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4. Testimony and the Self

  • Rosa M. Calcaterra
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Charles Sanders Peirce in His Own Words
This chapter is in the book Charles Sanders Peirce in His Own Words

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Foreword v
  3. Preface ix
  4. Table of contents xvii
  5. Charles Sanders Peirce – Primary Sources and Abbreviations xxv
  6. 1. Aesthetic Value in Peirce’s Theistic Naturalism 1
  7. 2. Man, Word, and the Other 5
  8. 3. Semiotic Gold at the End of Peirce’s Rainbow: on the Fallible Pursuit of Reality 13
  9. 4. Testimony and the Self 21
  10. 5. Against Pretend Doubt 27
  11. 6. Motion and Thought – a Generic Metaphor 33
  12. 7. Peirce on Realism and Nominalism: the Metaphysics and Ethics of a Community of Inquirers 39
  13. 8. Peircean Inquiry and Secret Communication 45
  14. 9. Peirce on Non-Accidental Causes of Belief 53
  15. 10. Scientific Method and the Realist Hypothesis 57
  16. 11. Logic is Rooted in the Social Principle (and vice versa) 63
  17. 12. Reasoning is Communal in Method and Spirit 73
  18. 13. The Bottomless Lake of Consciousness 81
  19. 14. Physical Laws are not Habits, while Rules of Life are 87
  20. 15. Semiosis: from Taxonomy to Process 95
  21. 16. Is Peirce’s Fallibilism an Ethical Attitude? 105
  22. 17. Peirce’s Fallibilism in the Context of the Theory of Cognition and the Theory of Inquiry 109
  23. 18. Diagrams or Rubbish 115
  24. 19. How does Cognition come from Chance? 121
  25. 20. Peirce’s Graph of “a Sort of Equilateral Hyperbola” 127
  26. 21. Icons and Indices Assert Nothing 131
  27. 22. Bohemians, Like Me 137
  28. 23. Peirce’s Evolutionary Thought 145
  29. 24. Peirce’s Guess at the Sphinx’s Riddle: The symbol as the Mind’s Eyebeam 153
  30. 25. Love as Attention in Peirce’s Thought 161
  31. 26. A Person is Like a Cluster of Stars 165
  32. 27. Crystal-Clearness: For the Second-Rates 169
  33. 28. On the Nature of Rare Minds & Useless Things 177
  34. 29. The Heart as a Perceptive Organ 187
  35. 30. On the “Realistic Hypostatization of Relations” 193
  36. 31. Peirce’s Role in the History of Logic: Lingua Universalis and Calculus Ratiocinator 201
  37. 32. Pure Zero 207
  38. 33. Peirce on Theory and Practice 213
  39. 34. Peirce and the Discipline of Metaphysics 221
  40. 35. Peirce’s First Rule of Reason and the Process of Learning 229
  41. 36. Bridging Ancient and Contemporary Knowing 235
  42. 37. Peirce’s Process Ontology of Relational Order 239
  43. 38. The Degenerate Monkey 245
  44. 39. On Digital Photo-Index 253
  45. 40. Semiotic Propedeutics for Logic and Cognition 259
  46. 41. The First Correlate 263
  47. 42. Logic, Ethics and the Ethics of Logic 271
  48. 43. Beauty and the Best 279
  49. 44. Iconicity in Peircean situated cognitive Semiotics 283
  50. 45. The Purloined Inkstand 291
  51. 46. A Very Short Version of Diagrammatic Reasoning 295
  52. 47. Against Preposterous Philosophies of Mind 297
  53. 48. Dream and Drama: Peirce's Copernican Turn 305
  54. 49. Words that Matter: Peirce and the Ethics of Scientific Terminology 309
  55. 50. The Curious Case of Peirce’s Anthropomorphism 315
  56. 51. Peirce and the “Flood of False Notions” 325
  57. 52. Peirce on Science, Practice, and the Permissibility of ‘Stout Belief’ 331
  58. 53. Logic, Time, and Knowledge 335
  59. 54. The Hypoicons 339
  60. 55. The Phenomenon of Reasoning 347
  61. 56. Peirce’s Abduction 353
  62. 57. Terminology and Scientific Advancement 359
  63. 58. Fibers of Abduction 365
  64. 59. Experience and Education 373
  65. 60. Peirce, Pragmatism, and Purposive Action 379
  66. 61. Peirce’s Method of Work 385
  67. 62. Metaphysics of Wickedness 393
  68. 63. A Pragmaticist Appreciates the Past 399
  69. 64. Peirce’s Logotheca 405
  70. 65. Animals use Signs, They just don't know it 411
  71. 66. A Purely Mathematical Way for Peirce's Semiotics 415
  72. 67. Pragmatism, Cultural Lags and Moral Self-Reflection 421
  73. 68. Peirce on Hegel, Pragmaticism, and “the Triadic Class of Philosophical Doctrines” 429
  74. 69. Science as a Communicative Mode of Life 437
  75. 70. Not an Individual, but a dual Self (at least) 443
  76. 71. Science and Metaphysics 451
  77. 72. The Semiosphere: A Synthesis of the Physio-, Bio-, Eco-, and Technospheres 457
  78. 73. Peirce’s Persistent Interest in Economics 465
  79. 74. The River of Pragmatism 475
  80. 75. Visualizing Reason 483
  81. 76. Self-Control, Self-Surrender, and Self-Constitution: The Large Significance of an “Afterthought” 487
  82. 77. The Peircean Concept of Existential Graph and Discovery in Mathematics 493
  83. 78. Peirce on Metaphor 503
  84. 79. Peirce’s System of 66 Classes of Signs 507
  85. 80. Peirce’s Philosophical Theology, Continuity, and Communication with the Deity 513
  86. 81. The Play of Musement 521
  87. 82. On Peirce’s Visualization of the Classifications of Signs: Finding a Common Pattern in Diagrams 527
  88. 83. Truth and Satisfaction: The Gist of Pragmaticism 537
  89. 84. Collateral Experience and Interpretation: Narrative Cognition and Symbolization 545
  90. 85. “Don’t You Think So?” 553
  91. 86. Collateral Experience as a Prerequisite for Signification 557
  92. 87. Comparing Ideas: Comparational Analysis and Peirce’s Phenomenology 561
  93. 88. Developing from Peirce’s Late Semeiotic Realism 569
  94. References 575
  95. Index 601
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