ABSTRACT

First published in 2000. This is volume VI in the VI-volume set titled Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Anglo-American Philosophy. In the essays gathered in this volume, the editors have the most developed and coherent available account of the philosophy of Charles S. Peirce, whom the leading thinkers in England, France, Germany, and Italy have placed in the forefront of the great seminal minds of recent times. The introduction is intended help the reader to concatenate the various lines of thought contained in these essays.

part I|149 pages

Chance and Logic (Illustrations of the Logic of Science)

chapter First Paper|25 pages

The Fixation of Belief 1

chapter Second Paper|29 pages

How to Make Our Ideas Clear 1

chapter Third Paper|21 pages

The Doctrine of Chances 1

chapter Fourth Paper|24 pages

The Probability of Induction 1

chapter Fifth Paper|25 pages

The Order of Nature 1

part II|146 pages

Love and Chance