Post : Types of Reasoning in C.S. Peirce and Aristotle • 2
http://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2016/04/28/types-of-reasoning-in-c-s-peirce-and-aristotle-%e2%80%a2-2/
Date : April 28, 2016 at 12:00 am

List,

On review, it looks like it was Ben and Gary who were discussing
the question of known vs. novel premisses, so I've corrected that
in my blog version.  Let me know if Jon S. also commented on that
issue and I'll add it to the re: list.

Re: Peirce List Discussion
http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/18683
• Ben Udell
http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/18733
• Gary Richmond
http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.science.philosophy.peirce/18749

Present business has kept me from following much of the
recent discussion on Peirce's three types of reasoning,
but we have been down this road before and so old tunes
keep coming to mind whenever I get a chance to sample
the stream.  So I'll use this thread to post what
incidental reflections I may have, as they come
to mind, in no particular order.

First, to the question recently discussed by Ben Udell
and Gary Richmond, as to what we know and when we know it.

Inquiry situations where both premisses, major and minor, rule and case,
arise at roughly the same time are very common, maybe even the archetype.
Aristotle said somewhere that the essence of wit was quickly grasping the
middle term and I somewhat later dubbed this the process of discovering a
“trial factorization” of a problem space or phenomenal field.  There is a
bit of discussion in my essay titled Prospects for Inquiry Driven Systems
in the section headed The Trees, The Forest.

Prospects for Inquiry Driven Systems : The Trees, The Forest
http://intersci.ss.uci.edu/wiki/index.php/Prospects_for_Inquiry_Driven_Systems#The_Trees.2C_The_Forest

<QUOTE>
For the present purpose, it should be recognized that this
“trial factorization” of a problem space or phenomenal field
is an important intellectual act in itself, one that deserves
attention in the effort to understand the competencies that
support intelligent functioning.  It is a good question to
ask just what sort of reasoning processes might be involved
in the ability to find such a middle term, as is served by
“knowledge” in the example at hand.  Generally speaking,
interest will reside in a whole system of middle terms,
which might be called a “medium” of the problem domain
or the field of phenomena.  This usage makes plain the
circumstance that the very recognition and expression
of a problem or phenomenon is already contingent upon
and complicit with a particular set of hypotheses that
will inform the direction of its resolution or explanation.
</QUOTE>

References
==========

• Types of Reasoning in Aristotle
http://intersci.ss.uci.edu/wiki/index.php/Functional_Logic_:_Inquiry_and_Analogy#1.1._Types_of_Reasoning_in_Aristotle

• Types of Reasoning in C.S. Peirce
http://intersci.ss.uci.edu/wiki/index.php/Functional_Logic_:_Inquiry_and_Analogy#1.2._Types_of_Reasoning_in_C.S._Peirce

--

academia: http://independent.academia.edu/JonAwbrey
my word press blog: http://inquiryintoinquiry.com/

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