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Peirce

[ US /ˈpiɹs, ˈpɪɹs/ ]
NOUN
  1. United States philosopher and logician; pioneer of pragmatism (1839-1914)
  2. United States mathematician and astronomer remembered for his studies of Uranus and Saturn and Neptune (1809-1880)

How To Use Peirce In A Sentence

  • In 1870 Peirce published a long paper “Description of a Notation for the Logic of Relatives” in which he introduced for the first time in history, two years before Frege's Begriffschrift a complete syntax for the logic of relations of arbitrary adicity (or: arity). Nobody Knows Nothing
  • Peirce spent five years studying the case and amassed an astonishing quantity of information.
  • Your lust for exotic creatures like Peirce’s glorious Quincunx are matched only by your ability to end conversations and empty rooms with impromptu lectures on Mollweide’s wicked homolographic compromise. Rambles at starchamber.com » Blog Archive » Flatten the world
  • Peircean semeiotic derives ultimately from the theory of signs of Duns Scotus and its later development by John of St. Thomas Nobody Knows Nothing
  • Although they continued to refer back to Peirce's 1878 paper as the source of pragmatism, and they continued to regard concepts and hypotheses as functioning as instruments, they did not always think of ˜pragmatism™ as denoting ˜the principle of Peirce™. Pragmatism
  • Without such an ultimate and immediate signification instantiated in the formal signification of the mental concept, there would be, as John Raulin remarks, an infinite regress (processus in infinitum) in any signification, something like a Peircean ˜infinite semeiosis™. [ Medieval Semiotics
  • With Augustus de Morgan, Peirce is one of the founders of the logic of relatives.
  • Peirce aimed to extend Venn's system in expressive power with respect to the first two kinds of propositions, i.e., existential and disjunctive statements.
  • At college, Peirce earned a reputation for arrogance, brilliance, iconoclasm, dangerous mood swings, and dissipation, behaviors owing in part to neurological pathologies.
  • Peirce uses numerous terms for the signifying element including “sign”, “representamen”, Peirce's Theory of Signs
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