Feibleman, James. An Introduction to Peirce's Philosophy, Interpreted as a System. NY: Harper, 1946.
Abstract
This work includes a one-chapter biography of Peirce and a chapter on the logical development of his thought, the final ambition of which was "nothing less than to supplant Aristotle" by establishing a new set of categories that would include Aristotle's philosophy and that of modern science. The concluding chapters trace realism from Plato to Peirce, offer a comparison between Whitehead and Peirce, and claim that Peirce's "open system" of realism points the way of philosophy into the indefinite future. [Abstract from The Philosopher’s Index]