|
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Book I. General Historical Orientation
|
|
Chapter 1. Lessons From the History of Philosophy
|
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1. Nominalism
| 15
|
2. Conceptualism
| 27
|
3. The Spirit of Scholasticism
| 28
|
4. Kant and his Refutation of Idealism
| 35
|
5. Hegelism
| 40
|
Chapter 2. Lessons From the History of Science
|
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1. The Scientific Attitude
| 43
|
2. The Scientific Imagination
| 46
|
3. Science and Morality
| 49
|
4. Mathematics
| 52
|
5. Science as a Guide to Conduct
| 55
|
6. Morality and Sham Reasoning
| 56
|
7. The Method of Authority
| 59
|
8. Science and Continuity
| 61
|
9. The Analytic Method
| 63
|
10. Kinds of Reasoning
| 65
|
11. The Study of the Useless
| 75
|
12. Il Lume Naturale
| 80
|
13. Generalization and Abstraction
| 82
|
14. The Evaluation of Exactitude
| 85
|
15. Science and Extraordinary Phenomena
| 87
|
16. Reasoning from Samples
| 92
|
17. The Method of Residual Phenomena
| 98
|
18. Observation
| 99
|
19. Evolution
| 103
|
20. Some A Priori Dicta
| 110
|
21. The Paucity of Scientific Knowledge
| 116
|
22. The Uncertainty of Scientific Results
| 120
|
23. Economy of Research
| 122
|
Chapter 3. Notes On Scientific Philosophy
|
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1. Laboratory and Seminary Philosophies
| 126
|
2. Axioms
| 130
|
3. The Observational Part of Philosophy
| 133
|
4. The First Rule of Reason
| 135
|
5. Fallibilism, Continuity, and Evolution
| 141
|
Book II. The Classification of The Sciences
|
|
Chapter 1. An Outline Classification of The Sciences
|
|
Chapter 2. A Detailed Classification of The Sciences
|
|
1. Natural Classes
| 203
|
2. Natural Classifications
| 224
|
3. The Essence of Science
| 232
|
4. The Divisions of Science
| 238
|
5. The Divisions of Philosophy
| 273
|
6. The Divisions of Mathematics
| 283
|
Book III. PHENOMENOLOGY
|
|
Chapter 1. INTRODUCTION
|
|
1. The Phaneron
| 284
|
2. Valencies
| 288
|
3. Monads, Dyads, and Triads
| 293
|
4. Indecomposable Elements
| 294
|
Chapter 2. THE CATEGORIES IN DETAIL
|
|
A. Firstness
|
|
1. The Source of the Categories
| 300
|
2. The Manifestation of Firstness
| 302
|
3. The Monad
| 303
|
4. Qualities of Feeling
| 304
|
5. Feeling as Independent of Mind and Change
| 305
|
6. A Definition of Feeling
| 306
|
7. The Similarity of Feelings of Different Sensory Modes
| 312
|
8. Presentments as Signs
| 313
|
9. The Communicability of Feelings
| 314
|
10. The Transition to Secondness
| 317
|
B. Secondness
|
|
1. Feeling and Struggle
| 322
|
2. Action and Perception
| 324
|
3. The Varieties of Secondness
| 325
|
4. The Dyad
| 326
|
5. Polar Distinctions and Volition
| 330
|
6. Ego and Non-Ego
| 332
|
7. Shock and the Sense of Change
| 335
|
C. Thirdness
|
|
1. Examples of Thirdness
| 337
|
2. Representation and Generality
| 338
|
3. The Reality of Thirdness
| 343
|
4. Protoplasm and the Categories
| 350
|
5. The Interdependence of the Categories
| 353
|
Chapter 3. A GUESS AT THE RIDDLE
|
|
Plan of the Work
| 354
|
1. Trichotomy
| 355
|
2. The Triad in Reasoning
| 369
|
3. The Triad in Metaphysics
| 373
|
4. The Triad in Psychology
| 374
|
5. The Triad in Physiology
| 385
|
6. The Triad in Biological Development
| 395
|
7. The Triad in Physics
| 400
|
Chapter 4. THE LOGIC OF MATHEMATICS; AN ATTEMPT TO DEVELOP MY CATEGORIES FROM WITHIN
|
|
1. The Three Categories
| 417
|
2. Quality
| 422
|
3. Fact
| 427
|
4. Dyads
| 441
|
5. Triads
| 471
|
Chapter 5. DEGENERATE CASES
|
|
1. Kinds of Secondness
| 521
|
2. The Firstness of Firstness, Secondness and Thirdness
| 530
|
Chapter 6. ON A NEW LIST OF CATEGORIES
|
|
1. Original Statement
| 545
|
2. Notes on the Preceding
| 560
|
Chapter 7. TRIADOMANY
| 568
|
Book IV. THE NORMATIVE SCIENCES
|
|
Chapter 1. INTRODUCTION
| 573
|
Chapter 2. ULTIMATE GOODS
| 575
|
Chapter 3. AN ATTEMPTED CLASSIFICATION OF ENDS
| 585
|
Chapter 4. IDEALS OF CONDUCT
| 591
|
Chapter 5. VITALLY IMPORTANT TOPICS
|
|
1. Theory and Practice
| 616
|
2. Practical Concerns and the Wisdom of Sentiment
| 649
|
3. Vitally Important Truths
| 661
|