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ITEM — Box: 19 Identifier: MS Am 1632, (300)

Peirce, Charles S. (Charles Sanders), 1839-1914. The Bed-Rock Beneath Pragmaticism (Bed) : autograph manuscript Digital

Dates

  • Creation: 1787-1951

Language of Materials

Collection materials are in English.

Physical Description

pp. 1-65, 33-40, 38-41, 37-38, 40-437, plus 64 pp. of fragments running brokenly from p. 1 to p. 60.

Conditions Governing Access

Restricted: closed for digitization.

Boxes 20-21 (Items 301-316) Boxes 43-45 (Items 694-693) Boxes 33-35 (Items 471-517) Individual Items: 145 328 507 593 725 797-798 802 841 1355 1363-1364



For all other material, there are no restrictions on physical access. Collection is open for research.

Extent

10 folder

Physical Location

b

General note

This was to have been the fourth and ante-penultimate article of the Monist series. The following pages were published as indicated: 4.561n (pp. 31-399); 4 553n2 (pp. 37-38 of a rejected section). Omitted from publication are comments on the circumstances which led to writing the various articles of the Monist series. In this connection Charles S. Peirce notes, with some horror, the view attributed by the New York Times to William James that practical preference was the basis of pragmatism and considers what James probably meant to say, noting James's definition of pragmatism in Baldwin's Dictionary of Psychology and Philosophy. The truth of pragmatism and its scientific proof. Charles S. Peirce reveals that he had passed through a doubt of pragmatism lasting very nearly twenty years. Discussion of the nature of doubt: the confounding of doubt with disbelief. System of existential graphs; comparison of existential graphs with chemical ones; existential and entitative graphs. Studies of modality: Charles S. Peirce's early views and subsequent modifications. Among the fragments one finds Charles S. Peirce's disagreement with Cantor on the matter of pseudo-continuity which for Charles S. Peirce raises a question of the ethics of terminology.

Burks' category: G-1905-1e.

Repository Details

Part of the Houghton Library Repository

Houghton Library is Harvard College's principal repository for rare books and manuscripts, archives, and more. Houghton Library's collections represent the scope of human experience from ancient Egypt to twenty-first century Cambridge. With strengths primarily in North American and European history, literature, and culture, collections range in media from printed books and handwritten manuscripts to maps, drawings and paintings, prints, posters, photographs, film and audio recordings, and digital media, as well as costumes, theater props, and a wide range of other objects. Houghton Library has historically focused on collecting the written record of European and Eurocentric North American culture, yet it holds a large and diverse number of primary sources valuable for research on the languages, culture and history of indigenous peoples of the Americas, Africa, Asia and Oceania.

Houghton Library’s Reading Room is free and open to all who wish to use the library’s collections.

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