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Home > Peirce, Charles S. (1897 [c.]). Logic. The Theory of Reasoning. Part I. Exact Logic. Introduction. What is Logic. MS [R] 735

Commens
Digital Companion to C. S. Peirce
Record in the Commens Bibliography. Retrieved from http://www.commens.org/bibliography/manuscript/peirce-charles-s-1897-c-logic-theory-reasoning-part-i-exact-logic, 30.06.2022.
Type: 
Manuscript
Author: 
Peirce, Charles Sanders
Title: 
Logic. The Theory of Reasoning. Part I. Exact Logic. Introduction. What is Logic
Manuscript Id: 
MS [R] 735
Year: 
1897 [c.]
Abstract / Description: 

Robin Catalogue:
A. MS., n.p., n.d., pp. 1-2, 1-5, 1-13, with a title page and a table of contents. Logic is the theory of reasoning and, as such, it is not a branch of psychology (pp. 1-2). Reasoning and common sense (reasoning from the initial propositions of common sense); the relationship between hope and truth (pp. 1-5). A sect of philosophy concerned with deducing the rules of reasoning by mathematics (the achievements of this sect include CSP’s contribution of the logic of continuity); Mill’s logic; Sigwart and Kant; Hegel’s importance to German philosophy; reasoning and signs (pp. 1-13).

Keywords: 
Logic, Reasoning, Kant, John Stuart Mill, Exact Logic, Historical Logic, Auguste Comte, William Whewell, Uniformity of Nature, Critical Logic, Christoph Sigwart, Hegel, Religion, Representation, Logic of Relatives
Language: 
English