Dissertation Abstract
Metaphors In The Construction Of
Theory:
Ramus, Peirce And The American Mind
by
Laurel Warren Trufant
Degree: PH.D.
Year: 1990
Pages: 00516
Institution:
Advisor: Director: Robert M. Mennel
Source: DAI, 52, no. 02A, (1990): 0661
This study argues for the mutual impenetration of
logical, legal and scientific metaphors and attempts to determine the role
played by them in the construction of theory.
Specifically it attempts to discover the impact which the metaphors of
topical logic may have had on the construction of American ideology.
Chapter
1 offers a brief discussion of logical metaphors and their relation to the
social and intellectual settings which generate them. Chapter 2 extends that
discussion to principles of positive law and political order as they developed
in the unstable atmosphere of 16th Century
paradigms.
Chapter
6 argues for the crucial importance of topical metaphors in the establishment
of order in the American colonies. Chapters 7 and 8 carry the argument for a
"New England Mind" into a national setting and discuss how Ramean
metaphors contributed to the construction of American conceptions of political
order and physical law. These chapters attempt to identify a controlling
metaphor of continuity which operated at the base of American models.
Chapter
9 claims this metaphor of continuity as the logical ground of pragmatic
thought, transmitted to C. S. Peirce through the German logical tradition via
Leibniz and Wolff. Chapter 10 extends that discussion to a specific
investigation of Peirce's Illustrations of the Logic of Science, considered
here as representative of a fundamental commitment on Peirce's part to a
methodology which would underwrite the rest of his thought. Chapter 11 laments
the failure of James, Dewey and Royce to appreciate the power of Peirce's model
and discusses the effect which their fragmentation of his continuous reality
had on American philosophy. Peirce's logic of science emerges as a fundamental
expression of an "American mind" with roots sunk deep in a Ramean
logical paradigm.
SUBJECT(S)
Descriptor: HISTORY OF SCIENCE
HISTORY,
UNITED STATES LAW
AMERICAN
STUDIES
(LEGAL
HISTORY, RAMUS PETRUS, PEIRCE C. S. , LOGIC)
Accession
No: AAG9119146
Provider: OCLC
Database: Dissertations