Seven Ways of Looking at a Pragmatic Maxim • 7
•
https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2023/08/07/pragmatic-maxim-2/
All,
The seventh excerpt is a late reflection on the reception of pragmatism.
With a sense of exasperation that is almost palpable, Peirce tries
to justify the maxim of pragmatism and to correct its misreadings by
pinpointing a number of false impressions that the intervening years
have piled on it, and he attempts once more to prescribe against the
deleterious effects of these mistakes. Recalling the very conception
and birth of pragmatism, he reviews its initial promise and its intended
lot in the light of its subsequent vicissitudes and its apparent fate.
Adopting the style of a post mortem analysis, he presents a veritable autopsy
of the ways that the main idea of pragmatism, for all its practicality, can be
murdered by a host of misdissecting disciplinarians, by what are ostensibly its
most devoted followers.
<QUOTE CSP:>
❝This employment five times over of derivates of concipere must then have had
a purpose. In point of fact it had two. One was to show that I was speaking
of meaning in no other sense than that of intellectual purport. The other was
to avoid all danger of being understood as attempting to explain a concept by
percepts, images, schemata, or by anything but concepts. I did not, therefore,
mean to say that acts, which are more strictly singular than anything, could
constitute the purport, or adequate proper interpretation, of any symbol.
I compared action to the finale of the symphony of thought, belief being
a demicadence. Nobody conceives that the few bars at the end of a musical
movement are the purpose of the movement. They may be called its upshot.❞
(Peirce, CP 5.402 note 3, 1906).
</QUOTE>
Regards,
Jon
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https://independent.academia.edu/JonAwbrey
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