Category Archives: Logic

Theory and Therapy of Representations • 2

December 19, 2011 In a complex society, people making decisions and taking actions at places remote from you have the power to affect your life in significant ways.  Those people govern your life, they are your government, no matter what … Continue reading

Posted in Accountability, Adaptive Systems, C.S. Peirce, Cybernetics, Democracy, Economics, Education, Expectation, Governance, Information, Inquiry, Intention, Justice, Law, Logic, Max Weber, Observation, Plato, Pragmata, Representation, Science, Semiotics, Society, Statistics, Systems Theory | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Theory and Therapy of Representations • 1

Again, in a ship, if a man were at liberty to do what he chose, but were devoid of mind and excellence in navigation (αρετης κυβερνητικης), do you perceive what must happen to him and his fellow sailors? Plato • … Continue reading

Posted in Accountability, Adaptive Systems, C.S. Peirce, Cybernetics, Democracy, Economics, Education, Expectation, Governance, Information, Inquiry, Intention, Justice, Law, Logic, Max Weber, Observation, Plato, Pragmata, Representation, Science, Semiotics, Society, Statistics, Systems Theory | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Tenacity, Authority, Plausibility, Inquiry

Re: Peter Cameron • Mathematics and Logic My favorite polymathematician, Charles Sanders Peirce, gave a fourfold classification of what he called “methods of fixing belief”, or “settling opinion”, most notably and seminally in his paper, “The Fixation of Belief” (1877).  … Continue reading

Posted in Authority, Belief, Belief Fixation, C.S. Peirce, Fixation of Belief, Inquiry, Logic, Method, Philosophy of Science, Plausibility, Science, Scientific Inquiry, Scientific Method, Tenacity, Uncertainty | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Interpreter and Interpretant • Selection 10

Transfer Returning to the scene of Dewey’s “Sign of Rain” example, let’s continue examining how the transfer of knowledge through the analogy of experience works in that case. By way of a recap, we began by considering a fragment of … Continue reading

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Interpreter and Interpretant • Selection 9

Transfer Let’s examine how the transfer of knowledge through the analogy of experience works in the case of Dewey’s “Sign of Rain” example. For concreteness, consider a fragment of the reasoner’s knowledge base which is logically equivalent to a conjunction … Continue reading

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Interpreter and Interpretant • Selection 8

Transfer What exactly gives the acquisition of a knowledge base its distinctively inductive character?  It is evidently the “analogy of experience” involved in applying what we’ve learned in the past to what confronts us in the present. Whenever we find … Continue reading

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Interpreter and Interpretant • Selection 7

Learning Rules in a knowledge base, as far as their effective content goes, can be obtained by any mode of inference.  For example, consider a proposition of the following form. Such a proposition is usually induced from a consideration of … Continue reading

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Interpreter and Interpretant • Selection 6

Inquiry and Induction To understand the bearing of inductive reasoning on the closing phases of inquiry there are a couple of observations we should make. Smaller inquiries are typically woven into larger inquiries, whether the whole pattern of inquiry is … Continue reading

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Interpreter and Interpretant • Selection 5

Inquiry and Inference If we follow Dewey’s “Sign of Rain” story far enough to consider the import of thought for action, we realize the subsequent conduct of the interpreter, progressing up through the natural conclusion of the episode — the … Continue reading

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Interpreter and Interpretant • Selection 4

Interpretation and Inquiry To illustrate the role of sign relations in inquiry we begin with Dewey’s elegant and simple example of reflective thinking in everyday life. A man is walking on a warm day.  The sky was clear the last … Continue reading

Posted in C.S. Peirce, Hermeneutics, Interpretation, Interpretive Frameworks, Logic, Logical Graphs, Objective Frameworks, Relation Theory, Semiotics, Sign Relations, Triadic Relations, Visualization | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments