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E-raamat: The Rule of Reason: The Philosophy of C.S. Peirce

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Charles Sanders Peirce (1839-1914), the founder of Pragmatism, was an American philosopher, logician, physicist, and mathematician. Since the publication of his collected papers in 1931, interest in Peirce has grown dramatically. His work has found audiences in such disciplines as philosophy, computer science, logic, film studies, semiotics, and literary criticism. While Peirce scholarship has advanced considerably since its earliest days, many controversies of interpretation persist, and several of the more obscure aspects of his work remain poorly understood.

The Rule of Reason is a collection of original essays examining Peirce's thought by some of the best-known scholars in the field. The contributors investigate outstanding issues and difficulties in his philosophy and situate his views in both their historical and their contemporary contexts. Some of the essays clarify aspects of Peirce's philosophy, some defend its contemporary significance, and some do both. The essays explore Peirce's work from various perspectives, considering the philosophical significance of his contributions to logic; the foundations of his philosophical system; his metaphysics and cosmology; his theories of inquiry and truth; and his theories of mind, agency, and selfhood.



The essays explore Peirce's work from various perspectives, considering the philosophical significance of his contributions to logic; the foundations of his philosophical system; his metaphysics and cosmology; his theories of inquiry and truth; and his theories of mind, agency, and selfhood.



Charles Sanders Peirce (1839-1914), the founder of Pragmatism, was an American philosopher, logician, physicist, and mathematician. Since the publication of his collected papers in 1931, interest in Peirce has grown dramatically. His work has found audiences in such disciplines as philosophy, computer science, logic, film studies, semiotics, and literary criticism. While Peirce scholarship has advanced considerably since its earliest days, many controversies of interpretation persist, and several of the more obscure aspects of his work remain poorly understood.

The Rule of Reason is a collection of original essays examining Peirce's thought by some of the best-known scholars in the field. The contributors investigate outstanding issues and difficulties in his philosophy and situate his views in both their historical and their contemporary contexts. Some of the essays clarify aspects of Peirce's philosophy, some defend its contemporary significance, and some do both. The essays explore Peirce's work from various perspectives, considering the philosophical significance of his contributions to logic; the foundations of his philosophical system; his metaphysics and cosmology; his theories of inquiry and truth; and his theories of mind, agency, and selfhood.

Abbreviations ix Acknowledgments xi Introduction 3(10) Jacqueline Brunning Paul Forster The Place of C.S. Peirce in the History of Logical Theory 13(21) Jaakko Hintikka Inference and Logic According to Peirce 34(23) Isaac Levi The Logical Foundations of Peirces Indeterminism 57(24) Paul Forster A Tarski-Style Semantics for Peirces Beta Graphs 81(15) Robert W. Burch The Tinctures and Implicit Quantification over Worlds 96(24) Jay Zeman Pragmatic Experimentalism and the Derivation of the Categories 120(19) Sandra B. Rosenthal Classical Pragmatism and Pragmatisms Proof 139(14) Richard S. Robin The Logical Structure of Idealism: C.S. Peirces Search for a Logic of Mental Processes 153(32) Helmut Pape Charles Peirce and the Origin of Interpretation 185(16) Carl R. Hausman Sentiment and Self-Control 201(22) Christopher Hookway A Political Dimension of Fixing Belief 223(18) Douglas R. Anderson The First Rule of Reason 241(21) Susan Haack The Dynamical Object and the Deliberative Subject 262(27) Vincent M. Colapietro Hypostatic Abstraction in Self-Consciousness 289(20) T.L. Short David Savan: In Memoriam 309(4) Calvin G. Normore Contributors 313
Jacqueline Brunning is an associate professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Toronto.

Paul Forster is an assistant professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Ottawa.