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Charles Sanders Peirce
The Collected Papers: Pragmatism and Pramaticism
I. Lectures on Pragmatism
Lecture 1.
Pragmatism: The Normative Sciences
Contents:
§1. Two Statements of the Pragmatic Maxim
§2. The Meaning of Probability
§3. The Meaning of »Practical« Consequences
§4. The Relations of the Normative Sciences
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2. The Universal Categories
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I. Lectures on Pragmatism
1. Pragmatism: The Normative Sciences
§1. Two Statements of the Pragmatic Maxim
§2. The Meaning of Probability
§3. The Meaning of »Practical« Consequences
§4. The Relations of the Normative Sciences
2. The Universal Categories
§1. Presentness
§2. Struggle
§3. Laws: Nominalism
3. The Categories Continued
§1. Degenerate Thirdness
§2. The Seven Systems of Metaphysics
§3. The Irreducibility of the Categories
4. The Reality of Thirdness
§1. Scholastic Realism
§2. Thirdness and Generality
§3. Normative Judgments
§4. Perceptual Judgments
5. Three Kinds of Goodness
§1. The Divisions of Philosophy
§2. Ethical and Esthetical Goodness
§3. Logical Goodness
6. Three Types of Reasoning
§1. Perceptual Judgments and Generality
§2. The Plan and Steps of Reasoning
§3. Inductive Reasoning
§4. Instinct and Abduction
§5. The Meaning of an Argument
7. Pragmatism and Abduction
§1. The Three Cotary Propositions
§2. Abduction and Perceptual Judgments
§3. Pragmatism — the Logic of Abduction
§4. The Two Functions of Pragmatism
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Charles Sanders Peirce
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The Collected Papers Vol. V.:
Pragmatism and Pramaticism
(1931)