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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2016

Pages: 361-377

Series: Studies in Applied Philosophy, Epistemology and Rational Ethics

ISBN (Hardback): 9783319459189

Full citation:

Lorenzo Magnani, "Of habit and abduction", in: Consensus on Peirce's concept of habit, Berlin, Springer, 2016

Of habit and abduction

preserving ignorance or attaining knowledge?

Lorenzo Magnani

pp. 361-377

in: Myrdene Anderson (ed), Consensus on Peirce's concept of habit, Berlin, Springer, 2016

Abstract

"Habit" is not an easy term in Peirce's epistemology: on the one hand it often signifies the rule of action that is attained with the fixation of belief (1877) [EP 1: 109–123]; on the another hand, it is also described as an almost instinctual process that determines further reasonings, the element "by virtue of which an idea gives rise to another" (1873) [CP 7.354]. Stressing the apparently wide separation between these two traits of habit in the epistemic continuum between doubt and belief, we will be able to illustrate (a) a knowledge-based kind of habit, for the analysis of which we will also exploit Gibson's concept of "affordance" (1950), which also plays a pivotal role in the justification of the agent's own beliefs; and (b) an ignorance-based kind of habit, which will be proved as necessary for the beginning of thought, and which is at the base of the ampliative reasoning, condensed in another Peircean key topic (often qualified as "instinctual" in his writings): abduction.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2016

Pages: 361-377

Series: Studies in Applied Philosophy, Epistemology and Rational Ethics

ISBN (Hardback): 9783319459189

Full citation:

Lorenzo Magnani, "Of habit and abduction", in: Consensus on Peirce's concept of habit, Berlin, Springer, 2016