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. |
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Dictionary Entry | Posted 24/11/2015 Quote from "Fragments [R]" A mental proposition is called a judgment. |
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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... |
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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... |
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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... |
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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... |
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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. |
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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... |
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Manuscript | Posted 19/01/2015 Peirce, Charles S. (1902 [c.]). Reason's Rules. MS [R] 599 Robin Catalogue: Truth, Opinion, Falsity, Assertion, Judgment, Proposition, Sentence, Command, Meaning, Subject, Reality, Mathematics, Absurdity, Emptiness, Insolubilia, Logic, Idealism, Berkeley, Value, Sign, Object, Thomas Aquinas, Port Royal Grammar, Consciousness, Eduard von Hartmann, Unconscious, Endless Series of Signs, Achilles and the Tortoise, Understanding, Reasonableness, Interpretant, Icon, Index, Symbol, Indeterminacy, Logical Possibility, Possibility, Self-contradiction, Innocent Self-contradiction, Vicious Self-contradiction
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Manuscript | Posted 23/09/2014 Peirce, Charles S. (1903). Lecture I [R]. MS [R] 453 Robin Catalogue: Reasoning, Fallacy, Morals, Motive, Pleasure, Necessitarianism, Ideal of Conduct, Poetical Ideal, Resolution, Determination, Conduct, Conscience, Judgment, Quality of Feeling, Satisfaction, Hedonism, Jeremy Bentham, Agency, Logic, Ethics, Self-control, Logica Utens, Logical Synderesis, Truth, Inference, Necessary Reasoning, Logical Feeling, Norm, Utilitarianism, Logical Ideal, Ideal, Logical Criticism, Wilhelm Wundt, Human Sciences, Mathematics, Philosophy, Pragmatism, Doubt, Inquiry, Certainty, German Thought, Historical Method, Isaac Newton, Progress of Science
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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... |
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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 ... |
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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: Term, Concept, Proposition, Judgment, Belief, Inference, Assertion, Symbol, Index, Subject, Predicate, Meaning, Selective, Grammar, Hieroglyphs, Monstrative Sign, Reasoning, Leading Principle, Knowledge, Perfect Knowledge, Sure Knowledge, Practically Perfect Belief, Information, Essential Possibility, Substantial Possibility, Informationally Possible, Informationally Necessary, Informationally Contingent, Nominalism, Realism, Essential Necessity, Substantial Necessity, Laboratory Philosopher, Seminary Philosopher, Descartes, Imaginative Reasoning, Experiential Reasoning, Nota Notae, Mathematics, Applied Mathematics
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Manuscript | Posted 27/01/2013 Peirce, Charles S. (1895). Short Logic: Chapter I. Of Reasoning in General. MS [R] 595 Robin Catalogue: Logic, Reasoning, Inference, Colligation, Rational Inference, Illation, Belief, Judgment, Proposition, Sign, Object, Interpretant, Icon, Index, Symbol, Speculative Grammar, Speculative Rhetoric, Composite Photograph, Assertion, Subject, Predicate, Copula, Demonstrative Reasoning, Experiential Reasoning
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