1.
Immortality in the Light of Synechism (1893) 1
2.
What Is a Sign? (1894) 4
3.
Of Reasoning in General (1895) 11
4.
Philosophy and the Conduct of Life (1898) 27
5.
The First Rule of Logic (1898) 42
6.
Pearson's Grammar of Science (1901) 57
7.
Laws of Nature (1901) 67
8.
On the Logic of Drawing History from Ancient Documents, Especially from
Testimonies (1901) 75
9.
On Science and Natural Classes (1902) 115
Harvard Lectures on Pragmatism (1903)
10.
The Maxim of Pragmatism (Lecture I) 133
11.
On Phenomenology (Lecture II) 145
12.
The Categories Defended (Lecture III) 160
13.
The Seven Systems of Metaphysics (Lecture IV) 179
14.
The Three Normative Sciences (Lecture V) 196
15.
The Nature of Meaning (Lecture VI) 208
16.
Pragmatism as the Logic of Abduction (Lecture VII) 226
Lowell Lectures on Logic
17.
What Makes a Reasoning Sound? (1903) 242
A Syllabus of Certain Topics of Logic (1903)
18.
An Outline Classification of the Sciences 258
19.
The Ethics of Terminology 263
20.
Sundry Logical Conceptions 267
21.
Nomenclature and Divisions of Triadic Relations, as Far as They Are Determined
289
22.
New Elements (KainÅ stoixeia) (1904) 300
23.
Ideas, Stray or Stolen, about Scientific Writing (1904) 325
Pragmaticism (1905-07)
24.
What Pragmatism Is (1905) 331
25.
Issues of Pragmaticism (1905) 346
26.
The Basis of Pragmaticism in Phaneroscopy (1906) 360
27.
The Basis of Pragmaticism in the Normative Sciences (1906) 371
28.
Pragmatism (1907) 398
29.
A Neglected Argument for the Reality of God (1908) 434
30.
A Sketch of Logical Critics (1911) 451
31.
An Essay toward Reasoning in Security and Uberty (1913) 463
Appendix: Semiotics from Late Correspondence
32.
Excerpts from Letters to Lady Welby (1904-08) 477
33.
Excerpts from Letters to William James (1909) 492
Notes / 503
Index / 557