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Frederik Wellmann
Amanuensis
LOGIC (MS 339-1009)
Published (pp. 5-6) as 7.336n Omitted from publication: the three elements of signs. The nature of the causal connection between a thought and the thing to which it is related. Reality and figment: Reality is the most general of expressions (even a figment is a reality when considered in itself and not as the representation of something else). What is real or what exists must be an object of thought, because it is impossible to have a conception of anything which is not an object of thought. That is, the attempt to discover a word which expresses a thing that exists without, at the same time, implying that that thing is a possible object of thought results in a contradictory (or meaningless) expression.
Causality, Fay Melusina (CSP's first wife), Figment, Logic (modal see Modality), Logic (of ), Reality, Sign(s), Thought
pp. 1-10; plus an exact copy (pp. 1-8) in another hand [Zina Fay Peirce?]
1873-3-10
379
G-c.1873-1
LOGIC / LOGIC OF 1873
no