More of an exclamation than a review: Peirce is one of the most captivating thinkers I've ever read, and this set of essays, his most accessible and stirring I know. A philosopher for the non-philosophers. I can't help but thinking that I am only beginning to grasp what his work could do for me, personally and intellectually. I love that Peirce puts, well, "chance, love, and logic," or chaos, ethics, and reason into the same world system (and I use "system" in the late nineteenth sense that Peirce would have used it: a vague but understandable worldview that predates all the problems of over-precise systems and ugly utilitarianism that has clouded pragmatism since early twentieth-century positivism). His pragmatism gives hope that an unpredictable life can still be reasoned and wholesome. Even better, unlike many minds I can't hope to understand, some small part of Peirce rubs off every time I read him. His is a world that we can understand: It may not be precise, it may not be perfect, but, wait a second, that sounds a lot like the world I live in: vague and uncertain, knowable and beautiful. (As a bonus, my copy, rather wonderfully, has misprinted "The Fixation of Belief" as "the Taxation of Belief." Here's to imperfection!) I will return to these essays often. Keep this book close.