Judgment

Keyword: Judgment


Dictionary Entry | Posted 06/03/2018
Quote from "Division III. Substantial Study of Logic. Chapter VI. The Essence of Reasoning"

The actual calling to mind of the substance of a belief, not as personal to ourselves, but as holding good, or true, is a judgment.

Dictionary Entry | Posted 24/11/2015
Quote from "Fragments [R]"

A mental proposition is called a judgment.

Dictionary Entry | Posted 16/11/2015
Quote from "New Elements (Kaina stoiceia)"

A proposition […] is not to be understood as the lingual expression of a judgment. It is, on the contrary, that sign of which the judgment is one replica and the lingual expression...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 20/10/2015
Quote from "On the Algebra of Logic"

A cerebral habit of the highest kind, which will determine what we do in fancy as well as what we do in action, is called a belief. The representation to ourselves...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 20/10/2015
Quote from "Chapter V. That the significance of thought lies in its reference to the future"

In a mind which is capable of logical criticism of its beliefs, there must be a sensation of believing, which shall serve to show what ideas are connected. The recognition that two objects present...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 30/08/2015
Quote from "New Elements (Kaina stoiceia)"

The man is a symbol. Different men, so far as they can have any ideas in common, are the same symbol. Judgment is the determination of the man-symbol to have whatever...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 19/01/2015
Quote from "Reason's Rules"

A judgment is a mental act by which one makes a resolution to adhere to a proposition as true, with all its logical consequences.

Dictionary Entry | Posted 19/01/2015
Quote from "Harvard Lectures on Pragmatism: Lecture I"

Do we not all perceive that judgment is something closely allied to assertion? That is the view that ordinary speech entertains. A man or woman will be heard to use the phrase, “I says to...

Manuscript | Posted 19/01/2015
Peirce, Charles S. (1902 [c.]). Reason's Rules. MS [R] 599

Robin Catalogue:
A. MS., n.p., [c.1902], pp. 4-45, 31-42, and 8 pp. of fragments.
The nature of a sign. Propositions as the significations of signs which represent that some...

Manuscript | Posted 23/09/2014
Peirce, Charles S. (1903). Lecture I [R]. MS [R] 453

Robin Catalogue:
A. MS., notebook, n.p., 1903, pp. 1-37.
Science hampered by the false notion that there is no distinction between good and bad reasoning. This notion related to...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 14/06/2014
Quote from "New Elements (Kaina stoiceia)"

A judgment is a mental act deliberately exercising a force tending to determine in the mind of the agent a belief in the proposition; to which should perhaps be...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 14/06/2014
Quote from "Short Logic"

An act of consciousness in which a person thinks he recognizes a belief is called a judgment. The expression of a judgment is called in logic a ...

Manuscript | Posted 05/05/2013
Peirce, Charles S. (1893-1895 [c.]). Division III. Substantial Study of Logic. Chapter VI. The Essence of Reasoning. MS [R] 409

From the Robin Catalogue:
A. MS., G-1893-5, pp. 85-141 (pp. sog, 130 missing), with 8 pp. of variants.
Published, in part, as 4.53-56 (but not all of 56) and 4.61-79 (...

Manuscript | Posted 27/01/2013
Peirce, Charles S. (1895). Short Logic: Chapter I. Of Reasoning in General. MS [R] 595

Robin Catalogue:
A. MS., G-c.1893-3, pp. 1-32, 33-38; plus 14 pp. of variants.
Selections published as follows: 2.286-291 (pp. 6-13); 2.295-296 (pp. 14-16); 2.435-443 (pp. 23-29...