CORRECTIONS! I bothered to scroll down further on the page to which I linked, and found the following topics AFTER "The Course of Research":

On Systems of Doctrine. On Classifications. On Definition and the Clearness of Ideas. On Objective Logic. On the Uniformity of Nature.

The first three of those are parts of methodeutic, in cenoscopic philosophy, and the last two concern metaphysics, or applications of logic in metaphysics. So Peirce was discussing course of research as a topic in methodeutic, seeking to generalize to a cenoscopic-theoretical level from historical examples.

In a draft of "On Objective Logic", which gets into metaphysical concerns, Peirce says,

   The remaining three memoirs are of the nature of elucidations of
   sound methodeutic by applying it in practice to the solution of
   certain questions, which, although they do not belong to logic, are
   of special interest in the discussion of logic.


There is only one memoir after "On Objective Logic" and that's "On the Uniformity of Nature" raises there for Peirce the question of nominalism vs. realism. That the topic is nature, and that such a metaphysical question gets raised, strongly suggest that for him the topic is in metaphysics.

Best, Ben

On 4/15/2014 12:11 PM, Benjamin Udell wrote:

Jeffrey D., list,

I don't know if this is the sort of thing that you meant by a genealogical approach, but I suddenly recalled Peirce's discussion of the course of research near the end of his Carnegie application of 1902. http://cspeirce.com/menu/library/bycsp/l75/ver1/l75v1-09.htm Peirce evidently has paid some attention to a genetic or genealogical approach.

   Final Version - MS L75.389-390
   MEMOIR  29

   ON THE COURSE OF RESEARCH

          Comparing the two wings of the special sciences, i.e.,
   psychognosy and physiognosy, and taking the history of their
   development as a basis, but correcting the history, as well as we
   can, in order to make it conform to what good logic and good economy
   would have made it, we get the idea of rational courses of
   development which these branches might have followed. Between these
   two there is a striking parallel; so that we can formulate a general
   rational course of inquiry. Now passing to the study of the history
   of special sciences, also modified by the same process, we find some
   traces of the same law; or to express it more clearly, it is as if
   the special science showed us one part of the general scheme under a
   microscope. By successively examining all the sciences in this way
   (or all I am sufficiently able to comprehend), we can fill in
   details and make the general formula more definite. We find here a
   succession of conceptions which we can generalize in some measure,
   but which we find it difficult to generalize very much without
   losing their peculiar "flavors." These I call the categories of the
   course of research. They have not the fundamental character of the
   categories of appearance, but appear, nevertheless, to be of
   importance.


There are also a passage from Draft D and a long passage from Draft E that goes into much more detail. The location of those discussions in the Carnegie application - the last of the discussions of subject matter - is consistent with the location of Science of Review, also called Synthetic Philosophy, in his system. However, the discussion suggests that he might be interested in generalizing some of the discussion to methodeutical theory in cenoscopic philosophy (philosophy as a class of Science of Discovery), and the location of the discussion in the Carnegie application (which doesn't cover metaphysics or the special sciences) is not too inconsistent with that.

Best, Ben

On 4/14/2014 9:06 PM, Benjamin Udell wrote:

Jeffrey D., list,

For my part I don't have an opinion on whether Peirce should have paid more attention to hermeneutics and genealogical thinking and should have had a higher opinion of dialectics. Still, for what it's worth, I've done a little text-searching in CP, W, and CN, and here are some results.

Peirce did pay attention to dialectics, since he read plenty of Kant, Hegel, and classical philosophers. He didn't think highly of it. He's less harsh about Hegel's dialectics than about Royce's and those of unnamed others. I can't find him commenting on Kant's dialectics.

From "A Guess at the Riddle", Chapter 1, (1886-7) http://www.cspeirce.com/menu/library/bycsp/guess/guess.htm , EP 1:256, he says about Hegel :

    [....] Finally Hegel's plan of evolving everything out of the
    abstractest conception by a dialectical procedure, though far from
    being so absurd as the experientialists think, but on the contrary
    representing one of the indispensable parts of the course of
    science, overlooks the weakness of individual man, who wants the
    strength to wield such a weapon as that.

In a note added in 1893 (CP 5 Endnotes) to (CP 5.392) "The Fixation of Ideas", Peirce classes Hegel's dialectic as belonging to the method of inclinations, by which I think Peirce means the method of the _/a priori/ _:

    As for Hegel, who led Germany for a generation, he recognizes
    clearly what he is about. He simply launches his boat into the
    current of thought and allows himself to be carried wherever the
    current leads. He himself calls his method _/dialectic/ _, meaning
    that a frank discussion of the difficulties to which any opinion
    spontaneously gives rise will lead to modification after
    modification until a tenable position is attained. This is a
    distinct profession of faith in the method of inclinations.

His criticisms of dialectics sometimes run along the line that it involves pretending to doubt. In Peirce's review (1885) of Josiah Royce's _The Religious Aspect of Philosophy _, CP 8.45, W 5:229:

    [....] The modern dialectician (if he will pardon a touch of
    exaggeration) would have such a man say to himself, Now I am going
    to be sceptical, but only provisionally so, in order to return to
    my faith with renewed conviction! But the whole history of thought
    shows that men cannot doubt at pleasure or merely because they
    find they have no positive reason for the belief they already
    hold. [....]

On Socratic dialectic, in an unpublished version or outtake or the like c.1900 of Peirce's review of Josiah Royce's _The World and the Individual _, CP 8.110:

    [....] For very seldom is anybody really convinced by the Socratic
    style of dialectic. Rather point out to a man a new fact, or one
    that he had overlooked; and then he himself, seeing it to be
    pertinent, will straightway begin to revise his opinion. [....]

As to hermeneutics (and exegetics) I can't find any instances of the string hermeneu or the name Dilthey in Peirce's writings. He mentions Schleiermacher a few times in passing. The string exege appears a few times in passing. So maybe Peirce paid little attention to that school or approach.

I'm not sure what you mean by the 'genealogical' approach unless you mean in a history-of-ideas sense, Peirce once wrote to Dewey that a 'genetic' approach to teaching a science makes sense in teaching some fields but is detrimental in others.

Best, Ben

On 4/13/2014 11:10 PM, Jeffrey Brian Downard wrote:

List,
This chapter on the philosophy of science breaks with the established pattern 
of following Peirce's architectonic.  Given the centrality of scientific 
inquiry in his philosophical theory, there is good reason to devote a separate 
chapter to this topic.  When I compare Peirce's view to those developed by 
other major philosophers, I can't help but wonder if Peirce has drawn the 
boundaries of philosophical theorizing too narrowly.  In his phenomenological 
theory and in his normative sciences, so much attention has been devoted to the 
philosophical foundations of the scientific method, that one might wonder if he 
has paid too little attention to the kinds of questions that figure prominently 
in the philosophical theories developed by the likes of Plato, Aristotle, 
Aquinas, Kant, Heidegger, and others.
With these kinds of concerns in mind, let me try to frame two questions.  
Peirce is trying to model philosophical inquiry on the scientific method.  In 
turn, the scientific method is itself the main focus of his philosophical 
inquiries.  Has the single minded focus on scientific method come at too high a 
price?  Has it caused him to pay too little attention to other methods:  
dialectical, genealogical, hermeneutic?  Has it caused him to pay too little 
attention to other kinds of philosophical questions about morality, art, and 
the like?
--Jeff
Jeff Downard
Associate Professor
Department of Philosophy
NAU
(o) 523-8354
________________________________________
From: Benjamin Udell [bud...@nyc.rr.com
]
Sent: Sunday, April 13, 2014 8:46 AM
To:peirce-l@list.iupui.edu
Subject: Re: Fwd: [PEIRCE-L] RE: de Waal Seminar:  Chapter 6, Philosophy of 
Science
Jeffrey, Sam, Jeff K., list,

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