Phenomenology
Dictionary Entry | Posted 15/03/2018 Quote from "A Brief Intellectual Autobiography by Charles Sanders Peirce" Phenomenology considers the phenomenon in general, whatever comes before the mind in any way, and without caring whether it be fact or fiction, discovers and describes the... |
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News | Posted 06/01/2018 Enactivism: Theory and Performance Enactivism continues to be developed as a theory of embodied cognition, informed by phenomenology, pragmatism, and ecological psychology. Recent work in this area has fostered theory development... |
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Article in Journal | Posted 20/12/2016 Bodie, Graham D., Crick, Nathan (2014). Listening, Hearing, Sensing: Three Modes of Being and the Phenomenology of Charles Sanders Peirce This article accepts Lipari's invitation to continue rethinking communication along the lines of artful listening as understood through the lens of phenomenology. However, we trace out the...
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Encyclopedia Article | Posted 17/10/2016 Gava, Gabriele: "Prescission" Prescission is a method used by Peirce to separate concepts and ideas from one another and to find hierarchical relationship of dependence among them. In particular, prescission is applied in... |
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Dictionary Entry | Posted 07/08/2016 Quote from "Reason's Conscience: A Practical Treatise on the Theory of Discovery; Wherein logic is conceived as Semeiotic" Phenomenology is that branch of philosophy which endeavors to describe in a general way the features of whatever may come before the mind in any way. |
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Monograph | Posted 19/01/2016 Haas, William P. (1964). The Conception of Law and the Unity of Peirce's Philosophy |
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Article in Journal | Posted 05/01/2016 Downard, Jeffrey B. (2015). The main questions and aims guiding Peirce’s Phenomenology The purpose of this paper is to clarify the main questions and aims guiding Charles Sanders Peirce’s phenomenological inquiries concerning the universal categories. The paper divides into four parts...
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Article in Journal | Posted 29/12/2015 Harney, Maurita (2015). Naturalizing phenomenology – A philosophical imperative Phenomenology since Husserl has always had a problematic relationship with empirical science. In its early articulations, there was Husserl's rejection of ‘the scientific attitude’, Merleau-...
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Article in Journal | Posted 17/11/2015 Sørensen, Bent, Thellefsen, Torkild (2015). Questions toward a Peircean phenomenological description of association According to the philosopher and scientist Charles Peirce (1839-1914) phenomenology is fundamental to all scientific inquiry and association is the only force that exists within the intellect....
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Dictionary Entry | Posted 04/05/2015 Quote from "A Suggested Classification of the Sciences" Phenomenology […] examines the objects before the mind and ascertains what are the categories of elements found everywhere… |
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Manuscript | Posted 04/05/2015 Peirce, Charles S. (nd). A Suggested Classification of the Sciences. MS [R] 1339 Robin Catalogue: |
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Dictionary Entry | Posted 07/01/2015 Quote from "Lowell Lectures on Some Topics of Logic Bearing on Questions Now Vexed. Part 1 of 3rd draught of 3rd Lecture" Phenomenology is the science which describes the different kinds of elements that are always present in the Phenomenon, meaning by the Phenomenon whatever is before... |
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Monograph | Posted 23/12/2014 Rosensohn, William L. (1974). The Phenomenology of Charles S. Peirce: From the Doctrine of Categories to Phaneroscopy |
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Article in Journal | Posted 16/11/2014 Lanigan, Richard (2014). Peirce and the Cenoscopic Science of Signs Peirce uses the covering term Semiotic to include his major divisions of thought and communication process: (1) Speculative Grammar, or the study of beliefs independent of the structure of language (...
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Article in Journal | Posted 30/10/2014 Fuhrman, Gary (2013). Peirce's Retrospectives on his Phenomenological Quest The late Joseph Ransdell's advocacy for a 'unitary interpretation' of the work of C.S. Peirce found expression in a 1989 paper where he declared Peirce's 1867 essay 'On a New...
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Manuscript | Posted 28/09/2014 Peirce, Charles S. (1903). Lowell Lectures. 1903. Lecture 3. MS [R] 459 Robin Catalogue: Mathematics, Benjamin Peirce, Science, Natural Classification of Sciences, Mathematical Hypothesis, Applied Mathematics, Pure Mathematics, Boëthius, Philosophy, Quantity, Richard Dedekind, Logic, Mathematical Reasoning, Necessary Reasoning, Existential Graph, Simplest Mathematics, Number, Georg Cantor, Cardinal Number, Ordinal Number, Multitude, Maniness, Posteriority, Ernst Schröder, Bertrand Russell, Alfred North Whitehead, Inclusion of Correlates, Substantive Possibility, Quality, Epistemology, Metaphysics, Psychology, Identity, Relation, Existence, Phenomenology, Phenomenon, Ens Rationis, Essence, Nothing, Nonsense
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Dictionary Entry | Posted 06/02/2013 Quote from "Syllabus: Syllabus of a course of Lectures at the Lowell Institute beginning 1903, Nov. 23. On Some Topics of Logic" Philosophy is divided into (a) Phenomenology; (b) Normative Science; (c) Metaphysics. Phenomenology ascertains and studies the kinds of... |
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Dictionary Entry | Posted 06/02/2013 Quote from "Harvard Lectures on Pragmatism: Lecture I" But before we can attack any normative science, any science which proposes to separate the sheep from the goats, it is plain that there must be a preliminary inquiry which shall justify the... |
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Dictionary Entry | Posted 06/02/2013 Quote from "Harvard Lectures on Pragmatism: Lecture II" A very moderate exercise of this third faculty suffices to show us that the word Category bears substantially the same meaning with all philosophers. For Aristotle, for Kant, and for... |
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Dictionary Entry | Posted 06/02/2013 Quote from "Minute Logic: Chapter II. Prelogical Notions. Section I. Classification of the Sciences (Logic II)" The first of these is Phenomenology, or the Doctrine of Categories, whose business it is to unravel the tangled skein [of] all that in any sense appears and wind... |