C. S. Peirce's Lowell Lectures of 1903. Eighth Lecture, Abduction
Resource tools
File information | File size | Options |
Original JPG File1516 × 1807 pixels (2.74 MP) 12.8 cm × 15.3 cm @ 300 PPI | 206 KB | Download |
Screen671 × 800 pixels (0.54 MP) 5.7 cm × 6.8 cm @ 300 PPI | 116 KB | Download |
PreviewScreen Preview | 116 KB | View |
Resource ID
18690
Access
Open
Contributed by
Frederik Wellmann
type of material
A. MS. notebook
description
Volume I. Published, in part, as 5.590-604 (pp. 28-92). Unpublished: the division of reasoning into deduction, induction, and abduction as deriving from Aristotle and Boole. The relationship of the three kinds of reasoning to the syllogism. A brief review of CSP's own reflections on the kinds of reasoning, noting articles he published and the errors and confusions these contain.
general index
Abduction, Aristotle, Boole George, Deduction, Induction, Logic (modal see Modality), Lowell Lectures, Reasoning (probable see also Probability), Syllogism
pagination
pp. 2-92 (pagination is somewhat irregular but the text is continuous)
Date
1903
number
MS0475_025
abbreviated title
-
date (Robin)
1903