How to Make Our Ideas Clear

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"How to Make Our Ideas Clear" is an influential 1878 philosophical essay by Charles Sanders Peirce that introduces his pragmatic maxim and explores how clarity of thought is achieved through practical consequences.

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How to Make Our Ideas Clear canonical 2

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Predicate Object
instanceOf non-fiction essay
philosophical essay
addresses distinction between clear and obscure ideas
distinction between distinct and confused ideas
aimsTo provide a method for achieving conceptual clarity
author Charles Sanders Peirce NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
critiques Cartesian intuitionism
appeal to self-evidence in philosophy
field epistemology
philosophy
philosophy of language
pragmatism
follows The Fixation of Belief NERFINISHED
genre pragmatist philosophy
hasNotableQuote "Consider what effects, that might conceivably have practical bearings, we conceive the object of our conception to have."
"Our idea of anything is our idea of its sensible effects."
hasPhilosophicalStance anti-Cartesianism
fallibilism
hasReception considered a foundational text of pragmatism
widely anthologized in philosophy collections
hasStructure essay
historicalPeriod 19th-century philosophy
influenced American pragmatism NERFINISHED
John Dewey NERFINISHED
William James NERFINISHED
analytic philosophy of language
logical empiricism
pragmatic theory of meaning
verificationist theories of meaning
introducesConcept clarity through practical consequences
pragmatic maxim
language English
mainTopic clarity of ideas
method of inquiry
pragmatic maxim
theory of meaning
originalMedium print
partOf Illustrations of the Logic of Science NERFINISHED
proposes that the meaning of a concept lies in its conceivable practical effects
publicationYear 1878
publishedIn Popular Science Monthly NERFINISHED
relatedWork Pragmatism (William James) NERFINISHED
The Fixation of Belief NERFINISHED
supports scientific method of inquiry

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Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Charles Sanders Peirce notableWork How to Make Our Ideas Clear
pragmatism associatedWithWork How to Make Our Ideas Clear
subject surface form: Pragmatism