Hello Jon S, List,

You have found some of what I've said to be inscrutable. Let me try to be 
clearer about what I was trying to say in the last message:

1.  In my own work, I am finding that a closer reading of the first chapter of 
the Minute Logic is quite helpful in my ongoing efforts to interpret the lines 
of inquiry and arguments in "A Neglected Argument". 

2. Peirce explicitly says this about the essay: "There is my poor sketch of the 
Neglected Argument, greatly cut down to bring it within the limits assigned to 
this article.  Next should come the discussion of its logicality; but nothing 
readable at a sitting could possibly bring home to readers my full proof of the 
principal points of such an examination. I can only hope to make the residue of 
this paper a sort of table of contents, from which some may possibly guess what 
I have to say; or to lay down a series of plausible points through which the 
reader will have to construct the continuous line of reasoning for himself.  In 
my own mind the proof is elaborated, and I am exerting my energies to getting 
it submitted to public censure." (CP, 6.468)

3. As such, I'm interested in seeing how the "table of contents" in "A 
Neglected Argument" might be pointing to arguments and inquiries in other 
works. There are a number of essays that we might consider, but this part of 
the Minute Logic has captured my attention. As such, I wanted to see if others 
might be interested in taking a look for the sake of comparing the lines of 
argument and inquiries in the two pieces.

4.  There are a number of points that are of particular interest, including his 
explanation of how we should, in general, make the transition from a normative 
theory of semiotics to an objective logic.  He raises the question of "whether 
there be a life in Signs, so that--the requisite vehicle being present--they 
will go through a certain order of development, and if so, whether this 
development be merely of such a nature that the same round of changes of form 
is described over and over again whatever be the matter of the thought or 
whether, in addition to such a repetitive order, there be also a greater 
life-history that every symbol furnished with a vehicle of life goes through, 
and what is the nature of it." (CP, 2.111)

5. The explanation of the proof that is offered in support of his hypothesis 
concerning the life of great symbols is something that caught my eye. I also 
think his remarks about the logic of Pooh-Pooh arguments might be interesting 
for those who think there is no real observational support for his hypothesis 
concerning the reality of God.
 
--Jeff


Jeffrey Downard
Associate Professor
Department of Philosophy
Northern Arizona University
(o) 928 523-8354
________________________________________
From: Jon Alan Schmidt [[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, November 1, 2016 11:42 AM
To: Jeffrey Brian Downard
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Instinctive Reason and Metaphysics

Jeff, List:

I must confess that although I continue to find your posts thought-provoking, 
they also tend to be somewhat inscrutable to me.  I am not sure exactly what 
bearing you are suggesting that CP 2.79-110 and CP 2.118 should have on our 
understanding of Peirce's theory of thinking in relation to the hypothesis of 
God's Reality.

JD:  So, let me ask, what does Peirce mean when he says that "it is so 
connected with a theory of the nature of thinking that if this be proved so is 
that." In what sense is each being "proved"?

I basically posed this same question at the very beginning of the earlier 
thread.  My own answer, after much discussion and consideration, is based on 
this passage from the first manuscript draft of "A Neglected Argument" in R 842.

CSP:  Thus, I am to outline two arguments, one supporting the other. The 
latter, which I will designate as the humble argument, although every mind can 
feel its force, rests on far too many premisses to be stated in full. Taking 
the general description of it as a minor premiss, and a certain theory of logic 
as a major premiss, it will follow by a simple syllogism that the humble 
argument is logical and that consequently whoever acknowledges its premisses 
need have no scruple in accepting its conclusion.

The major premiss, "a certain theory of logic," is that every process of 
thought that produces a spontaneous conjecture of instinctive reason is 
logical.  The minor premiss, "a general description of" the humble argument, is 
that it is a process of thought that produces a spontaneous conjecture of 
instinctive reason. The conclusion that follows is "that the humble argument is 
logical."  Notice the modesty of this claim; rather than demonstrating the 
Reality of God, Peirce sought merely to show that anyone who embraces his 
theory of logic, and recognizes that the humble argument is consistent with it, 
"need have no scruple in accepting its conclusion."

As for what it would mean to "prove" the major premiss--Peirce indicated in "A 
Neglected Argument" that its primary experiential consequence is that, if it is 
correct, humanity's instinctive reason should exhibit a remarkable tendency to 
generate spontaneous conjectures that successfully withstand further deductive 
and inductive scrutiny.  He then contended that this is exactly what we find to 
be the case, attributing it to what Galileo had called "il lume naturale" and 
advocating "that it is the simpler Hypothesis in the sense of the more facile 
and natural, the one that instinct suggests, that must be preferred" (CP 6.477, 
EP 2:444-445).  He also explictly rejected the alternative explanation.

CSP:  But may they not have come fortuitously, or by some such modification of 
chance as the Darwinian supposes?  I answer that three or four independent 
methods of computation show that it would be ridiculous to suppose our science 
to have so come to pass … There is a reason, an interpretation, a logic, in the 
course of scientific advance, and this indisputably proves to him who has 
perceptions of rational, or significant, relations, that man's mind must have 
been attuned to the truth of things in order to discover what he has 
discovered. It is the very bed-rock of logical truth. (CP 6.476, EP 2:444)

Peirce included some specific calculations in the manuscripts that substantiate 
his claim here.  In R 842, he invoked "the game of twenty questions," in which 
even the best player usually requires the full allotment--which means sifting 
through 2^20 (roughly a million) facts, such that on average it would take 
about half that many guesses to get to the right one purely by chance, whereas 
the history of science shows that it rarely requires more than a few.  In R 
843, he equated the total number of "logically simple hypotheses that might be 
proposed to explain any given hypothesis" to the total number of corpuscles in 
the visible universe, which is 10^64; and since "the number of seconds in three 
million years" is 10^14, "the odds would be 10^50 to 1,--which means 'utterly 
overwhelming,'--against the right explanation of any given fact having ever yet 
entered into the mind of man by chance; to say nothing of the labor of testing 
each hypothesis."

Regards,

Jon

On Tue, Nov 1, 2016 at 8:51 AM, Jeffrey Brian Downard 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Jon S, List,

You say: " 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."

You then suggest that the interpretation you are recommending fits nicely with 
the objection that he considers in the next paragraph. I am wondering if we 
might gain some clarity about the claim that "proving his 'theory of the nature 
of thinking' would also prove the hypothesis of God's Reality' if we were to 
read it in light of his earlier work in the Minute Logic on Originality, 
Obsistence and Transuasion. In particular, I think that the discussion of the 
role of the CenoPythagorean Categories in the development of the theories of 
speculative grammar, critical logic and speculative rhetoric is really quite 
clear and to the point when it comes to interpreting this remark. (CP, 
2.79-2.110) I have a hunch that the movement from the Normative Semiotic to a 
doctrine of signs that corresponds to an objective logic provides some ideas 
that might help in the interpretation of the more puzzling moves that Peirce 
seems to be making in "The Neglected Argument".

The remarks at 2.118 stand out in my mind. He says: "We now begin to see the 
sense of talking of modes of being. They are elements of cooperation toward the 
summum bonum. The categories now come in to aid us materially, and we clearly 
make out three modes or factors of being, which we proceed to make clear to 
ourselves. Arrived at this point, we can construct a Weltanschauung. From this 
platform, ethics acquires a new significance, as will be shown. Logic, too, 
shines forth with all is native nobility."

So, let me ask, what does Peirce mean when he says that "it is so connected 
with a theory of the nature of thinking that if this be proved so is that." In 
what sense is each being "proved"?

--Jeff

Jeffrey Downard
Associate Professor
Department of Philosophy
Northern Arizona University
(o) 928 523-8354<tel:928%20523-8354>

________________________________
From: Jon Alan Schmidt 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: Monday, October 31, 2016 1:37 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [PEIRCE-L] Instinctive Reason and Metaphysics

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<http://www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt> - 
twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt<http://twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt>
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