List:

In the thread on "Peirce's Theory of Thinking," we discussed what Peirce
might have meant in the first additament to "A Neglected Argument for the
Reality of God" (1908) when he wrote that proving his "theory of the nature
of thinking" would also prove the hypothesis of God's Reality (CP 6.491).
I eventually proposed that he was referring to the notion that every
retroductive conjecture endorsed by instinctive reason is logical.  This
interpretation is consistent with the fact that he acknowledged an
"obvious" objection in the very next paragraph.

CSP:  For example, it may be said that since I compare man's power of
guessing at the truth with the instincts of animals, I ought to have
noticed that these are entirely explained by the action of natural
selection in endowing animals with such powers as contribute to the
preservation of their different stocks; and that there is evidence that
man's power of penetrating the secrets of nature depends upon this, in the
fact that all the successful sciences have been either mechanical in
respect to their theories or psychological … Metaphysics, however, cannot
adapt the human race to maintaining itself, and therefore the presumption
is that man has no such genius for discoveries about God, Freedom, and
Immortality, as he has for physical and psychical science; and the history
of science supports this view.


The editors of the *Collected Papers* must have deemed it necessary to
provide a response from Peirce, because they inserted CP 6.492-493 at this
point--despite the fact that he wrote those two paragraphs more than a
decade earlier!  An accompanying footnote attributes them to "an
unpaginated fragment, c. 1896."  However, as it turns out, the manuscript
where CP 6.491 is found (R 844) includes additional remarks that serve
precisely that purpose.

CSP:  This opens an interesting question of logic to which I have devoted
much study, with the result of fully satisfying myself that man's power of
divining the truth is not so circumscribed. My reply to this objection
could not be given here nor in any piece to be read at one sitting. My
reply would show that whatever general conduct of a race would fit or
disfit its individuals to the life to come, may be expected also to adapt
or maladapt the race itself to maintaining its footing in this world; and
further to show, through its pragmaticistic interpretation, that the belief
in the *Ens necessarium* would according as it were true or false, fit or
disfit individuals to eternal life hereafter. And consequently, natural
selection naturally will act here on earth to the cultivation of this
belief, if it be true, and to its suppression if it be false, just as it
acts in respect to ordinary morality.


Since Peirce mentioned the "pragmaticistic interpretation" of "the belief
in *Ens necessarium*" here, and provided some "hints" regarding "the
pragmaticistic definition of *Ens necessarium*" in CP 6.490, perhaps our
subsequent discussions in the threads on Peirce's Cosmology and related
topics can shed light on this reply.  If my understanding of that
cosmology--and thus my analysis of CP 6.490--is correct, then there is
no *discontinuity
*between the natural competence of humanity's instinctive reason and
matters of metaphysics; or at least, matters pertaining to the Reality of
God.  After all, it posits that God is not completely independent of the
third Universe of Experience, which includes Mind and continuity itself;
and according to Peirce, our disposition to generate true hypotheses is
especially well-suited to that Category.

CSP:  It appears to me that the clearest statement we can make of the
logical situation--the freest from all questionable admixture--is to say
that man has a certain Insight, not strong enough to be oftener right than
wrong, but strong enough not to be overwhelmingly more often wrong than
right, into the Thirdnesses, the general elements, of Nature. (CP 5.173, EP
2:217; 1903)


Peirce's favorite name for his comprehensive system of thought was
*synechism*, because it "insists upon the idea of continuity as of prime
importance in philosophy" (CP 6.169; 1902).  The hypothesis of God as *Ens
necessarium* explains not only the origin of the three Universes of
Experience, but also their order (*cosmos*)--the "homogeneities of
connectedness" within each one of them, as well as the "homogeneities and
connections between two different Universes, or all three" (CP 6.464-465,
EP 2:438-439).  Our experience and observation of those "homogeneities and
connections" are such that our instinctive reason, while quite fallible,
nevertheless has a remarkable tendency to produce successful retroductive
conjectures.  Why would we acknowledge this in mathematics, phaneroscopy,
and the special sciences, but deny it in metaphysics?

Regards,

Jon Alan Schmidt - Olathe, Kansas, USA
Professional Engineer, Amateur Philosopher, Lutheran Layman
www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt - twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt
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