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38Charles Sanders PeirceIn John R. Shook & Joseph Margolis (eds.), A Companion to Pragmatism, Wiley-blackwell. 2008.This chapter contains sections titled: Philosopher and Scientist Scientific Intelligence and Theoretical Knowledge Philosophy Within the Limits of Experience Alone The Conduct of Inquiry Clarifying Meaning The Theory of Signs Absolute Chance, Brute Reaction, and Evolving Law.
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176Telling Tales Out of School: Pragmatic Reflections on Philosophical StorytellingJournal of Speculative Philosophy 27 (1): 1-32. 2013.ABSTRACT This article offers a critique of a deeply engrained tendency to narrate the story of American pragmatism exclusively or primarily in terms of modern European philosophy. While it suggests alternative stories, it is principally a metanarrative, an intentionally polemical story about our entrenched habits of philosophical storytelling. Indeed, the pragmatics of storytelling merits, especially in reference to historical accounts of American pragmatism, critical attention. The seemingly si…Read more
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86Antifoundationalism Old and New (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 33 (2): 251-254. 1993.
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43Truth, Rationality, and Pragmatism (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 42 (1): 122-124. 2002.
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52Let's All Go to the Movies: Two Thumbs up for Hugo Münsterberg's "The Photoplay" (1916)Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 36 (4): 477-501. 2000.
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75A lantern for the feet of inquirers: The heuristic function of the Peircean categoriesSemiotica 2001 (136). 2001.
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39Is Peirce's Theory of Signs Truly General?Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 23 (2): 205-234. 1987.
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12The Dynamical Object and the Deliberative SubjectIn Jacqueline Brunning & Paul Forster (eds.), The Rule of Reason: The Philosophy of C.S. Peirce, University of Toronto Press. pp. 262-288. 1997.
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65Gestures Historical and Incomplete, Critical yet FriendlyEuropean Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 8 (1). 2016.“Thought requires achievement for its own development, and without this development it is nothing. Thought must live and grow in incessant new and higher translations, or it proves itself not to be genuine thought.” – C. S. Peirce (CP 5.595) Introduction: Captivating Pictures and Liberating Gestures At the center of one of the most famous anecdotes involving a famous philosopher, we encounter what is commonly called in English a gesture, in fact, a Neapolitan gesture, though one made by a Tur...
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50Toward a Fuller Recovery of Living ReasonTransactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 31 (1): 21-39. 1995.
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76Cultivating the Arts of Inquiry, Interpretation, and Criticism: A Peircean Approach to our Educational PracticesStudies in Philosophy and Education 24 (3): 337-366. 2005.Peirce was a thinker who claimed that his mind had been thoroughly formed by his rigorous training in the natural sciences. But he was also the author who proclaimed that nothing is truer than true poetry. In making the case for Peirce’s relevance to issues of education, then, it is necessary to do justice to the multifaceted character of his philosophical genius, in particular, to the experimentalist cast of his mind and his profound appreciation for the aesthetic, the imaginative, and (more na…Read more
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52"Tell Your Friend Giuliano...": Jamesian Enthusiasms and Peircean ReservationsTransactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 30 (4): 897-926. 1994.
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86America’s Philosophical Vision (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 33 (3): 355-364. 1993.
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48C. S. Peirce, 1839–1914In Armen T. Marsoobian & John Ryder (eds.), The Blackwell Guide to American Philosophy, Wiley-blackwell. 2008.This chapter contains sections titled: Charles Sanders Peirce ‐ Scientist, Logician, and Philosopher Scientific Intelligence and Theoretical Knowledge Philosophy Within the Limits of Experience Alone The Conduct of Inquiry The Scope of Philosophy The Theory of Signs The Conjecture of a Physicist: Absolute Chance, Brute Reaction, and Evolving Law Conclusion.
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: The essay explores how C. S. Peirce, especially in his mature thought, addressed the question of meaning. It underscores how he not only took meaning to be at bottom a function of our habits but also how he conceived these habits themselves to be functions of the histories in which they originate and operate. Hence, what I propose here is this: One of the most fruitful ways to interpret Peirce's own contribution to this question is to see his efforts as carrying forward the impetus intensified…Read more
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46Metaphysics of Natural Complexes (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 32 (1): 132-136. 1992.
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47A Revised Portrait of Human AgencyEuropean Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 1 (1): 2-24. 2009.Anthony Giddens, Hans Joas, Margaret Archer, Norbert Wiley, and Eugene Halton (to name but a handful of such figures) are social theorists whose philosophical importance is all too often missed (or ignored) by professional philosophers. The main reason for this is obvious: they are by training and appointment social scientists, while professional philosophy tends to be an insular discipline. Disciplinary purity, like most other forms of this misplaced ideal, tends to insure insularity and vit...
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115Testing Our Traditional “Intuitions”Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 73 265-274. 1999.
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James Hoopes, "Consciousness in New England: From Puritanism and Ideas to Psychoanalysis and Semiotic" (review)Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 26 (4): 530. 1990.
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96Peircean Semeiotic and Legal Practices: Rudimentary and “Rhetorical” Considerations (review)International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 21 (3): 223-246. 2008.Too often C. S. Peirce’s theory of signs is used simply as a classificatory scheme rather than primarily as a heuristic framework (that is, a framework designed and modified primarily for the purpose of goading and guiding inquiry in any field in which signifying processes or practices are present). Such deployment of his semeiotic betrays the letter no less than the spirit of Peirce’s writings on signs. In this essay, the author accordingly presents Peirce’s sign theory as a heuristic framework…Read more
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101Aligning Deweyan pragmatism and Emersonian perfectionism: Re-imagining growth and educating grown-upsJournal of Philosophy of Education 41 (3). 2007.This essay examines in detail the triangulated conversation Naoko Saito constructs, in The Gleam of Light, among the voices of R. W. Emerson, John Dewey and Stanley Cavell. The pivot around which everything turns is the Emersonian ideal of moral perfectionism and, in particular, the implications of this ideal for the philosophy of education. As explicated by Cavell, this ideal concerns ‘the dimension of moral thought directed less to restraining the bad than to releasing the good’. For the consc…Read more
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