies every sign according to the category of the sign s way of denoting its object the icon also called semblance or likeness by a quality of its own the index by factual connection to its object and the symbol by a habit or rule for its interpretant III Rheme dicisign argument also called sumisign dicisign suadisign also seme pheme delome 143 and regarded as very broadened versions of the traditional term proposition argument This typology classifies every sign according to the category which the interpretant attributes to the sign s way of denoting its object the rheme for example a term is a sign interpreted to represent its object in respect of quality the dicisign for example a proposition is a sign interpreted to represent its object in respect of fact and the argument is a sign interpreted to represent its object in respect of habit or law This is the culminating typology of the three where the sign is understood as a structural element of inference Every sign belongs to one class or another within I and within II and within III Thus each of the three typologies is a three valued parameter for every sign The three parameters are not independent of each other many co classifications are absent for reasons pertaining to the lack of either habit taking or singular reaction in a quality and the lack of habit taking in a singular reaction The result is not 27 but instead ten classes of signs fully specified at this level of analysis Modes of inference Edit Main article Inquiry Borrowing a brace of concepts from Aristotle Peirce examined three basic modes of inference abduction deduction and induction in his critique of arguments or logic proper Peirce also called abduction retroduction presumption and earliest of all hypothesis He characterized it as guessing and as inference to an explanatory hypothesis He sometimes expounded the modes of inference by transformations of the categorical syllogism Barbara AAA for example in Deduction Induction and Hypothesis 1878 144 He does this by rearranging the rule Barbara s major premise the case Barbara s minor premise and the result Barbara s conclusion Deduction Rule All the beans from this bag are white Case These beans are beans from this bag displaystyle therefore Result These beans are white Induction Case These beans are randomly selected from this bag Result These beans are white displaystyle therefore Rule All the beans from this bag are white Hypothesis Abduction Rule All the beans from this bag are white Result These beans oddly are white displaystyle therefore Case These beans are from this bag Peirce 1883 in A Theory of Probable Inference Studies in Logic equated hypothetical inference with the induction of characters of objects as he had done in effect before 127 Eventually dissatisfied by 1900 he distinguished them once and for all and also wrote that he now took the syllogistic forms and the doctrine of logical extension and comprehension as being less basic than he had thought In 1903 he presented the following logical form for abductive inference 145 The surprising fact C is observed But if A were true C would be a matter of course Hence there is reason to suspect that A is true The logical form does not also cover induction since induction neither depends on surprise nor proposes a new idea for its conclusion Induction seeks facts to test a hypothesis abduction seeks a hypothesis to account for facts Deduction proves that something must be Induction shows that something actually is operative Abduction merely suggests that something may be 146 Peirce did not remain quite convinced that one logical form covers all abduction 147 In his methodeutic or theory of inquiry see below he portrayed abduction as an economic initiative to further inference and study and portrayed all three modes as clarified by their coordination in essential roles in inquiry hypothetical explanation deductive prediction inductive testing Pragmatism Edit Main articles Pragmaticism Pragmatic maxim and Pragmatic theory of truth Peirce Some noted articles and lectures Illustrations of the Logic of Science 1877 1878 inquiry pragmatism statistics inferenceThe Fixation of Belief 1877 How to Make Our Ideas Clear 1878 The Doctrine of Chances 1878 The Probability of Induction 1878 The Order of Nature 1878 Deduction Induction and Hypothesis 1878 The Harvard lectures on pragmatism 1903 What Pragmatism Is 1905 Issues of Pragmaticism 1905 Pragmatism 1907 MS in The Essential Peirce 2 Peirce s recipe for pragmatic thinking which he called pragmatism and later pragmaticism is recapitulated in several versions of the so called pragmatic maxim Here is one of his more emphatic reiterations of it Consider what effects that might conceivably have practical bearings you conceive the objects of your conception to have Then your conception of those effects is the whole of your conception of the object As a movement pragmatism began in the early 1870s in discussions among Peirce William James and others in the Metaphysical Club James among others regarded some articles by Peirce such as The Fixation of Belief 1877 and especially How to Make Our Ideas Clear 1878 as foundational to pragmatism 148 Peirce CP 5 11 12 like James Pragmatism A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking 1907 saw pragmatism as embodying familiar attitudes in philosophy and elsewhere elaborated into a new deliberate method for fruitful thinking about problems Peirce differed from James and the early John Dewey in some of their tangential enthusiasms in being decidedly more rationalistic and realistic in several senses of those terms throughout the preponderance of his own philosophical moods In 1905 Peirce coined the new name pragmaticism for the precise purpose of expressing the original definition saying that all went happily with James s and F C S Schiller s variant uses of the old name pragmatism and that he coined the new name because of the old name s growing use in literary journals where it gets abused Yet he cited as causes in a 1906 manuscript his differences with James and Schiller and in a 1908 publication his differences with James as well as literary author Giovanni Papini s declaration of pragmatism s indefinability Peirce in any case regarded his views that truth is immutable and infinity is real as being opposed by the other pragmatists but he remained allied with them on other issues 149 Pragmatism begins with the idea that belief is that on which one is prepared to act Peirce s pragmatism is a method of clarification of conceptions of objects It equates any conception of an object to a conception of that object s effects to a general extent of the effects conceivable implications for informed practice It is a method of sorting out conceptual confusions occasioned for example by distinctions that make sometimes needed formal yet not practical differences He formulated both pragmatism and statistical principles as aspects of scientific logic in his Illustrations of the Logic of Science series of articles In the second one How to Make Our Ideas Clear Peirce discussed three grades of clearness of conception Clearness of a conception familiar and readily used even if unanalyzed and undeveloped Clearness of a conception in virtue of clearness of its parts in virtue of which logicians called an idea distinct that is clarified by analysis of just what makes it applicable Elsewhere echoing Kant Peirce called a likewise distinct definition nominal CP 5 553 Clearness in virtue of clearness of conceivable practical implications of the object s conceived effects such that fosters fruitful reasoning especially on difficult problems Here he introduced that which he later called the pragmatic maxim By way of example of how to clarify conceptions he addressed conceptions about truth and the real as questions of the presuppositions of reasoning in general In clearness s second grade the nominal grade he defined truth as a sign s correspondence to its object and the real as the object of such correspondence such that truth and the real are independent of that which you or I or any actual definite community of inquirers think After that needful but confined step next in clearness s third grade the pragmatic practice oriented grade he defined truth as that opinion which would be reached sooner or later but still inevitably by research taken far enough such that the real does depend on that ideal final opinion a dependence to which he appeals in theoretical arguments elsewhere for instance for the long run validity of the rule of induction 150 Peirce argued that even to argue against the independence and discoverability of truth and the real is to presuppose that there is about that very question under argument a truth with just such independence and discoverability Peirce said that a conception s meaning consists in all general modes of rational conduct implied by acceptance of the conception that is if one were to accept first of all the conception as true then what could one conceive to be consequent general modes of rational conduct by all who accept the conception as true the whole of such consequent general modes is the whole meaning His pragmatism does not equate a conception s meaning its intellectual purport with the conceived benefit or cost of the conception itself like a meme or say propaganda outside the perspective of its being true nor since a conception is general is its meaning equated with any definite set of actual consequences or upshots corroborating or undermining the conception or its worth His pragmatism also bears no resemblance to vulgar pragmatism which misleadingly connotes a ruthless and Machiavellian search for mercenary or political advantage Instead the pragmatic maxim is the heart of his pragmatism as a method of experimentational mental reflection 151 arriving at conceptions in terms of conceivable confirmatory and disconfirmatory circumstances a method hospitable to the formation of explanatory hypotheses and conducive to the use and improvement of verification 152 Peirce s pragmatism as method and theory of definitions and conceptual clearness is part of his theory of inquiry 153 which he variously called speculative general formal or universal rhetoric or simply methodeutic 125 He applied his pragmatism as a method throughout his work Theory of inquiry Edit See also Inquiry In The Fixation of Belief 1877 Peirce gives his take on the psychological origin and aim of inquiry On his view individuals are motivated to inquiry by desire to escape the feelings of anxiety and unease which Peirce takes to be characteristic of the state of doubt Doubt is described by Peirce as an uneasy and dissatisfied state from which we struggle to free ourselves and pass into the state of belief Peirce uses words like irritation to describe the experience of being in doubt and to explain why he thinks we find such experiences to be motivating The irritating feeling of doubt is appeased Peirce says through our efforts to achieve a settled state of satisfaction with what we land on as our answer to the question which led to that doubt in the first place This settled state namely belief is described by Peirce as a calm and satisfactory state which we do not wish to avoid Our efforts to achieve the satisfaction of belief by whichever methods we may pursue are what Peirce calls inquiry Four methods which Peirce describes as having been actually pursued throughout the history of thought are summarized below in the section after next Critical common sensism Edit Critical common sensism 154 treated by Peirce as a consequence of his pragmatism is his combination of Thomas Reid s common sense philosophy with a fallibilism that recognizes that propositions of our more or less vague common sense now indubitable may later come into question for example because of transformations of our world through science It includes efforts to work up in tests genuine doubts for a core group of common indubitables that vary slowly if at all Rival methods of inquiry Edit In The Fixation of Belief 1877 Peirce described inquiry in general not as the pursuit of truth per se but as the struggle to move from irritating inhibitory doubt born of surprise disagreement and the like and to reach a secure belief belief being that on which one is prepared to act That let Peirce frame scientific inquiry as part of a broader spectrum and as spurred like inquiry generally by actual doubt not mere verbal quarrelsome or hyperbolic doubt which he held to be fruitless Peirce sketched four methods of settling opinion ordered from least to most successful The method of tenacity policy of sticking to initial belief which brings comforts and decisiveness but leads to trying to ignore contrary information and others views as if truth were intrinsically private not public The method goes against the social impulse and easily falters since one may well notice when another s opinion seems as good as one s own initial opinion Its successes can be brilliant but tend to be transitory The method of authority which overcomes disagreements but sometimes brutally Its successes can be majestic and long lasting but it cannot regulate people thoroughly enough to withstand doubts indefinitely especially when people learn about other societies present and past The method of the a priori which promotes conformity less brutally but fosters opinions as something like tastes arising in conversation and comparisons of perspectives in terms of what is agreeable to reason Thereby it depends on fashion in paradigms and goes in circles over time It is more intellectual and respectable but like the first two methods sustains accidental and capricious beliefs destining some minds to doubt it The method of science wherein inquiry supposes that the real is discoverable but independent of particular opinion such that unlike in the other methods inquiry can by its own account go wrong fallibilism not only right and thus purposely tests itself and criticizes corrects and improves itself Peirce held that in practical affairs slow and stumbling ratiocination is often dangerously inferior to instinct and traditional sentiment and that the scientific method is best suited to theoretical research 155 which in turn should not be trammeled by the other methods and practical ends reason s first rule 120 is that in order to learn one must desire to learn and as a corollary must not block the way of inquiry Scientific method excels over the others finally by being deliberately designed to arrive eventually at the most secure beliefs upon which the most successful practices can be based Starting from the idea that people seek not truth per se but instead to subdue irritating inhibitory doubt Peirce showed how through the struggle some can come to submit to truth for the sake of belief s integrity seek as truth the guidance of potential conduct correctly to its given goal and wed themselves to the scientific method Scientific method Edit Insofar as clarification by pragmatic reflection suits explanatory hypotheses and fosters predictions and testing pragmatism points beyond the usual duo of foundational alternatives deduction from self evident truths or rationalism and induction from experiential phenomena or empiricism Based on his critique of three modes of argument and different from either foundationalism or coherentism Peirce s approach seeks to justify claims by a three phase dynamic of inquiry Active abductive genesis of theory with no prior assurance of truth Deductive application of the contingent theory so as to clarify its practical implications Inductive testing and evaluation of the utility of the provisional theory in anticipation of future experience in both senses prediction and control Thereby Peirce devised an approach to inquiry far more solid than the flatter image of inductive generalization simpliciter which is a mere re labeling of phenomenological patterns Peirce s pragmatism was the first time the scientific method was proposed as an epistemology for philosophical questions A theory that succeeds better than its rivals in predicting and controlling our world is said to be nearer the truth This is an operational notion of truth used by scientists Peirce extracted the pragmatic model or theory of inquiry from its raw materials in classical logic and refined it in parallel with the early development of symbolic logic to address problems about the nature of scientific reasoning Abduction deduction and induction make incomplete sense in isolation from one another but comprise a cycle understandable as a whole insofar as they collaborate toward the common end of inquiry In the pragmatic way of thinking about conceivable practical implications every thing has a purpose and as possible its purpose should first be denoted Abduction hypothesizes an explanation for deduction to clarify into implications to be tested so that induction can evaluate the hypothesis in the struggle to move from troublesome uncertainty to more secure belief No matter how traditional and needful it is to study the modes of inference in abstraction from one another the integrity of inquiry strongly limits the effective modularity of its principal components Peirce s outline of the scientific method in III IV of A Neglected Argument 156 is summarized below except as otherwise noted There he also reviewed plausibility and inductive precision issues of critique of arguments 1 Abductive or retroductive phase Guessing inference to explanatory hypotheses for selection of those best worth trying From abduction Peirce distinguishes induction as inferring on the basis of tests the proportion of truth in the hypothesis Every inquiry whether into ideas brute facts or norms and laws arises from surprising observations in one or more of those realms and for example at any stage of an inquiry already underway All explanatory content of theories comes from abduction which guesses a new or outside idea so as to account in a simple economical way for a surprising or complicated phenomenon The modicum of success in our guesses far exceeds that of random luck and seems born of attunement to nature by developed or inherent instincts especially insofar as best guesses are optimally plausible and simple in the sense of the facile and natural as by Galileo s natural light of reason and as distinct from logical simplicity 157 Abduction is the most fertile but least secure mode of inference Its general rationale is inductive it succeeds often enough and it has no substitute in expediting us toward new truths 158 In 1903 Peirce called pragmatism the logic of abduction 159 Coordinative method leads from abducting a plausible hypothesis to judging it for its testability 160 and for how its trial would economize inquiry itself 161 The hypothesis being insecure needs to have practical implications leading at least to mental tests and in science lending themselves to scientific tests A simple but unlikely guess if not costly to test for falsity may belong first in line for testing A guess is intrinsically worth testing if it has plausibility or reasoned objective probability while subjective likelihood though reasoned can be misleadingly seductive Guesses can be selected for trial strategically for their caution for which Peirce gave as example the game of Twenty Questions breadth or incomplexity 162 One can discover only that which would be revealed through their sufficient experience anyway and so the point is to expedite it economy of research demands the leap so to speak of abduction and governs its art 161 2 Deductive phase Two stages i Explication Not clearly premised but a deductive analysis of the hypothesis so as to render its parts as clear as possible ii Demonstration Deductive Argumentation Euclidean in procedure Explicit deduction of consequences of the hypothesis as predictions about evidence to be found Corollarial or if needed Theorematic 3 Inductive phase Evaluation of the hypothesis inferring from observational or experimental tests of its deduced consequences The long run validity of the rule of induction is deducible from the principle presuppositional to reasoning in general that the real is only the object of the final opinion to which sufficient investigation would lead 150 in other words anything excluding such a process would never be real Induction involving the ongoing accumulation of evidence follows a method which sufficiently persisted in will diminish the error below any predesignate degree Three stages i Classification Not clearly premised but an inductive classing of objects of experience under general ideas ii Probation direct Inductive Argumentation Crude or Gradual in procedure Crude Induction founded on experience in one mass CP 2 759 presumes that future experience on a question will not differ utterly from all past experience CP 2 756 Gradual Induction makes a new estimate of the proportion of truth in the hypothesis after each test and is Qualitative or Quantitative Qualitative Gradual Induction depends on estimating the relative evident weights of the various qualities of the subject class under investigation CP 2 759 see also Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 7 114 20 Quantitative Gradual Induction depends on how often in a fair sample of instances of S S is found actually accompanied by P that was predicted for S CP 2 758 It depends on measurements or statistics or counting iii Sentential Induction which by Inductive reasonings appraises the different Probations singly then their combinations then makes self appraisal of these very appraisals themselves and passes final judgment on the whole result Against Cartesianism Edit Peirce drew on the methodological implications of the four incapacities no genuine introspection no intuition in the sense of non inferential cognition no thought but in signs and no conception of the absolutely incognizable to attack philosophical Cartesianism of which he said that 127 It teaches that philosophy must begin in universal doubt when instead we start with preconceptions prejudices which it does not occur to us can be questioned though we may find reason to question them later Let us not pretend to doubt in philosophy what we do not doubt in our hearts It teaches that the ultimate test of certainty is in the individual consciousness when instead in science a theory stays on probation till agreement is reached then it has no actual doubters left No lone individual can reasonably hope to fulfill philosophy s multi generational dream When candid and disciplined minds continue to disagree on a theoretical issue even the theory s author should feel doubts about it It trusts to a single thread of inference depending often upon inconspicuous premisses when instead philosophy should like the successful sciences proceed only from tangible scrutinizable premisses and trust not to any one argument but instead to the multitude and variety of its arguments as forming not a chain at least as weak as its weakest link but a cable whose fibers soever slender are sufficiently numerous and intimately connected It renders many facts absolutely inexplicable unless to say that God makes them so is to be regarded as an explanation 163 when instead philosophy should avoid being unidealistic 164 misbelieving that something real can defy or evade all possible ideas and supposing inevitably some absolutely inexplicable unanalyzable ultimate which explanatory surmise explains nothing and so is inadmissible Philosophy metaphysics EditSome noted articles The Monist Metaphysical Series 1891 1893 The Architecture of Theories 1891 The Doctrine of Necessity Examined 1892 The Law of Mind 1892 Man s Glassy Essence 1892 Evolutionary Love 1893 Immortality in the Light of Synechism 1893 MS Peirce divided metaphysics into 1 ontology or general metaphysics 2 psychical or religious metaphysics and 3 physical metaphysics Ontology Edit Peirce was a scholastic realist declaring for the reality of generals as early as 1868 165 Regarding modalities possibility necessity etc he came in later years to regard himself as having wavered earlier as to just how positively real the modalities are In his 1897 The Logic of Relatives he wrote I formerly defined the possible as that which in a given state of information real or feigned we do not know not to be true But this definition today seems to me only a twisted phrase which by means of two negatives conceals an anacoluthon We know in advance of experience that certain things are not true because we see they are impossible Peirce retained as useful for some purposes the definitions in terms of information states but insisted that the pragmaticist is committed to a strong modal realism by conceiving of objects in terms of predictive general conditional propositions about how they would behave under certain circumstances 166 Psychical or religious metaphysics Edit Peirce believed in God and characterized such belief as founded in an instinct explorable in musing over the worlds of ideas brute facts and evolving habits and it is a belief in God not as an actual or existent being in Peirce s sense of those words but all the same as a real being 167 In A Neglected Argument for the Reality of God 1908 156 Peirce sketches for God s reality an argument to a hypothesis of God as the Necessary Being a hypothesis which he describes in terms of how it would tend to develop and become compelling in musement and inquiry by a normal person who is led by the hypothesis to consider as being purposed the features of the worlds of ideas brute facts and evolving habits for example scientific progress such that the thought of such purposefulness will stand or fall with the hypothesis meanwhile according to Peirce the hypothesis in supposing an infinitely incomprehensible being starts off at odds with its own nature as a purportively true conception and so no matter how much the hypothesis grows it both A inevitably regards itself as partly true partly vague and as continuing to define itself without limit and B inevitably has God appearing likewise vague but growing though God as the Necessary Being is not vague or growing but the hypothesis will hold it to be more false to say the opposite that God is purposeless Peirce also argued that the will is free 168 and see Synechism that there is at least an attenuated kind of immortality Physical metaphysics Edit Peirce held the view which he called objective idealism that matter is effete mind inveterate habits becoming physical laws 169 Peirce asserted the reality of 1 absolute chance his tychist view 2 mechanical necessity anancist view and 3 that which he called the law of love agapist view echoing his categories Firstness Secondness and Thirdness respectively He held that fortuitous variation which he also called sporting mechanical necessity and creative love are the three modes of evolution modes called tychasm anancasm and agapasm 170 of the cosmos and its parts He found his conception of agapasm embodied in Lamarckian evolution the overall idea in any case is that of evolution tending toward an end or goal and it could also be the evolution of a mind or a society it is the kind of evolution which manifests workings of mind in some general sense He said that overall he was a synechist holding with reality of continuity 171 especially of space time and law 172 Science of review EditMain article Classification of the sciences Peirce Peirce outlined two fields Cenoscopy and Science of Review both of which he called philosophy Both included philosophy about science In 1903 he arranged them from more to less theoretically basic thus 108 Science of Discovery Mathematics Cenoscopy philosophy as discussed earlier in this article categorial normative metaphysical as First Philosophy concerns positive phenomena in general does not rely on findings from special sciences and includes the general study of inquiry and scientific method Idioscopy or the Special Sciences of nature and mind Science of Review as Ultimate Philosophy arranges the results of discovery beginning with digests and going on to endeavor to form a philosophy of science His examples included Humboldt s Cosmos Comte s Philosophie positive and Spencer s Synthetic Philosophy Practical Science or the Arts Peirce placed within Science of Review the work and theory of classifying the sciences including mathematics and philosophy His classifications on which he worked for many years draw on argument and wide knowledge and are of interest both as a map for navigating his philosophy and as an accomplished polymath s survey of research in his time See also EditHowland will forgery trial Hypostatic abstraction Idea Charles Sanders Peirce Laws of Form List of American philosophers Logical machine Logical matrix Mathematical psychology Normal distribution Naming Peircean realism Pragmatics Problem of universals Peirce Quantification science History Relation algebra Truth table Contemporaries associated with Peirce Edit Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr George Herbert MeadReferences Edit a b c Hacking Ian 1990 The Taming of Chance A Universe of Chance Cambridge University Press pp 200 15 a b c d Stigler Stephen M 1978 Mathematical statistics in the early States Annals of Statistics 6 2 239 65 248 doi 10 1214 aos 1176344123 JSTOR 2958876 MR 0483118 a b Crease Robert P 2009 Charles Sanders Peirce and the first absolute measurement standard Physics Today 62 12 39 44 Bibcode 2009PhT 62l 39C doi 10 1063 1 3273015 S2CID 121338356 Archived from the original on January 12 2013 In his brilliant but troubled life Peirce was a pioneer in both metrology and philosophy a b Cadwallader Thomas C 1974 Charles S Peirce 1839 1914 The first American experimental psychologist Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 10 3 291 98 doi 10 1002 1520 6696 197407 10 3 lt 291 AID JHBS2300100304 gt 3 0 CO 2 N PMID 11609224 a b Wible James R December 2008 The economic mind of Charles Sanders Peirce Contemporary Pragmatism Vol 5 no 2 pp 39 67 a b Noth Winfried 2000 Charles Sanders Peirce Pathfinder in Linguistics Noth Winfried 2000 Digital Encyclopedia of Charles S Peirce a b c d Houser Nathan 1989 Introduction Writings of Charles S Peirce 4 xxxviii find Eighty nine Peirce in the case of C S Peirce always rhymes with the English language word terse and so in most dialects is pronounced exactly like the English language word purse help info Note on the Pronunciation of Peirce Peirce Project Newsletter Vol 1 no 3 4 December 1994 Weiss Paul 1934 Peirce Charles Sanders Dictionary of American Biography Arisbe Peirce Benjamin Charles Sanders Webster s Biographical Dictionary Merriam Webster Springfield Massachusetts 1960 1943 a b Peirce C S 1886 Letter Peirce to A Marquand Writings of Charles S Peirce pp 5 541 43 ISBN 978 0253372017 See Burks Arthur W 1978 Charles S Peirce The new elements of mathematics PDF Book Review Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society Eprint 84 5 913 918 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1978 14533 9 Also Houser Nathan Introduction Writings of Charles S Peirce Vol 5 p xliv Weiss Paul 1934 Peirce Charles Sanders Dictionary of American Biography Internet Archive Fisch Max Introduction Writings of Charles S Peirce 1 xvii find phrase One episode Peirce Charles Sanders 1898 The National Cyclopedia of American Biography v 8 p 409 Brent 1998 pp 54 56 Brent Josep 1998 Charles Sanders Peirce A Life 2nd ed Bloomington Ind Indiana University Press pp 363 64 ISBN 9780253211613 Brent 1998 pp 19 20 53 75 245 Brent 1998 p 40 a b c d Burch Robert 2001 2010 Charles Sanders Peirce Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Brent 1998 p 139 Brent 1998 pp 61 62 Brent 1998 p 69 Brent 1998 p 368 Brent 1998 pp 79 81 a b c d e Moore Edward C and Robin Richard S eds 1964 Studies in the Philosophy of Charles Sanders Peirce Second Series Amherst U of Massachusetts Press On Peirce the astronomer see Lenzen s chapter Brent 1998 p 367 Fisch Max 1983 Peirce as Scientist mathematician historian Logician and Philosopher Studies in Logic new edition see p x See Peirce Edition Project UQAM in short Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine from PEP UQAM Houser Nathan Introduction Writings of Charles S Peirce 5 xxviii xxix find Allison Brent 1998 p 202 Randall R Dipert 1994 The Life and Logical Contributions of O H Mitchell Peirce s Gifted Student Brent 1998 pp 150 54 195 279 80 289 Brent 1998 p xv Devlin Keith 2000 The Math Gene Basic Books ISBN 978 0465016198 Brent 1998 pp 98 101 Brent 1998 p 141 Brent 1998 p 148 Houser Nathan Introduction Writings of Charles S Peirce 6 first paragraph Brent 1998 pp 123 368 Brent 1998 pp 150 51 368 In 1885 Brent 1998 p 369 in 1890 and 1900 p 273 in 1891 pp 215 16 and in 1892 pp 151 52 222 Brent 1998 p 77 Brent 1998 pp 191 92 217 270 318 321 337 Brent 1998 p 13 Brent 1998 pp 369 74 Brent 1998 p 191 Brent 1998 p 246 Brent 1998 p 242 Brent 1998 p 271 Brent 1998 pp 249 55 Brent 1998 p 371 Brent 1998 p 189 Brent 1998 p 370 Brent 1998 pp 205 06 Brent 1998 pp 374 76 Brent 1998 pp 279 89 Brent 1998 pp 261 64 290 92 324 Brent 1998 pp 306 07 315 16 In 2018 plans have been made to erect a memorial monument for Peirce at the site of burial see Justin Weinberg A Proper Memorial Monument for Peirce website Daily Nous March 14 2018 Brent 1998 p 34 Menand Louis 2001 The Metaphysical Club London Flamingo pp 161 62 ISBN 978 0007126903 Russell Bertrand 1959 Wisdom of the West p 276 a b Anellis Irving H 1995 Peirce Rustled Russell Pierced How Charles Peirce and Bertrand Russell Viewed Each Other s Work in Logic and an Assessment of Russell s Accuracy and Role in the Historiography of Logic Modern Logic 5 270 328 Arisbe Eprint Popper Karl 1972 Objective Knowledge An Evolutionary Approach p 212 See Royce Josiah and Kernan W Fergus 1916 Charles Sanders Peirce The Journal of Philosophy Psychology and Scientific Method v 13 pp 701 09 Arisbe Eprint Ketner et al 1986 Comprehensive Bibliography p iii Hookway Christopher 2008 Pragmatism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Brent 1998 p 8 Transactions of the Charles S Peirce Society Indiana University Press Journals Archived from the original on December 4 2015 Retrieved June 17 2017 Peirce Benjamin Charles Sanders Webster s Biographical Dictionary Springfield Massachusetts 1960 1943 Fisch Max 1986 Peirce Semeiotic and Pragmatism Kenneth Laine Ketner and Christian J W Kloesel eds Bloomington Indiana Indiana U Press Theological Research Group in C S Peirce s Philosophy Hermann Deuser Justus Liebig Universitat Giessen Wilfred Harle Philipps Universitat Marburg Germany Postmodernism and Christian Philosophy Quid Sit Postmodernismus p 93 archived Burks Arthur Introduction Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 7 p xi Robin Richard S 1967 Annotated Catalogue of the Papers of Charles S Peirce Amherst MA University of Massachusetts Press The manuscript material now 1997 comes to more than a hundred thousand pages These contain many pages of no philosophical interest but the number of pages on philosophy certainly number much more than half of that Also a significant but unknown number of manuscripts have been lost Joseph Ransdell 1997 Some Leading Ideas of Peirce s Semiotic end note 2 1997 light revision of 1977 version in Semiotica 19 157 78 Houser Nathan The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Peirce Papers Fourth Congress of the IASS Perpignan France 1989 Signs of Humanity v 3 1992 pp 1259 68 Eprint Memorandum to the President of Charles S Peirce Society by Ahti Veikko Pietarinen U of Helsinki March 29 2012 Eprint See for example Collections of Peirce s Writings at Commens U of Helsinki See 1987 review by B Kuklick of Peirce by Christopher Hookway in British Journal for the Philosophy of Sciencev 38 n 1 pp 117 19 First page Auspitz Josiah Lee 1994 The Wasp Leaves the Bottle Charles Sanders Peirce The American Scholar v 63 n 4 Autumn 1994 602 18 Arisbe Eprint Peirce 1879 A Quincuncial Projection of the Sphere American Journal of Mathematics 2 4 394 397 doi 10 2307 2369491 JSTOR 2369491 a b Burks Arthur W Review Charles S Peirce The new elements of mathematics Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society v 84 n 5 1978 pp 913 18 PDF Peirce 1860 MS Orders of Infinity News from the Peirce Edition Project September 2010 PDF p 6 with the manuscript s text Also see logic historian Irving Anellis s November 11 2010 comment Archived April 23 2017 at the Wayback Machine at peirce l Peirce MS winter of 1880 81 A Boolean Algebra with One Constant Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 4 12 20 Writings of Charles S Peirce 4 218 21 Google Preview See Roberts Don D 1973 The Existential Graphs of Charles S Peirce p 131 Peirce 1881 On the Logic of Number American Journal of Mathematics v 4 pp 85 95 Reprinted CP 3 252 88 Writings of Charles S Peirce 4 299 309 See Shields Paul 1997 Peirce s Axiomatization of Arithmetic in Houser et al eds Studies in the Logic of Charles S Peirce a b Peirce 1885 On the Algebra of Logic A Contribution to the Philosophy of Notation American Journal of Mathematics 7 two parts first part published 1885 pp 180 202 see Houser in linked paragraph in Introduction in Writings of Charles S Peirce 4 Presented National Academy of Sciences Newport RI October 14 17 1884 see The Essential Peirce 1 Headnote 16 1885 is the year usually given for this work Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 3 359 403 Writings of Charles S Peirce 5 162 90 The Essential Peirce 1 225 28 in part a b c Putnam Hilary 1982 Peirce the Logician Historia Mathematica 9 290 301 Reprinted pp 252 60 in Putnam 1990 Realism with a Human Face Harvard Excerpt with article s last five pages It was in Peirce s 1885 On the Algebra of Logic See Byrnes John 1998 Peirce s First Order Logic of 1885 Transactions of the Charles S Peirce Society v 34 n 4 pp 949 76 Brady Geraldine 2000 From Peirce to Skolem A Neglected Chapter in the History of Logic North Holland Elsevier Science BV Amsterdam Netherlands See Peirce 1898 Lecture 3 The Logic of Relatives not the 1897 Monist article Reasoning and the Logic of Things pp 146 64 151 Peirce 1898 The Logic of Mathematics in Relation to Education in Educational Review v 15 pp 209 16 via Internet Archive Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 3 553 62 See also his The Simplest Mathematics 1902 MS Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 4 227 323 Lewis Clarence Irving 1918 A Survey of Symbolic Logic see ch 1 7 Peirce pp 79 106 see p 79 Internet Archive Note that Lewis s bibliography lists works by Frege tagged with asterisks as important Avery John 2003 Information theory and evolution p 167 also Mitchell Melanie My Scientific Ancestry Archived October 8 2014 at the Wayback Machine Beil Ralph G and Ketner Kenneth 2003 Peirce Clifford and Quantum Theory International Journal of Theoretical Physics v 42 n 9 pp 1957 72 Houser Roberts and Van Evra eds 1997 Studies in the Logic of Charles Sanders Peirce Indiana U Bloomington IN Misak ed 2004 The Cambridge Companion to Peirce Cambridge U UK Peirce 1893 1894 MS 949 p 1 Peirce 1903 MS Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 6 176 But I now define a pseudo continuum as that which modern writers on the theory of functions call a continuum But this is fully represented by the totality of real values rational and irrational Peirce 1902 MS and Ransdell Joseph ed 1998 Analysis of the Methods of Mathematical Demonstration Memoir 4 Draft C MS L75 90 102 see 99 100 Once there scroll down See Peirce 1908 Some Amazing Mazes Conclusion Explanation of Curiosity the First The Monist v 18 n 3 pp 416 44 see 463 64 Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 4 594 642 see 642 Havenel Jerome 2008 Peirce s Clarifications on Continuity Transactions Winter 2008 pp 68 133 see 119 Abstract Peirce condemned the use of certain likelihoods The Essential Peirce 2 108 09 even more strongly than he criticized Bayesian methods Indeed Peirce used a bit of Bayesian inference in criticizing parapsychology Writings of Charles S Peirce 6 76 Miller Richard W 1975 Propensity Popper or Peirce British Journal for the Philosophy of Science v 26 n 2 pp 123 32 doi 10 1093 bjps 26 2 123 Eprint Haack Susan and Kolenda Konstantin 1977 Two Fallibilists in Search of the Truth Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volumes v 51 pp 63 104 JSTOR 4106816 Peirce CS Jastrow J On Small Differences in Sensation Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences 1885 3 73 83 a b Peirce 1897 Fallibilism Continuity and Evolution Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 1 141 75 Eprint placed by the Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce editors directly after F R L 1899 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 1 135 40 a b Peirce 1903 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 1 180 202 and 1906 The Basis of Pragmaticism The Essential Peirce 2 372 73 see Philosophy at Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce See in Firstness Secondness and Thirdness in Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce Peirce 1893 The Categories MS 403 Arisbe Eprint edited by Joseph Ransdell with information on the re write and interleaved with the 1867 New List for comparison Minute Logic CP 2 87 c 1902 and A Letter to Lady Welby CP 8 329 1904 See relevant quotes under Categories Cenopythagorean Categories in Commens Dictionary of Peirce s Terms CDPT Bergman amp Paalova eds U of Helsinki See quotes under Firstness First as a category in CDPT a b The ground blackness is the pure abstraction of the quality black Something black is something embodying blackness pointing us back to the abstraction The quality black amounts to reference to its own pure abstraction the ground blackness The question is not merely of noun the ground versus adjective the quality but rather of whether we are considering the black ness as abstracted away from application to an object or instead as so applied for instance to a stove Yet note that Peirce s distinction here is not that between a property general and a property individual a trope See On a New List of Categories 1867 in the section appearing in CP 1 551 Regarding the ground cf the Scholastic conception of a relation s foundation Google limited preview Deely 1982 p 61 A quale in this sense is a such just as a quality is a suchness Cf under Use of Letters in 3 of Peirce s Description of a Notation for the Logic of Relatives Memoirs of the American Academy v 9 pp 317 78 1870 separately reprinted 1870 from which see p 6 via Google books also reprinted in CP 3 63 Now logical terms are of three grand classes The first embraces those whose logical form involves only the conception of quality and which therefore represent a thing simply as a These discriminate objects in the most rudimentary way which does not involve any consciousness of discrimination They regard an object as it is in itself as such quale for example as horse tree or man These are absolute terms Peirce 1870 But also see Quale Consciousness 1898 in CP 6 222 37 See quotes under Secondness Second as a category in CDPT See quotes under Thirdness Third as a category in CDPT Charles S Peirce on Esthetics and Ethics A Bibliography Archived 6 April 2003 at the Wayback Machine PDF by Kelly A Parker in 1999 Peirce 1902 MS Carnegie Application edited by Joseph Ransdell Memoir 2 see table See Esthetics at Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce a b c Peirce 1899 MS F R L First Rule of Logic Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 1 135 40 Eprint a b Peirce 1882 Introductory Lecture on the Study of Logic delivered September 1882 Johns Hopkins University Circulars v 2 n 19 pp 11 12 via Google November 1882 Reprinted The Essential Peirce 1 210 14 Writings of Charles S Peirce 4 378 82 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 7 59 76 The definition of logic quoted by Peirce is by Peter of Spain Peirce 1878 The Doctrine of Chances Popular Science Monthly v 12 pp 604 15 CP 2 645 68 Writings of Charles S Peirce 3 276 90 The Essential Peirce 1 142 54 death makes the number of our risks the number of our inferences finite and so makes their mean result uncertain The very idea of probability and of reasoning rests on the assumption that this number is indefinitely great logicality inexorably requires that our interests shall not be limited Logic is rooted in the social principle Peirce Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 448 footnote from The Basis of Pragmaticism in 1906 a b c Peirce 1868 Questions concerning certain Faculties claimed for Man Journal of Speculative Philosophy v 2 n 2 pp 103 14 On thought in signs see p 112 Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 213 63 on thought in signs see 253 Writings of Charles S Peirce 2 193 211 The Essential Peirce 2 11 27 Arisbe Eprint a b See rhetoric definitions at Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce Peirce 1902 The Carnegie Institute Application Memoir 10 MS L75 361 62 Arisbe Eprint a b c d e Peirce 1868 Some Consequences of Four Incapacities Journal of Speculative Philosophy v 2 n 3 pp 140 57 Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 264 317 Writings of Charles S Peirce 2 211 42 The Essential Peirce 1 28 55 Arisbe Eprint a b Peirce Grounds of Validity of the Laws of Logic Further Consequences of Four Incapacities Journal of Speculative Philosophy v II n 4 pp 193 208 Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 318 57 Writings of Charles S Peirce 2 242 72 Peirce Edition Project Eprint The Essential Peirce 1 56 82 Peirce 1905 What Pragmatism Is The Monist v XV n 2 pp 161 81 see 167 Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 411 37 see 416 Arisbe Eprint Peirce 1907 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 484 Reprinted The Essential Peirce 2 411 in Pragmatism 398 433 See Quasi mind in Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce Peirce Carnegie Application The New Elements of Mathematics v 4 p 54 Peirce 1867 Upon Logical Comprehension and Extension CP 2 391 426 Writings of Charles S Peirce 2 70 86 a b See pp 404 09 in Pragmatism in The Essential Peirce 2 Ten quotes on collateral experience from Peirce provided by Joseph Ransdell can be viewed here at peirce l s Lyris archive Note Ransdell s quotes from Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 8 178 79 are also in The Essential Peirce 2 493 94 which gives their date as 1909 and his quote from Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 8 183 is also in The Essential Peirce 2 495 96 which gives its date as 1909 Peirce letter to William James dated 1909 see The Essential Peirce 2 492 a b c See 76 definitions of the sign by C S Peirce collected by Robert Marty U of Perpignan France Peirce A Letter to Lady Welby 1908 Semiotic and Significs pp 80 81 I define a Sign as anything which is so determined by something else called its Object and so determines an effect upon a person which effect I call its Interpretant that the latter is thereby mediately determined by the former My insertion of upon a person is a sop to Cerberus because I despair of making my own broader conception understood Representamen ˌ r ɛ p r ɪ z ɛ n ˈ t eɪ m e n REP ri zen TAY men was adopted not coined by Peirce as his technical term for the sign as covered in his theory in case a divergence should come to light between his theoretical version and the popular senses of the word sign He eventually stopped using representamen See The Essential Peirce 2 272 73 and Semiotic and Significs p 193 quotes in Representamen at Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce Eco Umberto 1984 Semiotics and the Philosophy of Language Bloomington amp Indianapolis Indiana University Press p 15 ISBN 978 0253203984 a b Peirce 1909 A Letter to William James The Essential Peirce 2 492 502 Fictional object 498 Object as universe of discourse 492 See Dynamical Object at Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce See Immediate Object etc at Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce a b Peirce 1903 MS Nomenclature and Divisions of Triadic Relations as Far as They Are Determined under other titles in Collected Papers CP v 2 paragraphs 233 72 and reprinted under the original title in Essential Peirce EP v 2 pp 289 99 Also see image of MS 339 August 7 1904 supplied to peirce l by Bernard Morand of the Institut Universitaire de Technologie France Departement Informatique a b On the varying terminology look up in Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce Popular Science Monthly v 13 pp 470 82 see 472 or the book at Wikisource Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 2 619 44 623 See under Abduction at Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce the following quotes On correction of A Theory of Probable Inference see quotes from Minute Logic Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 2 102 c 1902 and from the Carnegie Application L75 1902 Historical Perspectives on Peirce s Logic of Science v 2 pp 1031 32 On new logical form for abduction see quote from Harvard Lectures on Pragmatism 1903 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 188 89 See also Santaella Lucia 1997 The Development of Peirce s Three Types of Reasoning Abduction Deduction and Induction 6th Congress of the IASS Eprint Lectures on Pragmatism 1903 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 171 A Letter to J H Kehler dated 1911 The New Elements of Mathematics v 3 pp 203 04 see in Retroduction at Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce James William 1897 The Will to Believe see p 124 See Pragmaticism Pragmaticism s name for discussion and references a b That the rule of induction will hold good in the long run may be deduced from the principle that reality is only the object of the final opinion to which sufficient investigation would lead in Peirce 1878 April The Probability of Induction p 718 via Internet Archive in Popular Science Monthly v 12 pp 705 18 Reprinted in Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 2 669 93 Writings of Charles S Peirce 3 290 305 The Essential Peirce 1 155 69 elsewhere Peirce 1902 Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 13 note 1 See Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 1 34 Eprint in The Spirit of Scholasticism where Peirce ascribed the success of modern science less to a novel interest in verification than to the improvement of verification See Joseph Ransdell s comments and his tabular list of titles of Peirce s proposed list of memoirs in 1902 for his Carnegie application Eprint Peirce 1905 Issues of Pragmaticism The Monist v XV n 4 pp 481 99 Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 438 63 Also important Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 497 525 Peirce Philosophy and the Conduct of Life Lecture 1 of the 1898 Cambridge MA Conferences Lectures Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 1 616 48 in part and Reasoning and the Logic of Things 105 22 reprinted in The Essential Peirce 2 27 41 a b Peirce 1908 A Neglected Argument for the Reality of God published in large part Hibbert Journal v 7 90 112 Reprinted with an unpublished part Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 6 452 85 Selected Writings pp 358 79 The Essential Peirce 2 434 50 Peirce on Signs 260 78 See also Nubiola Jaime 2004 Il Lume Naturale Abduction and God Semiotiche I 2 91 102 Peirce c 1906 PAP Prolegomena to an Apology for Pragmatism MS 293 The New Elements of Mathematics v 4 pp 319 20 first quote under Abduction at Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce Peirce 1903 Pragmatism The Logic of Abduction Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 5 195 205 especially 196 Eprint Peirce Carnegie application MS L75 279 80 Memoir 27 Draft B a b See MS L75 329 30 from Draft D of Memoir 27 of Peirce s application to the Carnegie Institution Consequently to discover is simply to expedite an event that would occur sooner or later if we had not troubled ourselves to make the discovery Consequently the art of discovery is purely a question of economics The economics of research is so far as logic is concerned the leading doctrine with reference to the art of discovery Consequently the conduct of abduction which is chiefly a question of heuretic and is the first question of heuretic is to be governed by economical considerations Peirce C S On the Logic of Drawing Ancient History from Documents The Essential Peirce 2 see pp 107 09 On Twenty Questions see 109 Thus twenty skillful hypotheses will ascertain what 200 000 stupid ones might fail to do Peirce believed in God See section Philosophy metaphysics However Peirce disagreed with Hegelian absolute idealism See for example Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 8 131 Peirce 1868 Nominalism versus Realism Journal of Speculative Philosophy v 2 n 1 pp 57 61 Reprinted CP 6 619 24 Writings of Charles S Peirce 2 144 53 On developments in Peirce s realism see Peirce 1897 The Logic of Relatives The Monist v VII n 2 pp 161 217 see 206 via Google Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 3 456 552 Peirce 1905 Issues of Pragmaticism The Monist v XV n 4 pp 481 99 see 495 96 via Google Reprinted CP 5 438 63 see 453 57 Peirce c 1905 Letter to Signor Calderoni Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 8 205 13 see 208 Lane Robert 2007 Peirce s Modal Shift From Set Theory to Pragmaticism Journal of the History of Philosophy v 45 n 4 Peirce in his 1906 Answers to Questions concerning my Belief in God Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 6 495 Eprint Archived February 23 2008 at the Wayback Machine reprinted in part as The Concept of God in Philosophical Writings of Peirce J Buchler ed 1940 pp 375 78 I will also take the liberty of substituting reality for existence This is perhaps overscrupulosity but I myself always use exist in its strict philosophical sense of react with the other like things in the environment Of course in that sense it would be fetichism to say that God exists The word reality on the contrary is used in ordinary parlance in its correct philosophical sense I define the real as that which holds its characters on such a tenure that it makes not the slightest difference what any man or men may have thought them to be or ever will have thought them to be here using thought to include imagining opining and willing as long as forcible means are not used but the real thing s characters will remain absolutely untouched See his The Doctrine of Necessity Examined 1892 and Reply to the Necessitarians 1893 to both of which editor Paul Carus responded Peirce 1891 The Architecture of Theories The Monist v 1 pp 161 76 see p 170 via Internet Archive Reprinted CP 6 7 34 and The Essential Peirce 1 285 97 see p 293 See tychism tychasm tychasticism and the rest at http www helsinki fi science commens dictionary html Archived August 22 2010 at the Wayback Machine Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce https web archive org web 20111024011940 http www helsinki fi science commens dictionary html Peirce 1893 Evolutionary Love The Monist v 3 pp 176 200 Reprinted Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce 6 278 317 The Essential Peirce 1 352 72 Arisbe Eprint Archived May 20 2007 at the Wayback Machine See p 115 in Reasoning and the Logic of Things Peirce s 1898 lectures External links EditCharles Sanders Peirce at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Arisbe The Peirce Gateway Joseph Ransdell ed Over 100 online writings by Peirce as of November 24 2010 with annotations Hundreds of online papers on Peirce The peirce l e forum Much else Center for Applied Semiotics CAS 1998 2003 Donald Cunningham amp Jean Umiker Sebeok Indiana U Centro Internacional de Estudos Peirceanos CIEP and previously Centro de Estudos Peirceanos CeneP Lucia Santaella et al Pontifical Catholic U of Sao Paulo PUC SP Brazil In Portuguese some English Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce Mats Bergman Sami Paavola amp Joao Queiroz formerly Commens at Helsinki U Includes Commens Dictionary of Peirce s Terms with Peirce s definitions often many per term across the decades and the Digital Encyclopedia of Charles S Peirce old edition still at old website Centro Studi Peirce Archived September 8 2013 at the Wayback Machine Carlo Sini Rossella Fabbrichesi et al U of Milan Italy In Italian and English Part of Pragma Charles S Peirce Foundation Co sponsoring the 2014 Peirce International Centennial Congress 100th anniversary of Peirce s death Charles S Peirce SocietyTransactions of the Charles S Peirce Society Quarterly journal of Peirce studies since spring 1965 Table of Contents of all issues Charles S Peirce Studies Brian Kariger ed Charles Sanders Peirce at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Collegium for the Advanced Study of Picture Act and Embodiment The Peirce Archive Humboldt U Berlin Germany Cataloguing Peirce s innumerable drawings amp graphic materials More info Prof Aud Sissel Hoel Digital Encyclopedia of Charles S Peirce Joao Queiroz now at UFJF amp Ricardo Gudwin at Unicamp eds Universidade Estadual de Campinas U of Campinas Brazil in English 84 authors listed 51 papers online amp more listed as of January 31 2009 Newer edition now at Commens Digital Companion to C S Peirce Existential Graphs Jay Zeman ed U of Florida Has 4 Peirce texts Grupo de Estudios Peirceanos GEP Peirce Studies Group Jaime Nubiola ed U of Navarra Spain Big study site Peirce amp others in Spanish amp English bibliography more Helsinki Peirce Research Center HPRC Ahti Veikko Pietarinen et al U of Helsinki His Glassy Essence Autobiographical Peirce Kenneth Laine Ketner Institute for Studies in Pragmaticism Kenneth Laine Ketner Clyde Hendrick et al Texas Tech U Peirce s life and works International Research Group on Abductive Inference Uwe Wirth et al eds Goethe U Frankfurt Germany Uses frames Click on link at bottom of its home page for English Moved to U of Giessen Germany home page not in English but see Artikel section there L I R S C E 1974 2003 Institut de Recherche en Semiotique Communication et Education Gerard Deledalle Joelle Rethore U of Perpignan France Minute Semeiotic Vinicius Romanini U of Sao Paulo Brazil English Portuguese Peirce at Signo Theoretical Semiotics on the Web Louis Hebert director supported by U of Quebec Theory application exercises of Peirce s Semiotics and Esthetics English French Peirce Edition Project PEP Indiana U Purdue U Indianapolis IUPUI Andre De Tienne Nathan Houser et al Editors of the Writings of Charles S Peirce W and The Essential Peirce EP v 2 Many study aids such as the Robin Catalog of Peirce s manuscripts amp letters and Biographical introductions to EP 1 2 and W 1 6 amp 8Most of Writings of Charles S Peirce 2 readable online PEP s branch at Universite du Quebec a Montreal UQAM Working on Writings of Charles S Peirce 7 Peirce s work on the Century Dictionary Definition of the week Peirce s Existential Graphs Frithjof Dau Germany Peirce Research Group Department of Philosophy Piero Martinetti University of Milan Italy Pragmatism Cybrary David Hildebrand amp John Shook Research Group on Semiotic Epistemology and Mathematics Education late 1990s Institut fur Didaktik der Mathematik Michael Hoffman Michael Otte Universitat Bielefeld Germany See Peirce Project Newsletter v 3 n 1 p 13 Semiotics according to Robert Marty with 76 definitions of the sign by C S Peirce Works by Charles Sanders Peirce at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Sanders Peirce amp oldid 1150227121, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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