Charles S. Peirce and the contemporary philosophy of science
an uneasy conversation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0101-31731993000100005Keywords:
Fallibilism, Realism, Philosophical conversation, SemioticsAbstract
The increasingly frequent references to Peirce's thought made by the contemporary Philosophy of Science are not able to conceal the difficulty found in assuming that thought in its entireness. The most part of the quotations made are partial and contradict the whole of the doctrine. It seems easier to call James and Dewey to conversation than to call their common inspirer. The ultimate reason for this challenge seems to lie in the radicality of the fallibilist realism, hardly acceptable by almost all the present philosophical currents.
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Copyright (c) 1993 TRANS/FORM/AÇÃO: Revista de Filosofia
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