Adam Crabtree's Esalen paper on CS Pierce
Quote:ELEMENTS OF A PEIRCEAN VIEW OF THE WORLD
1. Peirce’s commandment in regard to the investigation of reality: Do not block the road to inquiry!
Everything has intelligibility built into it. There are no fundamental unknowables that will have to remain
forever a mystery.
In other words, there is no unattainable and inconceivable thing-in-itself.
2. We develop our knowledge of the world—whether common sense or scientific—through three types of inference: deduction, induction, and abduction.
3. There are three basic phenomenological categories that apply to all that exists: Firstness, Secondness and Thirdness.
4. It is possible to develop reasonable hypotheses about the origin of the universe. These
hypotheses must be such that they can account for the world as we know it.
These hypotheses should be able to indicate some verifiable evidence of what is and is not possible in our world.
5. All is mind. Reality and logic operate according to the same laws.
6. All things exhibit the features of both Freedom/Chance/Spontaneity and regularity or the tendency for habit-taking.
7. Matter is mind hidebound by habit.
8. Everything evolves.
9. Physical laws evolve and the currently operative laws are simply one phase in that evolution.
10. All laws are fallible, that is, more or less correct for the time being, but never absolutely true.
11. Peirce calls his philosophy objective idealism. This indicates that the only thing that can be called real is what appears in experience. But what appears in experience is what it is regardless of that experience; this is a realism that indicates that reality is independent of thought in general, and that our experiences are determined by that which we experience.
12. The world is a profusion of signs.
13. Human personality is a creative, evolving sign.
14. The world evolves with an intrinsic teleology; final causes are evident in all that happens.
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
- Bertrand Russell