Seven Ways of Looking at a Pragmatic Maxim • 5
•
https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2023/08/07/pragmatic-maxim-2/
All,
The fifth excerpt is useful by way of additional clarification,
and was aimed to correct a variety of historical misunderstandings
that arose over time with regard to the intended meaning of the
pragmatic maxim.
<QUOTE CSP:>
❝The doctrine appears to assume that the end of man is action —
a stoical axiom which, to the present writer at the age of sixty,
does not recommend itself so forcibly as it did at thirty. If it
be admitted, on the contrary, that action wants an end, and that
that end must be something of a general description, then the spirit
of the maxim itself, which is that we must look to the upshot of our
concepts in order rightly to apprehend them, would direct us towards
something different from practical facts, namely, to general ideas,
as the true interpreters of our thought.❞
(Peirce, CP 5.3, 1902).
</QUOTE>
Regards,
Jon
cc:
https://independent.academia.edu/JonAwbrey
cc:
https://mathstodon.xyz/@Inquiry/110854857966219596