Imagination, Concentration, and Generalization: Peirce on the Reasoning Abilities of the Mathematician
Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society: A Quarterly Journal in American Philosophy, Vol. 45, No. 2.
By Daniel G. Campos
I discuss the epistemic conditions for the possibility of mathematical
discovery that are implied by Peirce’s logic of mathematical inquiry.
Peirce describes the mathematician’s reasoning abilities as the powers
of imagination, concentration, and generalization. I interpret all
three as different semiotic abilities to reason with mathematical
icons, given Peirce’s conception of mathematics as the study of what is
true of hypothetical states of things and his view of mathematical
method as experimentation upon diagrams that embody formal relations.
These abilities come into play at different stages of the process of
experimentation upon diagrams. I illustrate Peirce’s view with a
historical example from ancient Greek geometry.
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