{ "metadata": { "title": "Collected papers", "author": "Charles Sanders PEIRCE", "year": 1931, "language": "en", "genre": "Philosophy" }, "toc": [ { "title": "Peirce: CP 1.1", "level": 1 }, { "title": "1. PREFACE", "level": 2 }, { "title": "Peirce: CP 1.2", "level": 1 }, { "title": "2. But before all else...", "level": 2 } ], "hierarchy": { "type": "flat" }, "pages": 548, "chunks_count": 5180, "chunks": [ { "chunk_id": "chunk_00000", "text": "To erect a philosophical edifice that shall outlast the vicissitudes of time, my care must be, not so much to set each brick with nicest accuracy, as to lay the foundations deep and massive...", "section": "1. PREFACE", "section_level": 2, "type": "main_content", "canonicalReference": "CP 1.1", "chapterTitle": "Peirce: CP 1.1", "sectionPath": "Peirce: CP 1.1 > 1. PREFACE", "orderIndex": 0, "keywords": [ "philosophical edifice", "Aristotle", "matter and form", "act and power", "peripatetic", "Descartes", "Kant", "comprehensive theory" ], "concepts": [ "philosophy as architecture", "Aristotelian foundations", "modern philosophy needs", "comprehensive theory construction" ], "unitType": "argument", "confidence": 0.95 }, { "chunk_id": "chunk_00001", "text": "But before all else, let me make the acquaintance of my reader, and express my sincere esteem for him and the deep pleasure it is to me to address one so wise and so patient...", "section": "2. But before all else, let me make the acquaintance of my reader, and", "section_level": 2, "type": "main_content", "canonicalReference": "CP 1.2", "chapterTitle": "Peirce: CP 1.1", "sectionPath": "Peirce: CP 1.2 > 2. But before all else, let me make the acquaintance of my reader, and", "orderIndex": 1, "keywords": [ "reader acquaintance", "preconceived opinions", "patient reader", "fundamental objections" ], "concepts": [ "reader as critical thinker", "philosophy requires patience", "openness to new ideas" ], "unitType": "introduction", "confidence": 0.92 }, { "chunk_id": "chunk_00627", "text": "It is the instincts, the sentiments, that make the substance of the soul. Cognition is only its surface, its locus of contact with what is external to it...", "section": "628. It is the instincts, the sentiments, that make the substance of the soul", "section_level": 2, "type": "main_content", "canonicalReference": "CP 1.628", "chapterTitle": "Peirce: CP 1.1", "sectionPath": "Peirce: CP 1.628 > 628. It is the instincts, the sentiments, that make the substance of the soul", "orderIndex": 627, "keywords": [ "instincts", "sentiments", "soul", "cognition", "surface", "external contact" ], "concepts": [ "soul as instinct and sentiment", "cognition as surface phenomenon", "depth psychology" ], "unitType": "argument", "confidence": 0.94 } ], "cost_ocr": 1.644, "cost_llm": 0.523, "cost_total": 2.167 }