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Home > Peirce, Charles S. (1865). Harvard Lectures on the Logic of Science. Lecture II, 1865. MS [W] 95;MS [R] 341, 765

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Record in the Commens Bibliography. Retrieved from http://www.commens.org/bibliography/manuscript/peirce-charles-s-1865-harvard-lectures-logic-science-lecture-ii-1865-ms-w, 18.08.2022.
Type: 
Manuscript
Author: 
Peirce, Charles Sanders
Title: 
Harvard Lectures on the Logic of Science. Lecture II, 1865
Manuscript Id: 
MS [W] 95;MS [R] 341, 765
Year: 
1865
Abstract / Description: 

From the Robin Catalogue:
A. MS., n.p., [1864-65], pp. 1-12 (double pages).
Problem of induction: logical or extra-logical? The answer as suggested by Aristotle’s views on induction. Distinction between premises and conclusions, and between data and inference. No induction by simple enumeration. A posteriori reasoning distinguished from deduction and induction. The three figures of a priori inference; the three principles of inference a posteriori. For an earlier draft of the first page, see MS. 765.

Published: W 1:175-189.

Language: 
English