Jerry C., List:

Almeder's 1985 *Transactions *article, "Peirce's Thirteen Theories of
Truth," does not spell out the list very clearly, but here is what I gather
from the text.

   1. Correspondence - "true propositions are simply the product of the
   destined final opinion of the scientific community."
   2. Correspondence - truth is "an ideal limit of scientific progress, a
   limit asymptotically approached (but never in fact reached) by successive
   advances in scientific progress."
   3. Correspondence - "some propositions *are *true because they are what
   the scientific community *would *endorse in the final opinion if the
   scientific community were to continue inquiry forever."
   4. Coherence - "truth is simply what one gets when one's beliefs are
   verified or fully authorized by standards of rationality proper to the
   scientific community."
   5. Consensus - "similar to that ... adopted by Habermas and certain
   continental hermeneuticists."
   6. Pragmatic - "the truth of a proposition is a function of whether it
   ... will be asserted in the final opinion of the community," which is
   "destined as a real product."
   7. Pragmatic - "the truth of a proposition is a function of whether it
   would be ... asserted in the final opinion of the community," which is
   "approached as an ideal limit."
   8. Pragmatic - "the truth of a proposition is a function of whether it
   ,,, *would *continue to be endorsed *were *some final scientific opinion
   to emerge."
   9. Amalgam - "as if Peirce adopted some remarkably subtle theory that
   consistently blends elements that are present every known theory of truth."
   10. Combination - "the meaning of 'true' is specified in terms of
   correspondence while the conditions for applying the predicate are
   coherentist."
   11. Muddle - "Peirce's views on truth are basically incoherent or
   reflect mutually inconsistent characterisations of the nature of truth."
   12. Received View - "whether Peirce defined truth in terms of
   correspondence or coherence, he viewed truth as the product of the opinion
   that the scientific community would ultimately reach were it to continue
   indefinitely long and progressively in its research."
   13. Plausible View - "Peirce defined truth (with a capital T) as
   correspondence and reckoned it the destined product the final opinion, and
   ... also defined truth in terms of what are fully authorized in asserting
   under the current standards of rationality and under the scientific method
   at any given moment."

Almeder thinks that only #10, #11, and #13 "make any sense at all," and
comes out in favor of #13.

Regards,

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

On Thu, Mar 9, 2017 at 11:18 AM, Jerry LR Chandler <
[email protected]> wrote:

> List:
>
> In her book, Charles Peirces’s Pragmatic Pluralism, Rosenthal states:
> … the literature on Peirce contains “no fewer than thirteen distinct
> interpretations of Peirce’s views on the nature of truth”, attributing the
> account to Robert Almeder.
>
> She apparently intends contrast CSP’s concept with the notions of
> correspondence and coherence.
>
> (My source of this information is Google Books.)
>
> Can anyone provide the putative listing of Almeter with the original text
> citations?
>
> Cheers
>
> Jerry
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