•  7
    Preface
    with Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Yuval Jobani, and Tzvee Zahavy
    In Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Peter Ochs, Yuval Jobani & Tzvee Zahavy (eds.), Pragmatic Studies in Judaism, Gorgias Press. 2013.
  •  10
    Acknowledgments
    with Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Yuval Jobani, and Tzvee Zahavy
    In Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Peter Ochs, Yuval Jobani & Tzvee Zahavy (eds.), Pragmatic Studies in Judaism, Gorgias Press. 2013.
  •  11
    Index
    with Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Yuval Jobani, and Tzvee Zahavy
    In Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Peter Ochs, Yuval Jobani & Tzvee Zahavy (eds.), Pragmatic Studies in Judaism, Gorgias Press. pp. 267-272. 2013.
  •  9
    Frontmatter
    with Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Yuval Jobani, and Tzvee Zahavy
    In Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Peter Ochs, Yuval Jobani & Tzvee Zahavy (eds.), Pragmatic Studies in Judaism, Gorgias Press. 2013.
  •  61
    Pragmatic Studies in Judaism (edited book)
    with Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Yuval Jobani, and Tzvee Zahavy
    Gorgias Press. 2013.
  •  13
    Foreword
    with Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Yuval Jobani, and Tzvee Zahavy
    In Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Peter Ochs, Yuval Jobani & Tzvee Zahavy (eds.), Pragmatic Studies in Judaism, Gorgias Press. 2013.
  •  9
    Table of Contents
    with Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Yuval Jobani, and Tzvee Zahavy
    In Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Peter Ochs, Yuval Jobani & Tzvee Zahavy (eds.), Pragmatic Studies in Judaism, Gorgias Press. 2013.
  • In an age of global conflict, what forms of reasoning help repair broken relations? We must, says Peter W. Ochs, draw new practices of Reparative Reasoning out of age-old traditions of Scripture-based wisdom. These practices renew age-old relations between mind and heart, science and religion.
  •  5
    Pragmatism and the Logic of Jewish Political Messianism
    In Andrew Schumann, Aviram Ravitsky, Lenn E. Goodman, Furio Biagini, Alan Mittleman, Uri J. Schild, Michael Abraham, Dov Gabbay, Peter Ochs, Yuval Jobani & Tzvee Zahavy (eds.), Pragmatic Studies in Judaism, Gorgias Press. pp. 135-178. 2013.
  •  17
    Saints and the Heterological Historian
    In Eric Boynton & Martin Kavka (eds.), Saintly Influence: Edith Wyschogrod and the Possibilities of Philosophy of Religion, Fordham University Press. pp. 219-238. 2020.
  •  703
    In 1992, Peter Ochs and a few Christian and Muslim colleagues began to gather small groups, in and outside the classroom, to practice close and attentive reading of the sacred Scriptures of the Jewish, Muslim, and Christian traditions. The hope was that members of different religions could hear one another through the patient, respectful reading of each other's Scripture. Hearing each other, participants might enter into interreligious relationships that might point a way to the peaceful engagem…Read more
  •  462
    Difference With Respect (To)
    Semiotics 64-75. 1994.
    In this essay, I offer several claims about how postmodern preoccupation with DIFFERENCE may be reread, pragmatically. The claims are based on the following, creatively interpretive model of the pragmatic maxim, as applied to what Peirce calls "intellectual concepts." According to the model, the maxim may have a variety of uses, but it can be proven only in so far as it is applied to the one species of "intellectual concepts" that results when real doubts are misrepresented as paper doubts. Th…Read more
  •  601
    Eugene Freeman , "The Relevance of Charles Peirce" (review)
    Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 21 (1): 121-138. 1985.
    No reader of The Relevance of Charles Peirce will fail to be impressed by what Max Fisch calls "The Range of Peirce's Relevance.' This exciting volume invites scholars in many of the fields of contemporary philosophy to see what Peirce has to contribute to their methods and their conclusions. Articles in the collection offer a more divided interpretation, however, of the meaning of Peirce's relevance. For some, Peirce's relevance is "extensive": like …Read more
  •  572
    Peirce's Metaphysical Equivalent of War
    Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 17 (3). 1981.
    William James declared a moral war, Charles Peirce a metaphysical one: "fall into the ranks then" was his battle cry, follow your colonel. Keep your one purpose steadily and alone in view, and you may promise yourself the attainment of your sole desire, which is to hasten the chariot wheels of redeeming love. (6.448:1893) Peirce's was a war not against war, but against the metaphysical equivalent of war, individuation. In the field of social philosophy, Peirce's enemy …Read more
  •  799
    "Charles Peirce as Postmodern Philosopher"
    In David Ray Griffin, John B. Cobb Jr, Marcus P. Ford, Pete A. Y. Gunter & Peter Ochs (eds.), Founders of Constructive Postmodern Philosophy: Peirce, James, Bergson, Whitehead, and Hartshorne, State University of New York Press. pp. 43-87. 1992.
    By definition, “logic of postmodernism" would appear to be a contradiction in terms: philosophic post¬modernism emerged as a critique of attempts to found philosophy on some principle of reasoning and to found reasoning on some formal guidelines for how we ought to think. Nonetheless, there are two reasons why Charles Sanders Peirce (1839-1914) ought to be labeled the logician of postmodernism — the philosopher who, more than any other, etched out the normative guidelines for postmodern thinkin…Read more
  •  818
    Crisis, Call, and Leadership in the Abrahamic Traditions (edited book)
    with W. Johnson
    Palgrave-Macmillan. 2008.
    "Over three years of study and fellowship, sixteen Muslim, Jewish, and Christian scholars sought to answer one question: “Do our three scriptures unite or divide us?” They offer their answers in this book: sixteen essays on how certain ways of reading scripture may draw us apart and other ways may draw us, together, into the source that each tradition calls peace. Reading scriptural sources in the classical and medieval traditions, the authors examine how each tradition addresses the “other” wit…Read more
  •  764
    In the course of. his philosophic career, Charles Peirce made repeated attempts to construct mathematical definitions of the commonsense or experimental notion of 'continuity'. In what I will label his Final Definition of Continuity, however, Peirce abandoned the attempt to achieve mathe­matical definition and assigned the analysis of continuity to an otherwise unnamed extra-mathematical science. In this paper, I identify the Final Definition, attempt to define its terms, and suggest that it bel…Read more
  •  505
    Rabbinic Semiotics
    American Journal of Semiotics 10 (1/2): 35-65. 1993.
    The German Jewish philosophers Hermann Cohen, Martin Buber and Franz Rosenzweig introduced a critique and extension of Kant's transcendental philosophy that looks to us today like the foundations of a rabbinic semiotics. It is a theory about the semiotic character of our knowledge of the world, of other humans and of God. And it is a claim that such a theory is embedded in the classical literature of rabbinic Judaism. More recently, the American rabbinic thinker Max Kadushin presented a more e…Read more
  •  88
    Jewish Philosophy in a Secular Age (review)
    Teaching Philosophy 14 (2): 209-214. 1991.
  • Founders of Constructive Postmodern Philosophy: Peirce, James, Bergson, Whitehead, and Hartshorne
    with David Ray Griffin, John B. Cobb, Marcus P. Ford, and Pete A. Y. Gunter
    Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 30 (1): 220-226. 1994.
  •  45
    Peirce’s Philosophy of Religion (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 25 (1): 103-103. 1993.
  • Jewish Sensibilities
    Journal of Textual Reasoning 4 (3). 2006.
  •  46
    Contemporary Jewish Philosophies (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 27 (2): 212-214. 1987.
  •  22
    Three leading Jewish philosophers explore what it means to participate in post modern Jewish philosophy. They contemplate where Judaism has been, the relevance of age-old Biblical traditions, and the direction in which Judaism is headed in the 21st century.
  •  723
    Torah, language and philosophy: A jewish critique
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 18 (3). 1985.
    Modern philosophy's fascination with language - for the last century, its obsession- may illustrate the axiom that we love to talk about what we desire and we desire what we don't have. From the perspective of traditional Judaism, philosophic obsession with language reflects the modern philosopher's dislocation from those speech communities in which, alone, language has meaning. Natural speech communities, meaning those whose origins are either unknown or referred to an in…Read more
  •  913
    This is a genealogical study that traces a “broadly Cartesian” pattern of argumentation: from Augustine’s scriptural semiotic to the “narrowly Cartesian” practice of foundationalism to Charles Peirce’s pragmatic and reparative semiotic. The essay argues (1) that Augustine transformed Stoic logic into a scriptural semiotic; (2) that this semiotic breeds both Cartesian foundationalism and the pragmatic semiotic that repairs it; (3) that Peirce’s semiotic displays the latter. In sum, Augustine’s in…Read more