@article{Atkins2012,
author = "Richard K. Atkins",
title = "{Broadening Peirce’s Phaneroscopy: Part One}",
year = 2012,
journal = "The Pluralist",
volume = 7,
number = "2",
pages = "1-29",
abstract = "{Peirce’s Mature Architectonic, or classification of the sciences, divides philosophy into three primary disciplines. They are phaneroscopy (Peirce’s later name for the science of phenomenology1 ), normative science, and metaphysics. Both normative science and metaphysics have sub-disciplines. Normative science subdivides into aesthetics (or, as Peirce spells it, esthetics), ethics, and logic. Metaphysics subdivides into general ontology, psychical metaphysics, and physical metaphysics.2 However, Peirce never identifies sub-disciplines for phaneroscopy. Why is this?
}",
url = "http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/the_pluralist/summary/v007/7.2.atkins.html",
keywords = "Phaneroscopy, Normative Science, Metaphysics",
language = "English",
note = "From the Commens Bibliography | \url{http://www.commens.org/bibliography/journal_article/atkins-richard-k-2012-broadening-peirce%E2%80%99s-phaneroscopy-part-one}"
}