Peirce held that the continuity of space, time, ideation, feeling, and perception is an irreducible deliverance of science, and that an adequate conception of the continuous is an extremely important part of all the sciences. This doctrine he called “synechism,” a word deriving from the Greek preposition that means “(together) with.”
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[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/peirce/#syn "Charles Sanders Peirce" profile in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, §6 : Synechism, the Continuum, Infinites, and Infinitesimals]