The Normative Thought of Charles S. Peirce

ISBN13: 9780823242443ISBN10: 0823242447 Hardback, 320 pages
Jun 2012,  Not Yet Published

Price:

$45.00 (06)

A Fordham University Press Publication

See more from the series

Description

This volume explores the three normative sciences that Peirce distinguished (aesthetics, ethics, and logic) and their relation to phenomenology and metaphysics. The essays approach this topic from a variety of angles, ranging from questions concerning the normativity of logic to an application of Peirce's semiotics to John Coltrane's "A Love Supreme."

A recurrent question throughout is whether a moral theory can be grounded in Peirce's work, despite his rather vehement denial that this can be done. Some essays ask whether a dichotomy exists between theoretical and practical ethics. Other essays show that Peirce's philosophy embraces meliorism, examine the role played by self-control, seek to ground communication theory in Peirce's speculative rhetoric, or examine the normative aspect of the notion of truth.

Features

  • This is a pioneering transatlantic volume, bringing together essays by American and Eastern European philosophers on one of the most subtle and interesting American philosophers--Charles Sanders Peirce, coiner of the term semiotics.
  • The volume takes an especially broad view of Peirce's work.

Product Details

320 pages; 9 b/w illus.; 6 x 9; ISBN13: 978-0-8232-4244-3ISBN10: 0-8232-4244-7

About the Author(s)

CORNELIS de WAAL is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis and Editor-in-Chief of the Transactions of the Charles Sanders Peirce Society.
KRYSZTOF PIOTR SKOWRONSKI is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Opole University in Poland.

Add to Cart button
Add to Cart button

Consider these titles...

The Politics of Survival

$26.00 Paperback Dec 2012

Moral Writings

$50.00 Paperback Oct 2002

The Retreat of Reason

$55.00 Paperback May 2008
Ingmar Persson offers an ambitious, broad vision of the human condition