Peircers,
Facebook has an app that reminds me of things I posted on
the same day in years past, and this one came up for today:
Ouch???
https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2012/02/22/ouch%e2%9d%a2/
A child hears it said that the stove is hot. But it is not, he says; and, indeed, that central body
Jon,
The self born in "error and ignorance" gives Peirce's psychological view of
the origin of *self-consciousness*, and tying this to his remarks regarding
the hot stove seems to offer some possibilities. What's interesting to me,
though, is the comparison of Peirce's view to Hegel's derivation
List,
The conclusion of the Peircean linguist Michael Shapiro's blog post of 2014
on the Second Amendment. First, the Amendment.
"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free
State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be
infringed."
"The word militia
These arguments are clear and obvious to all but certain political leaders
and their legal supporters. I am glad to see them understood as
pragmaticist. There is also an argument against violence per se which
relates in my view to a distinction between binary conflict and triadic
accommodation -- b