Abstract
Peirce’s pragmatic maxim is closely related to his conception of abduction.
The acquisition of the actual effect required by the method of scientific reasoning
expressed by Peirce’s maxim must be accomplished by resorting to abductive logic.
Abductive logic starts from a surprising fact, derives a hypothetical explanation
about that fact, and finally arrives at the possibility that the hypothesis is true. This is
the process of abductive reasoning, as provided by Peirce, which is distinct from
induction and deduction and generates explanatory views. Peirce opposed a unified
and unchangeable concept of causality. He used different interpretations of causality
to illustrate the considerable differences in people’s understanding of cause and
effect in different periods. The concept of pragmatism, as developed from the
pragmatic maxim to abduction and then to scientific inference to the best explanation,
is precisely what Peirce initially proposed, and inference to the best explanation
is the starting point and the final result of the pragmatic maxim.