Book contents
- Charles Peirce and Modern Science
- Charles Peirce and Modern Science
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- A Note on Citation of Sources
- Chapter 1 Peirce’s Life in Science: 1859–1891
- Chapter 2 Peirce’s Concept of Science
- Chapter 3 Modern Science Contra Classical Philosophy
- Chapter 4 The Meaning of Pragmatism
- Chapter 5 Misleading Appearances of System
- Chapter 6 Devolution of the Cosmogonic Program
- Chapter 7 Experiments Expanding Empiricism
- Chapter 8 Phaneroscopy and Realism
- Chapter 9 Normative Science
- Chapter 10 Modern Science Contra Modernity
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 1 - Peirce’s Life in Science: 1859–1891
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2022
- Charles Peirce and Modern Science
- Charles Peirce and Modern Science
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- A Note on Citation of Sources
- Chapter 1 Peirce’s Life in Science: 1859–1891
- Chapter 2 Peirce’s Concept of Science
- Chapter 3 Modern Science Contra Classical Philosophy
- Chapter 4 The Meaning of Pragmatism
- Chapter 5 Misleading Appearances of System
- Chapter 6 Devolution of the Cosmogonic Program
- Chapter 7 Experiments Expanding Empiricism
- Chapter 8 Phaneroscopy and Realism
- Chapter 9 Normative Science
- Chapter 10 Modern Science Contra Modernity
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter summarizes Peirce’s attainments and accomplishments during the period of his scientific career, noting their variety, describing his important contributions to mathematical logic, and mentioning his philosophical essays and lectures, but emphasizing his empirical investigations, which were in experimental psychology as well as in astronomy and geodesy. He improved on such recent developments as Venn’s frequency theory of probability and Boole’s algebra of logic. He studied the histories of science and of logic. I report nothing not already known; this chapter’s purpose is to establish the depth of Peirce’s immersion in modern science, so as to ground the fundamental thesis of this book, that his philosophical modus operandi was that of a scientist. His essays should be read, not as constructing a system, much less as conceptual analysis, but as framing bold conjectures intended to guide the inquiries in which they will be refined and tested, amended or superseded.
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- Charles Peirce and Modern Science , pp. 1 - 16Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022