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  • ...;</font> This page belongs to resource collections on [[Logic Live|Logic]] and [[Inquiry Live|Inquiry]]. ...e of this determination of its ideas by previous ideas. (Peirce, "On Time and Thought", CE&nbsp;3, 68&ndash;69.)
    24 KB (3,783 words) - 00:25, 16 November 2015
  • ...;</font> This page belongs to resource collections on [[Logic Live|Logic]] and [[Inquiry Live|Inquiry]]. ...ng a sunflower which turns in precisely corresponding ways toward the sun, and of doing so with the same reproductive power, the sunflower would become a
    58 KB (8,260 words) - 03:40, 21 November 2016
  • ...;</font> This page belongs to resource collections on [[Logic Live|Logic]] and [[Inquiry Live|Inquiry]]. ...of clarifying the meanings of difficult concepts, ''truth'' in particular, and (2) an emphasis on the fact that the ''product'' variously branded as ''bel
    33 KB (4,907 words) - 04:32, 22 September 2014
  • Theme One is a program for building and transforming a particular species designed to support a variety of fundamental learning and reasoning tasks.
    94 KB (8,938 words) - 22:12, 9 December 2015
  • ...typefaces that are used in the text below for Peirce's examples of general terms. |+ <math>\text{Absolute Terms (Monadic Relatives)}\!</math>
    226 KB (33,992 words) - 16:22, 29 December 2017
  • ...following material was removed from the Wikipedia article by inept editors and placed in a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Charles_Sanders_Peirce/Cache ...e chapter by McKeon in Wiener and Young (1952), and that by Moore in Moore and Robin (1964).
    74 KB (11,616 words) - 23:56, 21 May 2010
  • ...eness is incidental, hinging on the personal concept of the subject matter and the prevailing level of comprehension that relates an interpreter of the na ...he intellectual tools that allow a person taking up such a view to develop and to share a picture of what can be seen from it.
    92 KB (15,197 words) - 14:40, 24 August 2017
  • ...nded to provide readers with background on the pragmatic theory of inquiry and its relationship to the pragmatic theory of signs. ...ves doubt and creates knowledge. Computers are involved in inquiry today, and are likely to become more so as time goes on. The aim of my research is to
    121 KB (16,341 words) - 04:34, 30 October 2015
  • ...], called Peirce "the most original and versatile of American philosophers and America's greatest logician" (Brent, 1). ...much of what is now studied under the philosophies of knowledge, language, and science. Peirce saw logic as the formal branch of the theory of signs, or
    93 KB (14,277 words) - 20:00, 28 July 2017
  • ..., this Subdivision of the text emphasizes the positive features of inquiry and the positive qualities of its objective, while the next Subdivision is rese ...evelopment of its presence. In the order of discussion, however, positive terms must be proposed if it is desired to say anything at all.
    138 KB (23,322 words) - 14:50, 4 January 2015
  • or "Sign of Rain" example, and this time put it under the microscope and look at a few of its finer details.
    139 KB (16,717 words) - 14:30, 12 September 2017
  • ...l and because of their ability to leave the player impoverished or in debt and because ''bandit'' can be a synonym for "thief" in modern usage.<ref>[http: ...concept. Slot machines are the most popular gambling method in [[casino]]s and constitute about 70 percent of the average US casino's income.<ref>{{cite w
    78 KB (12,579 words) - 01:41, 2 January 2018
  • ...ectures on the &ldquo;Logic of Science&rdquo; at Harvard University (1865) and the Lowell Institute (1866). ...ty between extensions and intensions, Peirce, of course, has another idea, and I would say a better idea, in part, because it forms the occasion for him t
    362 KB (47,812 words) - 19:40, 9 November 2016
  • ...ce used to augment his genus, can be represented as parse-strings in Ascii and sculpted into pointer-structures in computer memory. ...s of the original graph correspond to nodes (or points) of the dual graph, and the boundaries between planar regions in the original graph correspond to e
    168 KB (21,027 words) - 12:41, 6 August 2017
  • ...I intend to address crucial questions about the operation, organization, and computational facilitation of inquiry, taking inquiry to encompass the gene ...iously? Correspondingly, the questions of methodological self-application and self-referential consistency will be found at the center of this research.
    241 KB (38,416 words) - 15:14, 15 April 2017
  • ...Awbrey/Mathematical Notes#PAS. Probability And Statistics|PAS. Probability And Statistics]] | mathematical systems can be unified and simplified by a presentation
    567 KB (86,909 words) - 21:00, 6 December 2016
  • | align="left" | ''Stand and unfold yourself.'' ...ain and the more self-contained work, to serve as a conceptual frame and a technical background for the network project.
    528 KB (75,728 words) - 21:56, 14 January 2021
  • {{DISPLAYTITLE:Differential Logic and Dynamic Systems 2.0}} | align="left" | ''Stand and unfold yourself.''
    529 KB (75,750 words) - 14:32, 3 March 2023
  • {{DISPLAYTITLE:Differential Logic and Dynamic Systems}} ...wbrey/Papers/Differential_Logic_and_Dynamic_Systems_2.0|Differential Logic and Dynamic Systems 2.0]].'''''
    394 KB (54,134 words) - 14:30, 3 March 2023
  • 00:27 < David_Stevenson> Sarah Palin and Michelle Bachman in.. 00:29 < David_Stevenson> and -ged*
    126 KB (18,486 words) - 23:46, 20 January 2015

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