Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2022
Peirce’s c.1902 taxonomy of the sciences is briefly described, stressing its anti-foundationalist formulation. That taxonomy identified philosophy as a science of discovery and divided it into several empirical, albeit very general, inquiries. Of these, phaneroscopy (phenomenology) is the most basic. Phaneroscopy depends not only on empiricism’s expansion (Chapter 7) but also on a vocabulary of phaneroscopic description, free of metaphysical assumptions, drawn from the algebra of relations. The resulting three phaneroscopic categories are here developed systematically. Peirce’s 1903 reformulation of pragmatism (Chapter 4) mandated a phaneroscopic account of the meaning of modal and metaphysical ideas – of possibility, actuality, and, especially, law – by which to establish the meaningfulness of modal realism. This implies that some forms of lawfulness are directly perceived. But direct (i.e., non-inferential) perception of lawfulness does not prove law’s reality, which must remain a hypothesis supported, never proven, by common experience and especially by the progress of scientific inquiry.
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