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Chauncey Wright was an American philosopher whose work greatly influenced the development of pragmatism. His intellectual contributions to philosophy focused on the relationship between human knowledge and reality, shaping the way we think about truth, knowledge, and scientific inquiry. Wright's critical thinking and dedication to intellectual progress continue to inspire philosophers and thinkers worldwide, reminding us that the pursuit of knowledge requires rigor, open-mindedness, and a passion for understanding the world around us.
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"Such evidence is not the only kind which produces belief; though positivism maintains that it is the only kind which ought to produce so high a degree of confidence as all minds have or can be made to have through their agreements."

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"By what criterion... can we distinguish among the numberless effects, that are also causes, and among the causes that may, for aught we can know, be also effects, - how can we distinguish which are the means and which are the ends?"

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"We receive the truths of science by compulsion. Nothing but ignorance is able to resist them."

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"If they are, then the only ultimate truths are the particulars of concrete experience, and no postulate or general assumption is inherent in science until its proceedings become systematic, or the truths already reached give direction to further research."

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"The questions of philosophy proper are human desires and fears and aspirations - human emotions - taking an intellectual form."

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"Natural Selection never made it come to pass, as a habit of nature, that an unsupported stone should move downwards rather than upwards. It applies to no part of inorganic nature, and is very limited even in the phenomena of organic life."

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"The pains of disconcerted or frustrated habits, and the inherent pleasure there is in following them, are motives which nature has put into our wills without generally caring to inform us why; and she sometimes decrees, indeed, that her reasons shall not be ours."

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"And we owe science to the combined energies of individual men of genius, rather than to any tendency to progress inherent in civilization."

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"All observers not laboring under hallucinations of the senses are agreed, or can be made to agree, about facts of sensible experience, through evidence toward which the intellect is merely passive, and over which the individual will and character have no control."

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