This volume consists of eleven chapters under four parts. The first part concerns methodologies and main principles of the two philosophers. An introductory chapter outlines central historical and systematical themes arising out of the recent scholarship on Peirce and Husserl. The second part is on logic, its Chapters dedicated to the topics from Peirce’s Existential Graphs and the philosophy of notation to Husserl’s notions of pure logic and transcendental logic. The third part includes contributions on philosophy of mathematics. Chapters in the final part deal with the theory of cognition, consciousness and intentionality. The closing chapter provides an extended glossary of central terms of Peirce’s theory of phaneroscopy, explaining them from the viewpoint of the theory of cognition.
Mohammad Shafiei wrote his PhD dissertation on Husserl and philosophy of logic under the direction of Mark van Atten and Shahid Rahman. He obtained his PhD in 2017 from the University of Paris. He is currently a postdoctoral researcher at Shahid Beheshti University, Iran, working on a project on transcendental logic in Husserl and Kant. His research interests include transcendental phenomenology, philosophical logic, theories of meaning and monadology.
Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen’s work is a landmark in Peirce-scholarship since his book Signs of Logic Peircean Themes on the Philosophy of Language, Games, and Communication published by Synthese Library in 2006. He is a philosopher of science, logic, language and human thought. He moved to Astana from Helsinki, Finland and Tallinn, Estonia, where he was professor of philosophy and professor of semiotics for a number of years. He has also had visiting positions at universities in China and Korea. His research interests span from scientific method to human mind and their histories.