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; Philosophical Notes
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#CROM. Critical Reflection On Method|CROM. Critical Reflection On Method]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#DIEP. De In Esse Predication|DIEP. De In Esse Predication]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction|HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#JITL. Just In Time Logic|JITL. Just In Time Logic]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#NEKS. New Elements • Kaina Stoicheia|NEKS. New Elements • Kaina Stoicheia]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#OLOD. Quine On The Limits Of Decision|OLOD. Quine On The Limits Of Decision]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#POLA. Philosophy Of Logical Atomism|POLA. Philosophy Of Logical Atomism]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#RTOK. Russell's Theory Of Knowledge|RTOK. Russell's Theory Of Knowledge]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#RTOP. Russell's Treatise On Propositions|RTOP. Russell's Treatise On Propositions]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#SABI. Synthetic/Analytic ≟ Boundary/Interior|SABI. Synthetic/Analytic ≟ Boundary/Interior]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#SYNF. Syntactic Fallacy|SYNF. Syntactic Fallacy]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#TDOE. Quine's Two Dogmas Of Empiricism|TDOE. Quine's Two Dogmas Of Empiricism]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#VOLS. Verities Of Likely Stories|VOLS. Verities Of Likely Stories]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#VOOP. Varieties Of Ontology Project|VOOP. Varieties Of Ontology Project]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience|VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience]]
 +
: [[User:Jon Awbrey/Philosophical Notes#Document Histories|Document Histories]]
 +
 
==CROM. Critical Reflection On Method==
 
==CROM. Critical Reflection On Method==
  
===Note 1===
+
{| align="center" width="90%"
 +
|
 +
<p>Two things here are all-important to assure oneself of and to remember.  The first is that a person is not absolutely an individual.  His thoughts  are what he is &ldquo;saying to himself&rdquo;, that is, is saying to that other self that is just coming into life in the flow of time.  When one reasons, it is that critical self that one is trying to persuade;  and all thought whatsoever is a sign, and is mostly of the nature of language.  The second thing to remember is that the man's circle of society (however widely or narrowly this phrase may be understood), is a sort of loosely compacted person, in some respects of higher rank than the person of an individual organism.  It is these two things alone that render it possible for you &mdash; but only in the abstract, and in a Pickwickian sense &mdash; to distinguish between absolute truth and what you do not doubt.  (Peirce, CP&nbsp;5.421).</p>
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
<p>Charles Sanders Peirce (1905), &ldquo;What Pragmatism Is&rdquo;, ''The Monist'' 15, 161&ndash;181.  Reprinted, ''Collected Papers'', CP&nbsp;5.411&ndash;437.</p>
  
<blockquote>
+
==DIEP. De In Esse Predication==
Two things here are all-important to assure oneself of and to remember. The first is that a person is not absolutely an individual.  His thoughts  are what he is &ldquo;saying to himself&rdquo;, that is, is saying to that other self that is just coming into life in the flow of time.  When one reasons, it is that critical self that one is trying to persuade;  and all thought whatsoever is a sign, and is mostly of the nature of language.  The second thing to remember is that the man's circle of society (however widely or narrowly this phrase may be understood), is a sort of loosely compacted person, in some respects of higher rank than the person of an individual organism.  It is these two things alone that render it possible for you &mdash; but only in the abstract, and in a Pickwickian sense &mdash; to distinguish between absolute truth and what you do not doubt.  (Peirce, CP&nbsp;5.421).
 
</blockquote>
 
  
Charles Sanders Peirce (1905), &ldquo;What Pragmatism Is&rdquo;, ''The Monist'' 15, 161&ndash;181.  Reprinted, ''Collected Papers'', CP&nbsp;5.411&mdash;437.
+
===DIEP. Note 1===
  
 
<pre>
 
<pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant]
 +
|
 +
| Every logical notation hitherto proposed has an unnecessary number of signs.
 +
| Is is by means of this excess that the calculus is rendered easy to use and
 +
| that a symmetrical development of the subject is rendered possible;  at the
 +
| same time, the number of primary formulae is thus greatly multiplied, those
 +
| signifying facts of logic being very few in comparison with those which
 +
| merely define the notation.  I have thought that it might be curious to
 +
| see the notation in which the number of signs should be reduced to a
 +
| minimum;  and with this view I have constructed the following.  The
 +
| apparatus of the Boolian calculus consists of the signs, =, > (not
 +
| used by Boole, but necessary to express particular propositions),
 +
| +, -, x [·], 1, 0.  In place of these seven signs, I propose to
 +
| use a single one.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.12, untitled paper circa 1880.
 +
</pre>
  
CROM. Discussion Note 1
+
===DIEP. Note 2===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 
+
| [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant] (cont.)
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
|
JH = Jay Halcomb
+
| I begin with the description of the notation for conditional
 
+
| or "secondary" propositionsThe different letters signify
Let me make a try at explaining some of this in plainer terms.
+
| propositions. Any one proposition written down by itself
 
+
| is considered to be assertedThus,
The topic of second intentional logic was raised most recently by Bernard Morand, replying to a note that I cross-posted to the "Semiotics and Communication List":
+
|
 
+
|   A
http://yaka.univ-perp.fr/wws/arc/gdsemiocom
 
 
 
I thought that his comment was extremely helpful with respect to the entangled questions of abstract objects, the processes of abstraction, the relationships of abstractions to abstractees, and so on, that we were engaged in at the time.
 
 
 
But I have since come to realize that in making the conventional translation from "higher intentional logic of relatives" (HILOR) to "higher order logic" (HOL) that some very serious distortions are almost inevitably introduced into the discussionI am still trying to work out what might account for these losses in translation, but the main fact seems to be that the traditions that have severally used these terminologies have very different purposes attached to their use, whatever form of "logically in principle" (LIP) conversion might be enunciated betweeen them.
 
 
 
I am adducing to the HAPA account a few canonical remarks from Peirce that I hope will help to explain some of the things that the older traditions regarded as belonging under the heading of second and higher intentions:
 
 
 
So far:
 
 
 
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11271.html
 
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11277.html
 
 
 
If I had to give a midflight capsule summary, I would probably say that
 
the HOL concern is primarily levelled at issues of global coverage while
 
the HIL concern starts out primarily from local operations, especially the
 
formal logical processes that support "critical reflection on method" (CROM).
 
 
 
In a way that is yet to be made as clear as I would like, HILOR demands slightly more "elbow room" than FOL can ever seem to afford -- but here it may not be the cramp of FOL per se so much as the habits of 2-adic reductive thinking that have been its accidents in history so far -- at any rate, HILOR doesn't really care all that much right at first "how high is the sky" the way that it sounds if you transduce higher intentional talk into higher order talkThat's the best I can explain it right now.
 
 
 
Previously:
 
 
 
| I must lie down where all the ladders start
 
| In the foul rag and bone shop of the heart.
 
 
|
 
|
| William Butler Yeats, "The Circus Animals' Desertion"
+
| means that the proposition A is true.
 +
| Two propositions written in a pair are
 +
| considered to be both denied.  Thus,
 
|
 
|
| http://www.web-books.com/Classics/Poetry/Anthology/Yeats/Circus.htm
+
|   A B
 
+
|
JA: I am glad that a few people are beginning to be dissatisfied with the
+
| means that the propositions A and B
    weenie logics that have historically flown down from Principian coops,
+
| are both false; and
    and that they are finally beginning to chafe at the albatross that
+
|
    Russell hung around their necks. Those who have consequently been
+
|    A A
    encouraged to begin doing their homework on the subject would do
+
|
    well to look into the state of the art that logic had attained
+
| means that A is falseWe may have pairs of pairs of propositions
    by mid 1980's in the hands of those who actually use it to any
+
| and higher complicationsIn this case we shall make use of commas,
    purpose, for instance, as exemplified by the excerpts that
+
| semicolons, colons, periods, and parentheses, just as [in] chemical
    I archived from Lambek and ScottIt goes without saying
+
| notation, to separate pairs which are themselves pairedThese
    that the state of the art in 1980's was in many ways just
+
| punctuation marks can no more count for distinct signs of
    catching up with what Peirce had been doing in the 1870's,
+
| algebra, than the parentheses of the ordinary notation.
    but I will let that continue to go without saying, for now.
+
|
 
+
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.13, untitled paper circa 1880.
JA: [HOCLHigher Order Categorical Logic -- Links 01-30]
+
</pre>
 
 
JH: Jon, I know not what this antick term, 'weenie logic' signifieth.
 
 
 
JA: Sorry, that shudda been "over-weenie logic".
 
 
 
JH: By the Rood!  I am indeed mightily glad to hear of such doctrines as
 
    you've conveyed, scholiastickly, as they may yet be the saving of me.
 
 
 
JH: For all along I've been in a great swivet and stew about whether
 
    'tis better to marry or to burn, as a Saint has vouchsafed that
 
    one state was better than t'otherBut it now has fallen out
 
    that learned men say that if we be but pleased in good sense
 
    to take the having and the not-having of a wife, we shall
 
    indeed find no repugnancy nor contradiction in the
 
    terms at all, betimes.
 
 
 
JH: For example:
 
 
 
    http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/r/r11g/part135.html
 
 
 
JH: Shall we not conclude that in like wise all nuptials may fare as
 
    well, both in good Holy order and with much attendant merriment?
 
  
JH: Or, in simpler words, what formalized logic do you endorse,
+
===DIEP. Note 3===
    if any, and of which do you disapprove, Jon?  And why?
 
    I freely confess it's awfully hard to tell.
 
  
JA: Jay, thanks for the chance to play the deadpun, as I really need the practice.
+
<pre>
    But here, I think that I do e-spy a question to which I can e-spouse a re:ply.
+
| [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant] (cont.)
 
+
|
JA: I got into this booming buzziness out of a desire to solve some problems.
+
| To express the proposition:  "If S then P",
    To make a long story short, that has led me by a winding stairway not to
+
| first write:
    heaven, not just yet, but to that "foul rag and bone shop of the heart"
+
|
    that one finds at the _|_ of the recursed heap, and by this _|_ line to
+
|    A
    say that I am mostly concerned with what the grubby pragmatician might
+
|
    call "applicable computable logic" (ACL), and what all this monicker
+
| for this propositionBut the proposition
    would likely suggest to the common sense problem solver.  And here,
+
| is that a certain conceivable state of things
    from the _|_ of my heart, at the _|_ of this persistently recursed
+
| is absent from the universe of possibility.
    heap of problems that go about orphaned and unaddressed by high
+
| Hence instead of A we write:
    and mighty logicists of every persuasion, I don't really care
+
|
    a Fig 1 or Fig 2 what flag they fly over the rubble, so long
+
|   B B
    as they get down from their high-rise vacant LOT's and help
+
|
    clean up the mess.
+
| Then B expresses the possibility of S being true and
 
+
| P falseSince, therefore, SS denies S, it follows
JH: It might be, e.g., weak (finitary) 2nd order logic, monadic 2nd order logic,
+
| that (SS, P) expresses BHence we write:
    2nd order logic itself, 3rd order logic, the theory of types, or something else.
+
|
 
+
|    SS, P; SS, P.
JH: Which do you think Peirce might have preferred?
+
|
 
+
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.14, untitled paper circa 1880.
JH: Can you cite me some Holy Writ thereupon from the Canon to clear up the matter?
 
 
 
JA: See above, or read the writing on the wall (of the city of philosophy).
 
 
 
JH: Nor discern I where be the 'coops of Principia',
 
    nor what strange fowl roost therein. Might this
 
    bespeak the fabled land of 'type theory', of which
 
    I have sometime heard strange ramifications?
 
 
 
JA: Close, but no cigarTrue, there's a mockingbird in this coop,
 
    but what I really had in my mental aviary was a bird like this:
 
 
 
JA: I give Russell full credit, well, partial credit, for asking some really
 
    good questions, like what does it mean to believe a statement, to desire
 
    a state of being, a state of affairs, or to undertstand a proposition,
 
    as he puts it in one place:
 
 
 
BR: | "How shall we describe the logical form of a belief?"
 
    |
 
    | POLA 25.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05000.html
 
    | POLA 26.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05001.html
 
    | POLA 27.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05002.html
 
    | POLA 28.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05006.html
 
    | POLA 29.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05007.html
 
 
 
JA: Of course, he quite characteristically has to
 
    go and spoil it all by saying something like:
 
 
 
<blockquote>
 
I hope you will forgive the fact that so much of what I say today is tentative      and consists of pointing out difficultiesThe subject is not very easy and it has not been much dealt with or discussed.  Practically nobody has until quite lately begun to consider the problem of the nature of belief with anything like a proper logical apparatus and therefore one has very little to help one in any discussion and so one has to be content on many points at present with pointing out difficulties rather than laying down quite clear solutions.  (Russell, POLA, pp. 91-92).
 
 
 
Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
POLA 27.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05002.html
 
 
 
JA: The mark of a midterm paper by somebody who didn't read the homework assignment.
 
 
 
JA: But every time that Russell found that a "pre-theoretcially really
 
    apt question" (PRAQ) didn't just fall over and play dead before the
 
    display of his "proper logical apparatus", he promptly consigned it,
 
    with all due encouragement from Wittgenstein to do so, to the realm
 
    of illegitimate questionsHe never seemed able to draw the rather
 
    obvious conclusion that maybe it was his "proper logical apparatus"
 
    that was lacking something somewhere.
 
 
 
JA: [POLA.  Philosophy Of Logical Atomism      -- Links 01-29]
 
JA: [RTOK.  Russell's Theory Of Knowledge      -- Links 01-03]
 
JA: [RTOP.  Russell's Treatise On Propositions -- Links 01-02]
 
 
JH: Praised be the good God in all things, but especially for bringing the world into that height of refinedness beyond what it was when I first came to be acquainted therewith, that now the learnedst and most prudent philosophers are not ashamed to be seen entering in at the porches and frontispieces of the schools of the Pyrrhonian, Aporrhetic, Sceptic, and Ephectic sects. Blessed be the holy name of God!  Veritably, it is like henceforth to be found an enterprise of much more easy undertaking to catch lions by the neck, horses by the main, oxen by the horns, bulls by the muzzle, wolves by the tail, goats by the beard, and flying birds by the feet, than to entrap such philosophers in their words.
 
 
 
JH: http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/r/r11g/part136.html
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
  
==DIEP. De In Esse Predication==
+
===DIEP. Note 4===
  
 
<pre>
 
<pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| I have maintained since 1867 that there is but one primary and fundamental
 +
| logical relation, that of illation, expressed by 'ergo'.  A proposition,
 +
| for me, is but an argumentation divested of the assertoriness of its
 +
| premiss and conclusion.  This makes every proposition a conditional
 +
| proposition at bottom.  In like manner a "term", or class-name, is
 +
| for me nothing but a proposition with its indices or subjects left
 +
| blank, or indefinite.  The common noun happens to have a very
 +
| distinctive character in the Indo-European languages.  In most
 +
| other tongues it is not sharply discriminated from a verb or
 +
| participle.  "Man", if it can be said to mean anything by
 +
| itself, means "what I am thinking of is a man".  This
 +
| doctrine, which is in harmony with the above theory
 +
| of signs, gives a great unity to logic.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.440,
 +
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 +
| pp. 19-40, 1896.
 +
</pre>
  
DIEP. Note 1
+
===DIEP. Note 5===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 
+
| Cicero and other ancient writers mention a great dispute between
| [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant]
+
| two logicians, Diodorus and Philo, in regard to the significance
 +
| of conditional propositions.  This dispute has continued to our
 +
| own day.  The Diodoran view seems to be the one which is natural
 +
| to the minds of those, at least, who speak the European languages.
 +
| How it may be with other languages has not been reported.  The
 +
| difficulty with this view is that nobody seems to have succeeded
 +
| in making any clear statement of it that is not open to doubt as
 +
| to its justice, and that is not pretty complicated.  The Philonian
 +
| view has been preferred by the greatest logicians.  Its advantage
 +
| is that it is perfectly intelligible and simple.  Its disadvantage
 +
| is that it produces results which seem offensive to common sense.
 
|
 
|
| Every logical notation hitherto proposed has an unnecessary number of signs.
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.441,
| Is is by means of this excess that the calculus is rendered easy to use and
+
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| that a symmetrical development of the subject is rendered possible;  at the
+
| pp. 19-40, 1896.
| same time, the number of primary formulae is thus greatly multiplied, those
+
</pre>
| signifying facts of logic being very few in comparison with those which
 
| merely define the notation. I have thought that it might be curious to
 
| see the notation in which the number of signs should be reduced to a
 
| minimum;  and with this view I have constructed the following.  The
 
| apparatus of the Boolian calculus consists of the signs, =, > (not
 
| used by Boole, but necessary to express particular propositions),
 
| +, -, x [·], 1, 0. In place of these seven signs, I propose to
 
| use a single one.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.12, untitled paper circa 1880.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Note 6===
  
DIEP. Note 2
+
<pre>
 
+
| In order to explain these positions, it is best
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| to mention that 'possibility' may be understood
 
+
| in many senses; but they may all be embraced
| [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant] (cont.)
+
| under the definition that that is possible
 +
| which, in a certain state of information,
 +
| is not known to be false.  By varying the
 +
| supposed state of information all the
 +
| varieties of possibility are obtained.
 
|
 
|
| I begin with the description of the notation for conditional
+
| Thus, 'essential' possibility
| or "secondary" propositions.  The different letters signify
+
| is that which supposes nothing
| propositions.  Any one proposition written down by itself
+
| to be known except logical rules.
| is considered to be asserted. Thus,
 
 
|
 
|
|   A
+
|'Substantive' possibility, on the other
 +
| hand, supposes a state of omniscience.
 
|
 
|
| means that the proposition A is true.
+
| Now the Philonian logicians have always insisted
| Two propositions written in a pair are
+
| upon beginning the study of conditional propositions
| considered to be both denied. Thus,
+
| by considering what such a proposition means in a state
 +
| of omniscience;  and the Diodorans have, perhaps not very
 +
| adroitly, commonly assented to this order of procedure.
 +
| Duns Scotus* terms such a conditional proposition
 +
| a "consequentia simplex de inesse".
 
|
 
|
|   A B
+
| According to the Philonians, "If it is now lightening it will thunder",
 +
| understood as a consequence 'de inesse', means "It is either not now
 +
| lightening or it will soon thunder".  According to Diodorus, and
 +
| most of his followers (who seem here to fall into a logical trap),
 +
| it means "It is now lightening and it will soon thunder".
 
|
 
|
| means that the propositions A and B
+
|* 'Quaestiones in Octo libror Physicorum Aristotelis', Liber 1, Question 2.
| are both false;  and
 
 
|
 
|
|   A A
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.442,
|
+
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| means that A is false. We may have pairs of pairs of propositions
+
| pp. 19-40, 1896.
| and higher complications. In this case we shall make use of commas,
+
</pre>
| semicolons, colons, periods, and parentheses, just as [in] chemical
 
| notation, to separate pairs which are themselves paired. These
 
| punctuation marks can no more count for distinct signs of
 
| algebra, than the parentheses of the ordinary notation.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.13, untitled paper circa 1880.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Note 7===
  
DIEP.  Note 3
+
<pre>
 
+
| Although the Philonian views lead to such inconveniences as that it
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| is true, as a consequence 'de inesse', that if the Devil were elected
 
+
| president of the United States, it would prove highly conducive to the
| [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant] (cont.)
+
| spiritual welfare of the people (because he will not be elected), yet
|
+
| both Professor Schroeder and I prefer to build the algebra of relatives
| To express the proposition: "If S then P",
+
| upon this conception of the conditional proposition. The inconvenience,
| first write:
+
| after all, ceases to seem important, when we reflect that, no matter
 +
| what the conditional proposition be understood to mean, it can always
 +
| be expressed by a complexus of Philonian conditionals and denials of
 +
| conditionals. It may, however, be suspected that the Diodoran view
 +
| has suffered from incompetent advocacy, and that if it were modified
 +
| somewhat, it might prove the preferable one.
 
|
 
|
|   A
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.443,
 +
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 +
| pp. 19-40, 1896.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===DIEP. Note 8===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| The consequence 'de inesse', "if A is true, then B is true",
 +
| is expressed by letting i denote the actual state of things,
 +
| A_i mean that in the actual state of things A is true, and
 +
| B_i mean that in the actual state of things B is true, and
 +
| then saying "If A_i is true then B_i is true", or, what is
 +
| the same thing, "Either A_i is not true or B_i is true".
 
|
 
|
| for this proposition.  But the proposition
+
| But an 'ordinary' Philonian conditional is expressed
| is that a certain conceivable state of things
+
| by saying, "In 'any' possible state of things, i,
| is absent from the universe of possibility.
+
| either A_i is not true, or B_i is true".
| Hence instead of A we write:
 
 
|
 
|
|   B B
+
| Now let us express the categorical proposition,
 +
| "Every man is wise".  Here, we let m_i mean that
 +
| the individual object i is a man, and w_i mean that
 +
| the individual object i is wise.  Then, we assert that,
 +
| "taking any individual of the universe, i, no matter
 +
| what, either that object, i, is not a man or that
 +
| object, i, is wise";  that is, whatever is a man
 +
| is wise.  That is, "whatever 'i' can indicate,
 +
| either m_i is not true or w_i is true".
 
|
 
|
| Then B expresses the possibility of S being true and
+
| The conditional and categorical propositions
| P falseSince, therefore, SS denies S, it follows
+
| are expressed in precisely the same form;
| that (SS, P) expresses B. Hence we write:
+
| and there is absolutely no difference,
 +
| to my mind, between themThe 'form'
 +
| of relationship is the same.
 
|
 
|
|   SS, P;  SS, P.
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.444-445,
|
+
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'The Monist', vol. 7,
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.14, untitled paper circa 1880.
+
| pp. 19-40, 1896.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Note 9===
  
DIEP. Note 4
+
<pre>
 
+
| The question is what is the sense which is most usefully attached
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| to the hypothetical proposition in logic? Now, the peculiarity of
 
+
| the hypothetical proposition is that it goes out beyond the actual
| I have maintained since 1867 that there is but one primary and fundamental
+
| state of things and declares what 'would' happen were things other
| logical relation, that of illation, expressed by 'ergo'. A proposition,
+
| than they are or may be.  The utility of this is that it puts us in
| for me, is but an argumentation divested of the assertoriness of its
+
| possession of a rule, say that "if A is true, B is true", such that
| premiss and conclusion. This makes every proposition a conditional
+
| should we hereafter learn something of which we are now ignorant,
| proposition at bottomIn like manner a "term", or class-name, is
+
| namely that A is true, then by virtue of this rule, we shall find
| for me nothing but a proposition with its indices or subjects left
+
| that we know something else, namely, that B is true.
| blank, or indefinite.  The common noun happens to have a very
+
|
| distinctive character in the Indo-European languages. In most
+
| There can be no doubt that the Possible, in its primary meaning,
| other tongues it is not sharply discriminated from a verb or
+
| is that which may be true for aught we know, that whose falsity
| participle"Man", if it can be said to mean anything by
+
| we do not know.  The purpose is subserved, then, if throughout
| itself, means "what I am thinking of is a man". This
+
| the whole range of possibility, in every state of things in
| doctrine, which is in harmony with the above theory
+
| which A is true, B is true too.
| of signs, gives a great unity to logic.
+
|
 +
| The hypothetical proposition may therefore be falsified
 +
| by a single state of things, but only by one in which A
 +
| is true while B is falseStates of things in which A
 +
| is false, as well as those in which B is true, cannot
 +
| falsify it.
 +
|
 +
| If, then, B is a proposition true in every case
 +
| throughout the whole range of possibility, the
 +
| hypothetical proposition, taken in its logical
 +
| sense, ought to be regarded as true, whatever
 +
| may be the usage of ordinary speech.
 +
|
 +
| If, on the other hand, A is in no case true, throughout the
 +
| range of possibility, it is a matter of indifference whether
 +
| the hypothetical be understood to be true of not, since it is
 +
| uselessBut it will be more simple to class it among true
 +
| propositions, because the cases in which the antecedent is
 +
| false do not, in any other case, falsify a hypothetical.
 +
| This, at any rate, is the meaning which I shall attach
 +
| to the hypothetical proposition in general, in this
 +
| paper.
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.440,
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.374,
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
+
|"On the Algebra of Logic:  A Contribution to the Philosophy of Notation",
| pp. 19-40, 1896.
+
|'American Journal of Mathematics', vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 180-202, 1885.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Note 10===
  
DIEP.  Note 5
+
<pre>
 
+
| Indexical Dicisigns seem to have no important varieties;  but propositions are
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| divisible, generally by dichotomy primarily in various ways.  In the first place,
 
+
| according to 'Modality' or 'Mode', a proposition is either 'de inesse' (the phrase
| Cicero and other ancient writers mention a great dispute between
+
| used in the 'Summulae'*) or 'modal'A proposition 'de inesse' contemplates only
| two logicians, Diodorus and Philo, in regard to the significance
+
| the existing state of things -- existing, that is, in the logical universe of
| of conditional propositions.  This dispute has continued to our
+
| discourseA modal proposition takes account of a whole range of possibility.
| own dayThe Diodoran view seems to be the one which is natural
+
| According as it asserts something to be true or false throughout the whole
| to the minds of those, at least, who speak the European languages.
+
| range of possibility, it is 'necessary' or 'impossible'.  According as it
| How it may be with other languages has not been reportedThe
+
| asserts something to be true or false within the range of possibility
| difficulty with this view is that nobody seems to have succeeded
+
| (not expressly including or excluding the existent state of things),
| in making any clear statement of it that is not open to doubt as
+
| it is 'possible' or 'contingent'(The terms are all from Boethius).
| to its justice, and that is not pretty complicated.  The Philonian
+
|
| view has been preferred by the greatest logicians.  Its advantage
+
|* Petrus Hispanus, 'Summulae Logicales', p. 71B.
| is that it is perfectly intelligible and simpleIts disadvantage
 
| is that it produces results which seem offensive to common sense.
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.441,
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.323,
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
+
| from an unpublished "Syllabus", circa 1902.
| pp. 19-40, 1896.
+
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Note 11===
  
DIEP.  Note 6
+
<pre>
 
+
| It remains to show in what manner I suppose the ideas of the other forms
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| of propositions to be evolved;  and this will be a chapter of what I have
 
+
| called "speculative rhetoric". I may begin by remarking that I use the
| In order to explain these positions, it is best
+
| sign -< for the sign of inclusion.  I believe I was the first to show,
| to mention that 'possibility' may be understood
+
| in 1867, that Boole's algebra, as he left it, was unfit to express
| in many senses; but they may all be embraced
+
| particular propositions.  Following out that idea, I showed, in 1870,
| under the definition that that is possible
+
| before anybody else, that we needed in logic a sign corresponding to
| which, in a certain state of information,
+
| the sign =<, but that sign is unsatisfactory because it implies that
| is not known to be false.  By varying the
+
| the relation is a combination of the relations expressed by < and =,
| supposed state of information all the
+
| whereas in truth, as I demonstrated, it is more simple than either.  ...
| varieties of possibility are obtained.
 
 
|
 
|
| Thus, 'essential' possibility
+
| Accordingly,
| is that which supposes nothing
 
| to be known except logical rules.
 
 
|
 
|
|'Substantive' possibility, on the other
+
| h_i -< d_i
| hand, supposes a state of omniscience.
 
 
|
 
|
| Now the Philonian logicians have always insisted
+
| means that on the occasion i, if the idea h is definitively
| upon beginning the study of conditional propositions
+
| forced upon the mind, then on the same occasion the idea d
| by considering what such a proposition means in a state
+
| is definitively forced upon the mind.  On the Philonian view
| of omniscience;  and the Diodorans have, perhaps not very
+
| this is the same as to say that on the occasion i, either the
| adroitly, commonly assented to this order of procedure.
+
| idea h is not definitively forced upon the mind or on the same
| Duns Scotus* terms such a conditional proposition
+
| occasion the idea d is definitively forced upon the mind. From
| a "consequentia simplex de inesse".
+
| that hypothesis, the rules of the sign -< may be mathematically
 +
| deduced.  ...
 
|
 
|
| According to the Philonians, "If it is now lightening it will thunder",
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.356,
| understood as a consequence 'de inesse', means "It is either not now
+
|"That Categorical and Hypothetical Propositions
| lightening or it will soon thunder".  According to Diodorus, and
+
| are one in essence, with some connected matters",
| most of his followers (who seem here to fall into a logical trap),
+
| circa 1895.
| it means "It is now lightening and it will soon thunder".
+
</pre>
|
 
|* 'Quaestiones in Octo libror Physicorum Aristotelis', Liber 1, Question 2.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.442,
 
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 
| pp. 19-40, 1896.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Note 12===
  
DIEP. Note 7
+
<pre>
 +
| It must be remembered that
 +
| possibility and necessity
 +
| are relative to the state
 +
| of information.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 4.517,
 +
|"The Gamma Part of Existential Graphs",
 +
|"Lowell Lectures of 1903", Lecture 4.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Note 13===
  
| Although the Philonian views lead to such inconveniences as that it
+
<pre>
| is true, as a consequence 'de inesse', that if the Devil were elected
+
| A modal dyadic relation is either a relation between characters
| president of the United States, it would prove highly conducive to the
+
| (including qualities and relations of individuals, of characters,
| spiritual welfare of the people (because he will not be elected), yet
+
| and of concepts), or between symbols, or concepts.
| both Professor Schroeder and I prefer to build the algebra of relatives
+
|
| upon this conception of the conditional propositionThe inconvenience,
+
| Dyadic relations between characters mostly correspond to
| after all, ceases to seem important, when we reflect that, no matter
+
| relations between the subjects of those characters or to
| what the conditional proposition be understood to mean, it can always
+
| relations between the symbols of them;  and such need not
| be expressed by a complexus of Philonian conditionals and denials of
+
| be separately considered.  There remain some relations
| conditionals. It may, however, be suspected that the Diodoran view
+
| between characters, especially between qualities, which
| has suffered from incompetent advocacy, and that if it were modified
+
| do not seem to be derivative.  Such are the relations
| somewhat, it might prove the preferable one.
+
| of "being more intense than", of "being disparate to"
 +
| (or in applicability to subjects of the same category,
 +
| as multitude and intensity are disparate)But, so
 +
| far as appears at present, no particular logical
 +
| interest attaches to such relations, and they
 +
| will here be passed by.
 +
|
 +
| Dyadic relations between symbols, or concepts, are matters of logic,
 +
| so far as they are not derived from relations between the objects and
 +
| the characters to which the symbols refer.  Noting that we are limiting
 +
| ourselves to modal 'dyadic' relations, it may probably be said that those
 +
| of them that are truly and fundamentally dyadic arise from corresponding
 +
| relations between propositions.  To exemplify what is meant, the dyadic
 +
| relations of logical 'breadth' and 'depth', often called denotation and
 +
| connotation, have played a great part in logical discussions, but these
 +
| take their origin in the triadic relation between a sign, its object,
 +
| and its interpretant sign; and furthermore, the distinction appears
 +
| as a dichotomy owing to the limitation of the field of thought, which
 +
| forgets that concepts grow, and that there is thus a third respect
 +
| in which they may differ, depending on the state of knowledge, or
 +
| amount of information.  To give a good and complete account of
 +
| the dyadic relations of concepts would be impossible without
 +
| taking into account the triadic relations which, for the
 +
| most part, underlie them;  and indeed almost a complete
 +
| treatise upon the first of the three divisions of logic
 +
| would be required.*
 +
|
 +
|*
 +
|[ The three divisions of logic are:
 +
| 1.  Speculative Grammar  (= the theory of signs)
 +
|  2. Critical Logic      (= denotative semantics)
 +
|  3.  Speculative Rhetoric (= methodology, methodeutic)]
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.443,
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.606-608,
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
+
|'A Syllabus of Certain Topics of Logic', intended
| pp. 19-40, 1896.
+
| as a supplement to the "Lowell Lectures of 1903".
 
+
</pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
  
DIEP. Note 8
+
===DIEP. Note 14===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 
+
| Introduction to the Logic of Quantity
| The consequence 'de inesse', "if A is true, then B is true",
 
| is expressed by letting i denote the actual state of things,
 
| A_i mean that in the actual state of things A is true, and
 
| B_i mean that in the actual state of things B is true, and
 
| then saying "If A_i is true then B_i is true", or, what is
 
| the same thing, "Either A_i is not true or B_i is true".
 
 
|
 
|
| But an 'ordinary' Philonian conditional is expressed
+
| The great importance of the idea of quantity in demonstrative reasoning
| by saying, "In 'any' possible state of things, i,
+
| seems to me not yet sufficiently explained.  It appears, however, to be
| either A_i is not true, or B_i is true".
+
| connected with the circumstance that the relations of being greater
 +
| than and of being at least as great as are transitive relations.
 +
| Still, a satisfactory evolutionary logic of mathematics remains a
 +
| desideratum.  I intend to take up that problem in a future paper
 +
| ["The Simplest Mathematics", CP 4.227-323, 1902].  Meantime the
 +
| development of projective geometry and of geometrical topics has
 +
| shown that there are at least two large mathematical theories of
 +
| continuity into which the idea of continuous 'quantity', in the
 +
| usual sense of that word, does not enter at all.  For projective
 +
| geometry Schubert has developed an algebraical calculus which has
 +
| a most remarkable affinity to the Boolian algebra of logic.  It is,
 +
| however, imperfect, in that it only gives imaginary points, rays, and
 +
| planes, without deciding whether they are real or not.  This defect cannot
 +
| be remedied until topology -- or, as I prefer to call it, mathematical topics --
 +
| has been further developed and its logic accurately analysed.  To do this
 +
| ought to be one of the first tasks of exact logicians.  But before that
 +
| can be accomplished, a perfectly satisfactory logical account of the
 +
| conception of continuity is required.  This involves the definition
 +
| of a certain kind of infinity;  and in order to make that quite clear,
 +
| it is requisite to begin by developing the logical doctrine of infinite
 +
| multitude.  This doctrine still remains, after the works of Cantor, Dedekind,
 +
| and others, in an inchoate condition.  For example, such a question remains
 +
| unanswered as the following:  Is it, or is it not, logically possible for
 +
| two collections to be so multitudinous that neither can be put into a
 +
| one-to-one correspondence with a part or the whole of the other?
 +
| To resolve this problem demands, not a mere 'application' of
 +
| logic, but a further 'development' of the conception of
 +
| logical possibility.
 
|
 
|
| Now let us express the categorical proposition,
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.526,
| "Every man is wise".  Here, we let m_i mean that
+
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| the individual object i is a man, and w_i mean that
+
| pp. 161-217, 1897.
| the individual object i is wise.  Then, we assert that,
+
</pre>
| "taking any individual of the universe, i, no matter
 
| what, either that object, i, is not a man or that
 
| object, i, is wise";  that is, whatever is a man
 
| is wise.  That is, "whatever 'i' can indicate,
 
| either m_i is not true or w_i is true".
 
|
 
| The conditional and categorical propositions
 
| are expressed in precisely the same form;
 
| and there is absolutely no difference,
 
| to my mind, between them.  The 'form'
 
| of relationship is the same.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.444-445,
 
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'The Monist', vol. 7,
 
| pp. 19-40, 1896.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Note 15===
  
DIEP.  Note 9
+
<pre>
 
+
| Introduction to the Logic of Quantity (cont.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| The question is what is the sense which is most usefully attached
 
| to the hypothetical proposition in logic?  Now, the peculiarity of
 
| the hypothetical proposition is that it goes out beyond the actual
 
| state of things and declares what 'would' happen were things other
 
| than they are or may be.  The utility of this is that it puts us in
 
| possession of a rule, say that "if A is true, B is true", such that
 
| should we hereafter learn something of which we are now ignorant,
 
| namely that A is true, then by virtue of this rule, we shall find
 
| that we know something else, namely, that B is true.
 
 
|
 
|
| There can be no doubt that the Possible, in its primary meaning,
+
| I formerly defined the possible as that which in a given
| is that which may be true for aught we know, that whose falsity
+
| state of information (real or feigned) we do not know not
| we do not know.  The purpose is subserved, then, if throughout
+
| to be trueBut this definition today seems to me only a
| the whole range of possibility, in every state of things in
+
| twisted phrase which, by means of two negatives, conceals
| which A is true, B is true too.
+
| an anacoluthon.  We know in advance of experience that
 +
| certain things are not true, because we see they are
 +
| impossible.
 
|
 
|
| The hypothetical proposition may therefore be falsified
+
| Thus, if a chemist tests the contents of a hundred bottles for fluorine,
| by a single state of things, but only by one in which A
+
| and finds it present in the majority, and if another chemist tests them
| is true while B is falseStates of things in which A
+
| for oxygen and finds it in the majority, and if each of them reports his
| is false, as well as those in which B is true, cannot
+
| results to me, it will be useless for them to come to me together and say
| falsify it.
+
| that they know infallibly that fluorine and oxygen cannot be present in the
 +
| same bottle;  for I see that such infallibility is 'impossible'I know it
 +
| is not true, because I satisfy myself that there is no room for it even in
 +
| that ideal world of which the real world is but a fragment.  I need no
 +
| sensible experimentation, because ideal experimentation establishes
 +
| a much broader answer to the question than sensible experimentation
 +
| could give.
 
|
 
|
| If, then, B is a proposition true in every case
+
| It has come about through the agencies of development that man is
| throughout the whole range of possibility, the
+
| endowed with intelligence of such a nature that he can by ideal
| hypothetical proposition, taken in its logical
+
| experiments ascertain that in a certain universe of logical
| sense, ought to be regarded as true, whatever
+
| possibility certain combinations occur while others do not
| may be the usage of ordinary speech.
+
| occur.  Of those which occur in the ideal world some do
 +
| and some do not occur in the real world;  but all that
 +
| occur in the real world occur also in the ideal world.
 +
| For the real world is the world of sensible experience,
 +
| and it is a part of the process of sensible experience
 +
| to locate its facts in the world of ideas.  This is what
 +
| I mean by saying that the sensible world is but a fragment
 +
| of the ideal world.
 
|
 
|
| If, on the other hand, A is in no case true, throughout the
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
| range of possibility, it is a matter of indifference whether
+
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| the hypothetical be understood to be true of not, since it is
+
| pp. 161-217, 1897.
| useless.  But it will be more simple to class it among true
+
</pre>
| propositions, because the cases in which the antecedent is
 
| false do not, in any other case, falsify a hypothetical.
 
| This, at any rate, is the meaning which I shall attach
 
| to the hypothetical proposition in general, in this
 
| paper.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.374,
 
|"On the Algebra of Logic:  A Contribution to the Philosophy of Notation",
 
|'American Journal of Mathematics', vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 180-202, 1885.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Note 16===
  
DIEP. Note 10
+
<pre>
 
+
| Introduction to the Logic of Quantity (cont.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
|
 
+
| In respect to the ideal world we are virtually omniscientthat is
| Indexical Dicisigns seem to have no important varieties;  but propositions are
+
| to say, there is nothing but lack of time, of perseverance, and of
| divisible, generally by dichotomy primarily in various ways.  In the first place,
+
| activity of mind to prevent our making the requisite experiments
| according to 'Modality' or 'Mode', a proposition is either 'de inesse' (the phrase
+
| to ascertain positively whether a given combination occurs or not.
| used in the 'Summulae'*) or 'modal'.  A proposition 'de inesse' contemplates only
+
| Thus, every proposition about the ideal world can be ascertained
| the existing state of things -- existing, that is, in the logical universe of
+
| to be true or false.  A description of thing which occurs in that
| discourse.  A modal proposition takes account of a whole range of possibility.
+
| world is 'possible, in the substantive logical sense'.
| According as it asserts something to be true or false throughout the whole
+
|
| range of possibility, it is 'necessary' or 'impossible'.  According as it
+
| Very many writers assert that everything is logically possible which involves
| asserts something to be true or false within the range of possibility
+
| no contradiction.  Let us call that sort of logical possibility, 'essential',
| (not expressly including or excluding the existent state of things),
+
| or 'formal', logical possibilityIt is not the only logical possibility;
| it is 'possible' or 'contingent'.  (The terms are all from Boethius).
+
| for in this sense, two propositions contradictory of one another may both
 +
| be severally possible, although their combination is not possible.
 +
|
 +
| That is to say each is 'vaguely', not 'distinctly', possible[note, 1908].
 
|
 
|
|* Petrus Hispanus, 'Summulae Logicales', p. 71B.
+
| But in the 'substantive' sense, the contradictory of a possible proposition
 +
| is impossible, because we are virtually omniscient in regard to the ideal
 +
| world.  For example, there is no contradiction in supposing that only
 +
| four, or any other number, of independent atoms exist. But it is
 +
| made clear to us by ideal experimentation, that five atoms are
 +
| to be found in the ideal world.  Whether all five are to be
 +
| found in the sensible world or not, to say there are only
 +
| four in the ideal world is a proposition absolutely to be
 +
| rejected, notwithstanding its involving no contradiction.
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.323,
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
| from an unpublished "Syllabus", circa 1902.
+
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 
+
| pp. 161-217, 1897.
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
DIEP. Note 11
+
===DIEP. Note 17===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 
+
| A few of the most frequently recurring scholastic phrases follow.  ...
| It remains to show in what manner I suppose the ideas of the other forms
+
|
| of propositions to be evolved;  and this will be a chapter of what I have
+
|'Essential Predication': in which the predicate is wholly contained in the
| called "speculative rhetoric". I may begin by remarking that I use the
+
| essence of the subjectIt is, therefore, in Kant's sense, an analytical
| sign -< for the sign of inclusionI believe I was the first to show,
+
| judgmentBut neither Kant nor the scholastics provide for the fact that
| in 1867, that Boole's algebra, as he left it, was unfit to express
+
| an indefinitely complicated proposition, very far from obvious, may often
| particular propositionsFollowing out that idea, I showed, in 1870,
+
| be deduced by mathematical reasoning, or necessary deduction, by the logic
| before anybody else, that we needed in logic a sign corresponding to
+
| of relatives, from a definition of the utmost simplicity, without assuming
| the sign =<, but that sign is unsatisfactory because it implies that
+
| any hypothesis whatever (indeed, such assumption could only render the
| the relation is a combination of the relations expressed by < and =,
+
| proposition deduced simpler);  and this may contain many notions not
| whereas in truth, as I demonstrated, it is more simple than either.  ...
+
| explicit in the definition.
 
|
 
|
| Accordingly,
+
| This may be illustrated by the following:
 
|
 
|
| h_i -< d_i
+
| Man is a rational animal;  hence, whatever is not a man is either,
 +
| on the one hand, not rational, while either at the same time being
 +
| an animal or else benefiting nothing except such objects as love
 +
| nothing but fairies, or, on the other hand, is not an animal,
 +
| while either being rational or standing to whatever fairy may
 +
| exist in the relation of benefiting something that loves it.
 
|
 
|
| means that on the occasion i, if the idea h is definitively
+
| Now, if it be said that that is an analytical judgment, or essential predication,
| forced upon the mind, then on the same occasion the idea d
+
| neither the definition of the scholastics nor that of Kant is adequateBut if it
| is definitively forced upon the mindOn the Philonian view
+
| be said that it is not an essential predication, or analytical judgement, then the
| this is the same as to say that on the occasion i, either the
+
| accidental predication and the synthetical judgment may be a necessary consequence,
| idea h is not definitively forced upon the mind or on the same
+
| and a very recondite one, of a mere definition, quite contrary to what either Kant
| occasion the idea d is definitively forced upon the mind.  From
+
| or the scholastics supposed and built uponCf. Scotus ('In Univ. Porph.', 9.12),
| that hypothesis, the rules of the sign -< may be mathematically
+
| who makes essential predication the predication of genus, species, or difference.
| deduced.  ...
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.356,
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.361, in dictionary entry for "Predication",
|"That Categorical and Hypothetical Propositions
+
| J.M. Baldwin (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy & Psychology', vol. 2, pp. 326-329.
| are one in essence, with some connected matters",
+
</pre>
| circa 1895.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Note 18===
  
DIEPNote 12
+
<pre>
 +
I need to go back and repair an omission.
 +
It occurs at the point in CP 3.527 where
 +
Peirce writes this:
 +
 
 +
| It has come about through the agencies of development that man is
 +
| endowed with intelligence of such a nature that he can by ideal
 +
| experiments ascertain that in a certain universe of logical
 +
| possibility certain combinations occur while others do not
 +
| occur.  Of those which occur in the ideal world some do
 +
| and some do not occur in the real world; but all that
 +
| occur in the real world occur also in the ideal world.
 +
| For the real world is the world of sensible experience,
 +
| and it is a part of the process of sensible experience
 +
| to locate its facts in the world of ideas.  This is what
 +
| I mean by saying that the sensible world is but a fragment
 +
| of the ideal world.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
In a marginal note, dating from 1908, Peirce provides us with
 +
an important statement about his take on the "end of inquiry":
  
| It must be remembered that
+
| For the simple reason that the real world is a part of the ideal world,
| possibility and necessity
+
| namely, that part which sufficient experience would tend ultimately (and
| are relative to the state
+
| therefore definitively), to compel Reason to acknowledge as having a being
| of information.
+
| independent of what he may arbitrarily, or willfully, create.
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 4.517,
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
|"The Gamma Part of Existential Graphs",
+
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
|"Lowell Lectures of 1903", Lecture 4.
+
| pp. 161-217, 1897.  Marginal note, 1908.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Note 19===
  
DIEP.  Note 13
+
<pre>
 
+
| The other divisions of terms, propositions, and arguments
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| arise from the distinction of extension and comprehension.
 
+
| I propose to treat this subject in a subsequent paper.*
| A modal dyadic relation is either a relation between characters
+
| But I will so far anticipate that as to say that there is,
| (including qualities and relations of individuals, of characters,
+
| first, the direct reference of a symbol to its objects, or
| and of concepts), or between symbols, or concepts.
+
| its denotation;  second, the reference of the symbol to its
|
+
| ground, through its object, that is, its reference to the
| Dyadic relations between characters mostly correspond to
+
| common characters of its objects, or its connotation;  and
| relations between the subjects of those characters or to
+
| third, its reference to its interpretants through its object,
| relations between the symbols of them;  and such need not
+
| that is, its reference to all the synthetical propositions in
| be separately considered.  There remain some relations
+
| which its objects in common are subject or predicate, and this
| between characters, especially between qualities, which
+
| I term the information it embodiesAnd as every addition to
| do not seem to be derivativeSuch are the relations
+
| what it denotes, or to what it connotes, is effected by means
| of "being more intense than", of "being disparate to"
+
| of a distinct proposition of this kind, it follows that the
| (or in applicability to subjects of the same category,
+
| extension and comprehension of a term are in an inverse
| as multitude and intensity are disparate).  But, so
+
| relation, as long as the information remains the same,
| far as appears at present, no particular logical
+
| and that every increase of information is accompanied
| interest attaches to such relations, and they
+
| by an increase of one or other of these two quantities.
| will here be passed by.
+
| It may be observed that extension and comprehension
 +
| are very often taken in other senses in which this
 +
| last proposition is not true.
 
|
 
|
| Dyadic relations between symbols, or concepts, are matters of logic,
+
|* C.S. Peirce, "Upon Logical Comprehension and Extension",
| so far as they are not derived from relations between the objects and
+
| 'Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences',
| the characters to which the symbols refer.  Noting that we are limiting
+
| vol. 7, pp. 416-432, 1867. CP 2.391-430Online copy at:
| ourselves to modal 'dyadic' relations, it may probably be said that those
+
http://www.iupui.edu/~peirce/web/writings/v2/w2/w2_06/v2_06.htm
| of them that are truly and fundamentally dyadic arise from corresponding
 
| relations between propositions.  To exemplify what is meant, the dyadic
 
| relations of logical 'breadth' and 'depth', often called denotation and
 
| connotation, have played a great part in logical discussions, but these
 
| take their origin in the triadic relation between a sign, its object,
 
| and its interpretant sign; and furthermore, the distinction appears
 
| as a dichotomy owing to the limitation of the field of thought, which
 
| forgets that concepts grow, and that there is thus a third respect
 
| in which they may differ, depending on the state of knowledge, or
 
| amount of informationTo give a good and complete account of
 
| the dyadic relations of concepts would be impossible without
 
| taking into account the triadic relations which, for the
 
| most part, underlie them; and indeed almost a complete
 
| treatise upon the first of the three divisions of logic
 
| would be required.*
 
 
|
 
|
|*
+
| C.S. Peirce, CP 1.559, "On a New List of Categories",
|[ The three divisions of logic are:
+
|'Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences',
|  1.  Speculative Grammar  (= the theory of signs)
+
| vol. 7, pp. 287-298, 1867.
|  2.  Critical Logic      (= denotative semantics)
+
</pre>
|  3.  Speculative Rhetoric (= methodology, methodeutic)]
+
 
|
+
===DIEP. Note 20===
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.606-608,
+
 
|'A Syllabus of Certain Topics of Logic', intended
+
* CP 2.418
| as a supplement to the "Lowell Lectures of 1903".
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
==DIEP. De In Esse Predication &bull; Discussion==
  
DIEP. Note 14
+
===DIEP. Discussion Note 1===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| Introduction to the Logic of Quantity
+
Re: CP 3.441
|
+
 
| The great importance of the idea of quantity in demonstrative reasoning
+
GR: given that two paragraphs later, Peirce writes:
| seems to me not yet sufficiently explained.  It appears, however, to be
 
| connected with the circumstance that the relations of being greater
 
| than and of being at least as great as are transitive relations.
 
| Still, a satisfactory evolutionary logic of mathematics remains a
 
| desideratum.  I intend to take up that problem in a future paper
 
| ["The Simplest Mathematics", CP 4.227-323, 1902]. Meantime the
 
| development of projective geometry and of geometrical topics has
 
| shown that there are at least two large mathematical theories of
 
| continuity into which the idea of continuous 'quantity', in the
 
| usual sense of that word, does not enter at all.  For projective
 
| geometry Schubert has developed an algebraical calculus which has
 
| a most remarkable affinity to the Boolian algebra of logic.  It is,
 
| however, imperfect, in that it only gives imaginary points, rays, and
 
| planes, without deciding whether they are real or not.  This defect cannot
 
| be remedied until topology -- or, as I prefer to call it, mathematical topics --
 
| has been further developed and its logic accurately analysed.  To do this
 
| ought to be one of the first tasks of exact logicians.  But before that
 
| can be accomplished, a perfectly satisfactory logical account of the
 
| conception of continuity is required.  This involves the definition
 
| of a certain kind of infinity;  and in order to make that quite clear,
 
| it is requisite to begin by developing the logical doctrine of infinite
 
| multitude.  This doctrine still remains, after the works of Cantor, Dedekind,
 
| and others, in an inchoate condition.  For example, such a question remains
 
| unanswered as the following: Is it, or is it not, logically possible for
 
| two collections to be so multitudinous that neither can be put into a
 
| one-to-one correspondence with a part or the whole of the other?
 
| To resolve this problem demands, not a mere 'application' of
 
| logic, but a further 'development' of the conception of
 
| logical possibility.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.526,
 
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 
| pp. 161-217, 1897.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
    | if the Devil were elected president of the United States, it would prove
 +
    | highly conducive to the spiritual welfare of the people (because he will
 +
    | not be elected), yet both Professor Schröder and I prefer to build the
 +
    | algebra of relatives upon this conception of the conditional proposition.
  
DIEP.  Note 15
+
GR: and given the bizarre situation that the devil HAS been
 +
    elected President of the United States, what does this
 +
    say about Peirce's or Schroder's logic, especially in
 +
    its esthetical and ethical presuppositions?
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JA: he means that if the name on the ballot were "The Devil",
 +
    the people would not thus knowingly elect him.  of course,
 +
    putting his real name on the ballot would be the last thing
 +
    that the Devil would do.
  
| Introduction to the Logic of Quantity (cont.)
+
JA: but hey, don't read ahead,
|
+
    it'll spoil the surprise.
| I formerly defined the possible as that which in a given
+
 
| state of information (real or feigned) we do not know not
+
GR: Most interesting interpretation.
| to be true.  But this definition today seems to me only a
+
 
| twisted phrase which, by means of two negatives, conceals
+
GR: Yes, I certainly try not to "spoil the surprise".
| an anacoluthon. We know in advance of experience that
+
 
| certain things are not true, because we see they are
+
JA: of course, none of this applies in california ...
| impossible.
+
 
|
+
JA: With that last bit (CP 3.442) on the "state of information" (SOI)
| Thus, if a chemist tests the contents of a hundred bottles for fluorine,
+
    in the mix, I guess that I can now follow-up without letting any
| and finds it present in the majority, and if another chemist tests them
+
    more categories out of the bag -- there are only three after all --
| for oxygen and finds it in the majority, and if each of them reports his
+
    Peirce's simplex faith in the democratic process is conditioned,
| results to me, it will be useless for them to come to me together and say
+
    simplexly or otherwise, on the evidently inessential contingency
| that they know infallibly that fluorine and oxygen cannot be present in the
+
    of a "liberally informed electorate" (LIE).
| same bottle;  for I see that such infallibility is 'impossible'. I know it
 
| is not true, because I satisfy myself that there is no room for it even in
 
| that ideal world of which the real world is but a fragment. I need no
 
| sensible experimentation, because ideal experimentation establishes
 
| a much broader answer to the question than sensible experimentation
 
| could give.
 
|
 
| It has come about through the agencies of development that man is
 
| endowed with intelligence of such a nature that he can by ideal
 
| experiments ascertain that in a certain universe of logical
 
| possibility certain combinations occur while others do not
 
| occur.  Of those which occur in the ideal world some do
 
| and some do not occur in the real world;  but all that
 
| occur in the real world occur also in the ideal world.
 
| For the real world is the world of sensible experience,
 
| and it is a part of the process of sensible experience
 
| to locate its facts in the world of ideas.  This is what
 
| I mean by saying that the sensible world is but a fragment
 
| of the ideal world.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
 
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 
| pp. 161-217, 1897.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
DIEP. Note 16
+
===DIEP. Discussion Note 2===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| Introduction to the Logic of Quantity (cont.)
+
CSP = C.S. Peirce
|
+
JA  = Jon Awbrey
| In respect to the ideal world we are virtually omniscient; that is
+
BM = Bernard Morand
| to say, there is nothing but lack of time, of perseverance, and of
+
 
| activity of mind to prevent our making the requisite experiments
+
CSP: | [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant] (cont.)
| to ascertain positively whether a given combination occurs or not.
+
    |
| Thus, every proposition about the ideal world can be ascertained
+
    | To express the proposition: "If S then P",
| to be true or false. A description of thing which occurs in that
+
    | first write:
| world is 'possible, in the substantive logical sense'.
+
    |
|
+
    |   A
| Very many writers assert that everything is logically possible which involves
+
    |
| no contradiction.  Let us call that sort of logical possibility, 'essential',
+
    | for this proposition.  But the proposition
| or 'formal', logical possibility.  It is not the only logical possibility;
+
    | is that a certain conceivable state of things
| for in this sense, two propositions contradictory of one another may both
+
    | is absent from the universe of possibility.
| be severally possible, although their combination is not possible.
+
    | Hence instead of A we write:
|
+
    |
| That is to say each is 'vaguely', not 'distinctly', possible[note, 1908].
+
    |   B B
|
 
| But in the 'substantive' sense, the contradictory of a possible proposition
 
| is impossible, because we are virtually omniscient in regard to the ideal
 
| world.  For example, there is no contradiction in supposing that only
 
| four, or any other number, of independent atoms exist.  But it is
 
| made clear to us by ideal experimentation, that five atoms are
 
| to be found in the ideal world. Whether all five are to be
 
| found in the sensible world or not, to say there are only
 
| four in the ideal world is a proposition absolutely to be
 
| rejected, notwithstanding its involving no contradiction.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
 
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 
| pp. 161-217, 1897.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM: All was going right till there for me.
  
DIEP. Note 17
+
CSP: | Then B expresses the possibility of S being true and P false.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM: Now, I am stopped.  May be there is an intermediary
 +
    implicit proposition that I am not seeing?  If yes
 +
    which one?  This could be of interest to Gary too:
 +
    I guess that for the whole passage the elements
 +
    of the demonstration count more than the
 +
    conclusion in itself.
  
| A few of the most frequently recurring scholastic phrases follow.  ...
+
CSP: | Since, therefore, SS denies S, it follows
|
+
    | that (SS, P) expresses B. Hence we write:
|'Essential Predication': in which the predicate is wholly contained in the
+
    |
| essence of the subject.  It is, therefore, in Kant's sense, an analytical
+
    |   SS, PSS, P.
| judgment.  But neither Kant nor the scholastics provide for the fact that
+
    |
| an indefinitely complicated proposition, very far from obvious, may often
+
    | C.S. Peirce, CP 4.14, untitled paper circa 1880.
| be deduced by mathematical reasoning, or necessary deduction, by the logic
 
| of relatives, from a definition of the utmost simplicity, without assuming
 
| any hypothesis whatever (indeed, such assumption could only render the
 
| proposition deduced simpler); and this may contain many notions not
 
| explicit in the definition.
 
|
 
| This may be illustrated by the following:
 
|
 
| Man is a rational animalhence, whatever is not a man is either,
 
| on the one hand, not rational, while either at the same time being
 
| an animal or else benefiting nothing except such objects as love
 
| nothing but fairies, or, on the other hand, is not an animal,
 
| while either being rational or standing to whatever fairy may
 
| exist in the relation of benefiting something that loves it.
 
|
 
| Now, if it be said that that is an analytical judgment, or essential predication,
 
| neither the definition of the scholastics nor that of Kant is adequate.  But if it
 
| be said that it is not an essential predication, or analytical judgement, then the
 
| accidental predication and the synthetical judgment may be a necessary consequence,
 
| and a very recondite one, of a mere definition, quite contrary to what either Kant
 
| or the scholastics supposed and built upon.  Cf. Scotus ('In Univ. Porph.', 9.12),
 
| who makes essential predication the predication of genus, species, or difference.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.361, in dictionary entry for "Predication",
 
| J.M. Baldwin (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy & Psychology', vol. 2, pp. 326-329.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Peirce is working analytically here -- I mean that in the good sense of the word --
 +
in the manner that Bentham calls "paraphrasis", Boole "development", or most math
 +
folks "expansion", if I remember right.  But he already knows the answer he wants,
 +
so the whole analysis will have that "pulling a rabbit out of the hat" quality of
 +
such performances.
  
DIEPNote 18
+
The basic operation is unmarked, or you could think of the blank space as a symbol
 +
for the logical operation of "joint denial", that Peirce counted as one of the two
 +
possible "amphecks" (cutting both ways), Sheffer called a "stroke", and comp sci
 +
folk call NNOR (neither nor)The punctuation marks are not really operators,
 +
they just group terms, much like the "puncts" or "dots" of Peano that Russell
 +
so butchered to the point of unintelligibility, like so much else.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
In saying "S => P" one is saying "that a certain conceivable state of things
 +
is absent from the universe of possibility" -- sounds awfully "intensional",
 +
does it not? -- but anyway, the conceivable states of things that one is
 +
excluding from the universe of possibility are any states of things that
 +
would form a counterexample to "S => P", namely, those states of things
 +
that are described by "S and not P".
  
I need to go back and repair an omission.
+
That denial would take the form:
It occurs at the point in CP 3.527 where
 
Peirce writes this:
 
  
| It has come about through the agencies of development that man is
+
S and not PS and not P.
| endowed with intelligence of such a nature that he can by ideal
 
| experiments ascertain that in a certain universe of logical
 
| possibility certain combinations occur while others do not
 
| occurOf those which occur in the ideal world some do
 
| and some do not occur in the real world;  but all that
 
| occur in the real world occur also in the ideal world.
 
| For the real world is the world of sensible experience,
 
| and it is a part of the process of sensible experience
 
| to locate its facts in the world of ideas.  This is what
 
| I mean by saying that the sensible world is but a fragment
 
| of the ideal world.
 
  
In a marginal note, dating from 1908, Peirce provides us with
+
Let's call that the Lady Macbeth denial.
an important statement about his take on the "end of inquiry":
 
  
| For the simple reason that the real world is a part of the ideal world,
+
It remains to analyze the metalanguage phrase "S and not P"
| namely, that part which sufficient experience would tend ultimately (and
+
using only "S", "P", and the tacit joint denial connective.
| therefore definitively), to compel Reason to acknowledge as having a being
 
| independent of what he may arbitrarily, or willfully, create.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
 
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 
| pp. 161-217, 1897.  Marginal note, 1908.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
If I wrote "S P", this would be saying "not S and not P",
 +
so all I need to do is change the sign on the S part of it,
 +
which I can do by doubling the S.  As we have stipulated,
 +
doubling is a way of putting things in doubt.  Therefore,
 +
"SS, P" says "S and not P", which is the thing we want
 +
to deny, and which final denial we can make by writing:
  
DIEP. Note 19
+
SS, P;  SS, P.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Voila!
  
| The other divisions of terms, propositions, and arguments
+
</pre>
| arise from the distinction of extension and comprehension.
 
| I propose to treat this subject in a subsequent paper.*
 
| But I will so far anticipate that as to say that there is,
 
| first, the direct reference of a symbol to its objects, or
 
| its denotation;  second, the reference of the symbol to its
 
| ground, through its object, that is, its reference to the
 
| common characters of its objects, or its connotation;  and
 
| third, its reference to its interpretants through its object,
 
| that is, its reference to all the synthetical propositions in
 
| which its objects in common are subject or predicate, and this
 
| I term the information it embodies.  And as every addition to
 
| what it denotes, or to what it connotes, is effected by means
 
| of a distinct proposition of this kind, it follows that the
 
| extension and comprehension of a term are in an inverse
 
| relation, as long as the information remains the same,
 
| and that every increase of information is accompanied
 
| by an increase of one or other of these two quantities.
 
| It may be observed that extension and comprehension
 
| are very often taken in other senses in which this
 
| last proposition is not true.
 
|
 
|* C.S. Peirce, "Upon Logical Comprehension and Extension",
 
| 'Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences',
 
|  vol. 7, pp. 416-432, 1867.  CP 2.391-430.  Online copy at:
 
|  http://www.iupui.edu/~peirce/web/writings/v2/w2/w2_06/v2_06.htm
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, CP 1.559, "On a New List of Categories",
 
|'Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences',
 
| vol. 7, pp. 287-298, 1867.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===DIEP. Discussion Note 3===
  
DIEP.  Note 20
+
<pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
 +
TJ = Tom Johnson
  
CP 2.418
+
Re: CP 4.517
  
 +
This started out as an attempt to track down a 30 year old memory,
 +
having to do with the phrase "predication (de?) inesse", which
 +
I thought I saw first in Peirce, supposed that he got from
 +
Leibniz (who I also read a lot of in those days), and had
 +
a "clear and distinct" idea (the worst kind) that it was
 +
an "intensional" account of predication.  I used to have
 +
access to the microfilm manuscripts of Peirce's nachlass
 +
at that time, and if it's there I probably won't get back
 +
to it.  From what I have uncovered this time around, I seem
 +
to be correct about the significance that Leibniz attached to
 +
the phrase -- will have to check again -- but all I find so far
 +
in the CP is 'conditio/consequentia simplex de inesse' that Peirce
 +
says he got from Scotus and Petrus Hispanus.  I'll probably have to
 +
go about the mindless data collection for a while longer before I try
 +
to draw a conclusion, but in the meantime I have become more intrigued
 +
with the connection to Peirce's theory of information as the third quid
 +
between extension and intension, and relative to states of which the
 +
entire spectrum of modalities is refracted before our minds' eyes.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
TJ: Is Peirce saying here that [1] there is necessity de dicto, but not de re?
 +
    Is he saying [2] that there are no Aristotelian essences?
 +
    Is he [3] distinguishing various kinds of necessity?
  
DIEP.  Work Area
+
My partially informed guesses:
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
1.  No
 +
2.  No
 +
3.  Yes
  
01.  1880, CP 4.12
+
TJ: For example, one might argue that physical causality is necessity de re, and
02.  1880, CP 4.13
+
    is not influenced by how much information we have about physical processes.
03.  1880, CP 4.14
 
  
04.  1896, CP 3.440
+
In the spirit of an even wilder guess, I think that he would say that there
05.  1896, CP 3.441
+
is a difference between what we are destined to believe, for example, about
06.  1896, CP 3.442
+
the objective referent, if any, of the phrase "physical causality" at the
07.  1896, CP 3.443
+
"end of inquiry" (EOI) and what we are likely to believe in that respect
08.  1896, CP 3.444-445
+
at the present time -- time being relative, too, of course -- and that
09.  1885, CP 3.374
+
it may form a useful analytic ideal or a "hypostatic independentity",
 +
to coin a phrase, to think of this "physical_causality_EOI" as being
 +
there all along, or not being there all along, waiting for us to
 +
discover the quantum of truth in the sign "physical causality".
  
10.  1902, CP 2.323
+
</pre>
11.  1895, CP 2.356
 
  
12. 1903, CP 4.517
+
===DIEP. Discussion Note 4===
  
13.  1903, CP 3.606-608
+
<pre>
14.  1897, CP 3.526
 
15.  1897, CP 3.527
 
16.  1897, CP 3.527
 
17.  ????, CP 2.361
 
18.  1908, CP 3.527 note
 
19.  1867, 1.559
 
20.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
 +
TJ = Tom Johnston
 +
 
 +
Re: CP 4.517
  
1.559      x
+
JA, amending JA:
  
2.323      x
+
    I will probably have to go about the mindless data collection
2.347-349
+
    for a while longer before I try to draw a conclusion, but in
2.356      x
+
    the meantime I have become more intrigued with the connection
2.361      x
+
    to Peirce's theory of information as the third quid between
2.382
+
    extension and intension, and relative to the states of which
2.394
+
    information the entire spectrum of modalities is refracted
2.407-409
+
    before our minds' eyes.
2.418
 
2.546
 
  
2.
+
TJ: I like that last sentence, and look
323
+
    forward to finding out what it means.
348
 
349
 
546
 
  
2.
+
Egged on a bit by Gary and John, I am only just starting to return to
231
+
the question of modality, as that was never so compelling to me in math,
250
+
where one gets by with a "necessary" and a "sufficient" that seem to rank
260
+
inane dismissal quotes in other people's ears, and so mood was never before
293
+
so compelling to me as the cousin/cozen issues of intentionality, but here
364
+
are some links to Peirce's derivation of information from logical grounds,
409
+
Peirce's 1865-1866 Lectures at Harvard and the Lowell Institute, where he
416
+
introduces his newfangled notion of "information" and the theory thereof:
418
 
418n
 
  
3.374      x
+
C.S. Peirce, Harvard Lectures (1865)
3.375
 
3.382
 
3.384      Peirce's Law
 
3.440-445  x
 
3.446-448
 
3.526-527  x
 
3.606-608  x
 
  
4.12-14    x
+
23. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000216.html -- CE 1, 272
4.21
+
24.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000217.html -- CE 1, 272-274
4.49
+
25.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000218.html -- CE 1, 274
4.372-376
+
26.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000219.html -- CE 1, 274-275
4.401
+
27.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000220.html -- CE 1, 275-276
4.454
+
28.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000221.html -- CE 1, 276
4.514-523
+
29.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000222.html -- CE 1, 276-277
4.517      x
+
30.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000223.html -- CE 1, 277
4.520
+
31.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000224.html -- CE 1, 278-279
4.564
+
32.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000225.html -- CE 1, 279-280
 +
33.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000226.html -- CE 1, 280
 +
34.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000227.html -- CE 1, 280-281
 +
35.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000228.html -- CE 1, 281-282
 +
36.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000229.html -- CE 1, 282-283
 +
37. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000230.html -- CE 1, 283
 +
38.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000356.html -- CE 1, 285
 +
39. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000357.html -- CE 1, 285-286
 +
40.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000358.html -- CE 1, 286-288
 +
41.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000359.html -- CE 1, 288
 +
42. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000361.html -- CE 1, 288-289
 +
43.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000362.html -- CE 1, 289
 +
44. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000363.html -- CE 1, 289-290
  
6.450
+
C.S. Peirce, Lowell Lectures (1866)
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
11.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000204.html -- CE 1, 458-459
 +
12.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000205.html -- CE 1, 459-460
 +
13.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000206.html -- CE 1, 460
 +
14.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000207.html -- CE 1, 461
 +
15.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000208.html -- CE 1, 461
 +
16.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000209.html -- CE 1, 462
 +
17.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000210.html -- CE 1, 462
 +
18.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000211.html -- CE 1, 462-463
 +
19.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000212.html -- CE 1, 463-464
 +
20.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000213.html -- CE 1, 464-465
 +
21.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000214.html -- CE 1, 465
 +
22.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000215.html -- CE 1, 466-467
  
DIEPDiscussion Note 1
+
02http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000195.html -- CE 1, 467
 +
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000196.html -- CE 1, 467-468
 +
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000197.html -- CE 1, 468-469
 +
05.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000198.html -- CE 1, 469
 +
06.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000199.html -- CE 1, 470
 +
07.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000200.html -- CE 1, 470-471
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JA: In the spirit of an even wilder guess, I think that he would say that there
 +
    is a difference between what we are destined to believe about, for example,
 +
    the objective referent, if any, of the phrase "physical causality" at the
 +
    "end of inquiry" (EOI) and what we are likely to believe in that respect
 +
    at the present time -- time being relative, too, off course -- and that
 +
    it may form a useful analytic ideal or a "hypostatic independentity",
 +
    to coin a phrase, to think of this "physical_causality_EOI" as being
 +
    there all along, or not being there all along, waiting for us to
 +
    discover the quantum of truth in the sign "physical causality".
  
Re: CP 3.441
+
TJ: Perhaps I should know better than to ask this, but what the heck:
 +
    (a) What marks the EOI?  No more disagreements among members of
 +
    the relevant community of inquiry (physicists, biologists, etc)?
 +
    (b) Assuming we do reach an EOI in some subject area, what accounts
 +
    for it?  Why have we stopped disagreeing?  Is it that, guided by the
 +
    pragmatic principle, we have finally arrived at a set of statements
 +
    that accurately represent/describe things as they really are?
  
GR: given that two paragraphs later, Peirce writes:
+
These are good questions, part of what I tried
 +
to address in my dissertation ever in progress:
  
    | if the Devil were elected president of the United States, it would prove
+
http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/awbrey/inquiry.htm
    | highly conducive to the spiritual welfare of the people (because he will
 
    | not be elected), yet both Professor Schröder and I prefer to build the
 
    | algebra of relatives upon this conception of the conditional proposition.
 
  
GR: and given the bizarre situation that the devil HAS been
+
Whatever EOI be in the end, how it functions in the
    elected President of the United States, what does this
+
meantime is as a normative ideal.  I will round up
    say about Peirce's or Schroder's logic, especially in
+
the usual Chapter & Peirce, but in the meanwhile
    its esthetical and ethical presuppositions?
+
here is a 3-logy of good books on the subject:
  
JA: he means that if the name on the ballot were "The Devil",
+
Peter Skagestad, 'The Road of Inquiry: [CSP]'s Pragmatic Realism'.
    the people would not thus knowingly elect him. of course,
+
Cheryl Misak, 'Truth and the End of Inquiry: A Peircean Account of Truth'.
    putting his real name on the ballot would be the last thing
+
C.F. Delaney, 'Science, Knowledge, and Mind:  A Study in the Philosophy of [CSP]'.
    that the Devil would do.
 
  
JA: but hey, don't read ahead,
+
The Big EOI can be understood on analogy with the
    it'll spoil the surprise.
+
little EOI's that make up the "fixions of belief"
 +
that we reach every day in our everyday inquiries.
 +
The primer canon shot on that score is found here:
  
GR: Most interesting interpretation.
+
http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/fixation/fx-frame.htm
  
GR: Yes, I certainly try not to "spoil the surprise".
+
</pre>
  
JA: of course, none of this applies in california ...
+
===DIEP. Discussion Note 5===
  
JA: With that last bit (CP 3.442) on the "state of information" (SOI)
+
<pre>
    in the mix, I guess that I can now follow-up without letting any
 
    more categories out of the bag -- there are only three after all --
 
    Peirce's simplex faith in the democratic process is conditioned,
 
    simplexly or otherwise, on the evidently inessential contingency
 
    of a "liberally informed electorate" (LIE).
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
GR = Gary Richmond
 +
JA = Jon Awbrey
  
DIEP.  Discussion Note 2
+
JA: Egged on a bit by Gary and John, I am only just starting to return to
 +
    the question of modality, as that was never so compelling to me in math,
 +
    where one gets by with a "necessary" and a "sufficient" that seem to rank
 +
    inane dismissal quotes in other people's ears, and so mood was never before
 +
    so compelling to me as the cousin/cozen issues of intentionality, but here
 +
    are some links to Peirce's derivation of information from logical grounds,
 +
    Peirce's 1865-1866 Lectures at Harvard and the Lowell Institute, where he
 +
    introduces his newfangled notion of "information" and the theory thereof:
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
GR: This is very good news indeed, jon.
  
CSP = C.S. Peirce
+
GR: Of course, you've already expressed that third term
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
    (beyond "necessary" and "sufficient")And truly,
BM  = Bernard Morand
+
    logical breadth x logical depth = information.
  
CSP: | [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant] (cont.)
+
GR: But that's not the whole picture by half, right?
    |
+
    Therefore, modality has finally to be taken up
    | To express the proposition:  "If S then P",
+
    with all that trichotomic semiosis ought imply.
    | first write:
 
    |
 
    |    A
 
    |
 
    | for this proposition.  But the proposition
 
    | is that a certain conceivable state of things
 
    | is absent from the universe of possibility.
 
    | Hence instead of A we write:
 
    |
 
    |    B B
 
  
BM: All was going right till there for me.
+
GR: Personally, I'm glad that John and I have been "nudges" here.
  
CSP: | Then B expresses the possibility of S being true and P false.
+
GR: I can hardly wait ...
  
BM: Now, I am stopped. May be there is an intermediary
+
Be careful what you wait for ...
    implicit proposition that I am not seeing?  If yes
 
    which one?  This could be of interest to Gary too:
 
    I guess that for the whole passage the elements
 
    of the demonstration count more than the
 
    conclusion in itself.
 
  
CSP: | Since, therefore, SS denies S, it follows
+
I had been putting off the gamma graphs until I was older.
    | that (SS, P) expresses BHence we write:
+
I am older nowBut I don't know if I am old enough yet.
    |
+
Maybe when I'm aleph plus one ...
    |    SS, P;  SS, P.
 
    |
 
    | C.S. Peirce, CP 4.14, untitled paper circa 1880.
 
  
Peirce is working analytically here -- I mean that in the good sense of the word --
+
I hadn't really been thinking about this much as I gathered the data.
in the manner that Bentham calls "paraphrasis", Boole "development", or most math
+
For my part, and I think for Peirce most of the time, 2-valued logic
folks "expansion", if I remember right.  But he already knows the answer he wants,
+
of the good old-fashioned classical variety is good enough -- in the
so the whole analysis will have that "pulling a rabbit out of the hat" quality of
+
beginning, and in the end, there are just two values of significance,
such performances.
+
one begins with a distinction, one ends with a decision, and what it
 +
means is that the question of uncertainty is always a meantime thing.
  
The basic operation is unmarked, or you could think of the blank space as a symbol
+
This is what I concluded long ago from my study of Peirce's essays
for the logical operation of "joint denial", that Peirce counted as one of the two
+
in 3-valued logics.  The possibility of it all occurred to me when
possible "amphecks" (cutting both ways), Sheffer called a "stroke", and comp sci
+
I was first learning topology, and there you have a 3-valued logic
folk call NNOR (neither nor).  The punctuation marks are not really operators,
+
of {interior, boundary, exterior} rather than classing every point
they just group terms, much like the "puncts" or "dots" of Peano that Russell
+
as {in, out}, 2-tomously in relation to a set, no ifs ands or buts.
so butchered to the point of unintelligibility, like so much else.
 
  
In saying "S => P" one is saying "that a certain conceivable state of things
+
There was, and probably still is, a whole literature on "topo-logic",
is absent from the universe of possibility" -- sounds awfully "intensional",
+
just my pet name for it, that proceeds from basically this very same
does it not? -- but anyway, the conceivable states of things that one is
+
intuition.  The issue did not force itself on my attention again, so
excluding from the universe of possibility are any states of things that
+
far as I can recall at the moment, in this mood, until I was writing
would form a counterexample to "S => P", namely, those states of things
+
my Theme One program, or one of its early precursors.  There, in the
that are described by "S and not P".
+
middle of a breadth-&-depth search function -- funny how those words
 +
come up again -- what is frequently called a "beam search" algorithm,
 +
I was led, wil-me, nil-me, to interject a "modal variable" of a type:
 +
mode = (null, moot, firm). See here:
  
That denial would take the form:
+
http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000115.html
  
S and not P.  S and not P.
+
The use of the mode value dubbed "moot" is in the middle of a search,
 +
to register the fact that the absence or presence of the thing being
 +
sought is not yet decided, though in the end you know that it has to
 +
fall out one way or the other, by the very definition of the case.
  
Let's call that the Lady Macbeth denial.
+
That's all I can remember at the moment ...
  
It remains to analyze the metalanguage phrase "S and not P"
+
</pre>
using only "S", "P", and the tacit joint denial connective.
 
  
If I wrote "S P", this would be saying "not S and not P",
+
===DIEP. Discussion Note 6===
so all I need to do is change the sign on the S part of it,
 
which I can do by doubling the S. As we have stipulated,
 
doubling is a way of putting things in doubt.  Therefore,
 
"SS, P" says "S and not P", which is the thing we want
 
to deny, and which final denial we can make by writing:
 
  
SS, P;  SS, P.
+
<pre>
  
Voila!
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
 +
TJ = Tom Johnston
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
I will go back to your earlier questions and
 +
try to work out my own way of answering them.
 +
There are readers of Peirce I know who would
 +
probably give you a significantly different
 +
collection of answers and interpretations,
 +
so this can only be my own sense of it.
  
DIEP. Discussion Note 3
+
Review.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Quiz 1.
  
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
CSP: | It must be remembered that
TJ = Tom Johnson
+
    | possibility and necessity
 
+
    | are relative to the state
Re: CP 4.517
+
    | of information.
 +
    |
 +
    | C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 4.517,
 +
    |"The Gamma Part of Existential Graphs",
 +
    |"Lowell Lectures of 1903", Lecture 4.
  
This started out as an attempt to track down a 30 year old memory,
+
TJ: 1.1.  Is Peirce saying here that there is necessity de dicto, but not de re?
having to do with the phrase "predication (de?) inesse", which
+
    1.2Is he saying that there are no Aristotelian essences?
I thought I saw first in Peirce, supposed that he got from
+
    1.3Is he distinguishing various kinds of necessity?
Leibniz (who I also read a lot of in those days), and had
 
a "clear and distinct" idea (the worst kind) that it was
 
an "intensional" account of predicationI used to have
 
access to the microfilm manuscripts of Peirce's nachlass
 
at that time, and if it's there I probably won't get back
 
to itFrom what I have uncovered this time around, I seem
 
to be correct about the significance that Leibniz attached to
 
the phrase -- will have to check again -- but all I find so far
 
in the CP is 'conditio/consequentia simplex de inesse' that Peirce
 
says he got from Scotus and Petrus Hispanus.  I'll probably have to
 
go about the mindless data collection for a while longer before I try
 
to draw a conclusion, but in the meantime I have become more intrigued
 
with the connection to Peirce's theory of information as the third quid
 
between extension and intension, and relative to states of which the
 
entire spectrum of modalities is refracted before our minds' eyes.
 
  
TJ: Is Peirce saying here that [1] there is necessity de dicto, but not de re?
+
JA: My partially informed guesses:
    Is he saying [2] that there are no Aristotelian essences?
 
    Is he [3] distinguishing various kinds of necessity?
 
  
My partially informed guesses:
+
    1.1.  No
 +
    1.2.  No
 +
    1.3.  Yes
  
1.  No
+
It's not Molly Bloom, but 1 out of 3 ain't bad to my way of counting.
2.  No
 
3. Yes
 
  
 
TJ: For example, one might argue that physical causality is necessity de re, and
 
TJ: For example, one might argue that physical causality is necessity de re, and
 
     is not influenced by how much information we have about physical processes.
 
     is not influenced by how much information we have about physical processes.
  
In the spirit of an even wilder guess, I think that he would say that there
+
JA: In the spirit of an even wilder guess, I think that he would say that there
is a difference between what we are destined to believe, for example, about
+
    is a difference between what we are destined to believe, for example, about
the objective referent, if any, of the phrase "physical causality" at the
+
    the objective referent, if any, of the phrase "physical causality" at the
"end of inquiry" (EOI) and what we are likely to believe in that respect
+
    "end of inquiry" (EOI) and what we are likely to believe in that respect
at the present time -- time being relative, too, of course -- and that
+
    at the present time -- time being relative, too, of course -- and that
it may form a useful analytic ideal or a "hypostatic independentity",
+
    it may form a useful analytic ideal or a "hypostatic independentity",
to coin a phrase, to think of this "physical_causality_EOI" as being
+
    to coin a phrase, to think of this "physical_causality_EOI" as being
there all along, or not being there all along, waiting for us to
+
    there all along, or not being there all along, waiting for us to
discover the quantum of truth in the sign "physical causality".
+
    discover the quantum of truth in the sign "physical causality".
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Quiz 2.
  
DIEP.  Discussion Note 4
+
TJ: Perhaps I should know better than to ask this, but what the heck:
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
    2.1.  What marks the EOI?  No more disagreements among members of
 +
          the relevant community of inquiry (physicists, biologists, etc)?
 +
 
 +
    2.2.1.  Assuming we do reach an EOI in some
 +
            subject area, what accounts for it?
 +
 
 +
    2.2.2.  Why have we stopped disagreeing?
 +
 
 +
    2.2.3.  Is it that, guided by the pragmatic principle,
 +
            we have finally arrived at a set of statements
 +
            that accurately represent/describe things as
 +
            they really are?
 +
 
 +
JA: These are good questions, part of what I tried
 +
    to address in my dissertation ever in progress:
  
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
JA: http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/awbrey/inquiry.htm
TJ = Tom Johnston
 
  
Re: CP 4.517
+
JA: Whatever the EOI might be in the end,
 +
    how it functions in the meantime is
 +
    effectively as a normative ideal.
  
JA, amending JA:
+
JA: The Big EOI can be understood on analogy with the
 +
    little EOI's that make up the "fixions of belief"
 +
    that we reach every day in our everyday inquiries.
 +
    The primer canon shot on that score is found here:
  
    I will probably have to go about the mindless data collection
+
JA: http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/fixation/fx-frame.htm
    for a while longer before I try to draw a conclusion, but in
 
    the meantime I have become more intrigued with the connection
 
    to Peirce's theory of information as the third quid between
 
    extension and intension, and relative to the states of which
 
    information the entire spectrum of modalities is refracted
 
    before our minds' eyes.
 
  
TJ: I like that last sentence, and look
+
I get a handle on this subject with the following two hands:
    forward to finding out what it means.
 
  
Egged on a bit by Gary and John, I am only just starting to return to
+
On the 1st hand, Peirce's Theory Of Signs (PTOS).
the question of modality, as that was never so compelling to me in math,
+
On the 2nd hand, Peirce's Theory Of Inquiry (PTOI).
where one gets by with a "necessary" and a "sufficient" that seem to rank
 
inane dismissal quotes in other people's ears, and so mood was never before
 
so compelling to me as the cousin/cozen issues of intentionality, but here
 
are some links to Peirce's derivation of information from logical grounds,
 
Peirce's 1865-1866 Lectures at Harvard and the Lowell Institute, where he
 
introduces his newfangled notion of "information" and the theory thereof:
 
  
C.S. Peirce, Harvard Lectures (1865)
+
PTOS.
  
23.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000216.html -- CE 1, 272
+
The following is what I personally consider
24.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000217.html -- CE 1, 272-274
+
to be the clearest and the most complete of
25.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000218.html -- CE 1, 274
+
all the definitions of a sign relation that
26.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000219.html -- CE 1, 274-275
+
I've been able to find in Peirce's writings:
27.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000220.html -- CE 1, 275-276
 
28.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000221.html -- CE 1, 276
 
29.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000222.html -- CE 1, 276-277
 
30.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000223.html -- CE 1, 277
 
31.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000224.html -- CE 1, 278-279
 
32.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000225.html -- CE 1, 279-280
 
33.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000226.html -- CE 1, 280
 
34.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000227.html -- CE 1, 280-281
 
35.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000228.html -- CE 1, 281-282
 
36.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000229.html -- CE 1, 282-283
 
37.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000230.html -- CE 1, 283
 
38.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000356.html -- CE 1, 285
 
39.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000357.html -- CE 1, 285-286
 
40.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000358.html -- CE 1, 286-288
 
41.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000359.html -- CE 1, 288
 
42.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000361.html -- CE 1, 288-289
 
43.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000362.html -- CE 1, 289
 
44.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000363.html -- CE 1, 289-290
 
  
C.S. Peirce, Lowell Lectures (1866)
+
| A sign is something, 'A',
 +
| which brings something, 'B',
 +
| its 'interpretant' sign
 +
| determined or created by it,
 +
| into the same sort of correspondence
 +
| with something, 'C', its 'object',
 +
| as that in which itself stands to 'C'.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, NEM 4, pp. 20-21, cf. p. 54, also available here:
 +
| http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/L75/L75.htm
  
11.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000204.html -- CE 1, 458-459
+
It is one of the few where Peirce is intrepid enough
12.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000205.html -- CE 1, 459-460
+
to go boldly forward without any sop to psychologism.
13.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000206.html -- CE 1, 460
 
14.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000207.html -- CE 1, 461
 
15.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000208.html -- CE 1, 461
 
16.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000209.html -- CE 1, 462
 
17.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000210.html -- CE 1, 462
 
18.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000211.html -- CE 1, 462-463
 
19.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000212.html -- CE 1, 463-464
 
20.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000213.html -- CE 1, 464-465
 
21.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000214.html -- CE 1, 465
 
22.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000215.html -- CE 1, 466-467
 
  
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000195.html -- CE 1, 467
+
More detail here:
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000196.html -- CE 1, 467-468
 
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000197.html -- CE 1, 468-469
 
05.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000198.html -- CE 1, 469
 
06.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000199.html -- CE 1, 470
 
07.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000200.html -- CE 1, 470-471
 
  
JA: In the spirit of an even wilder guess, I think that he would say that there
+
| On the Definition of Logic [Version 1]
    is a difference between what we are destined to believe about, for example,
+
|
    the objective referent, if any, of the phrase "physical causality" at the
+
| Logic will here be defined as 'formal semiotic'.
    "end of inquiry" (EOI) and what we are likely to believe in that respect
+
| A definition of a sign will be given which no more
    at the present time -- time being relative, too, off course -- and that
+
| refers to human thought than does the definition
    it may form a useful analytic ideal or a "hypostatic independentity",
+
| of a line as the place which a particle occupies,
    to coin a phrase, to think of this "physical_causality_EOI" as being
+
| part by part, during a lapse of time.  Namely,
    there all along, or not being there all along, waiting for us to
+
| a sign is something, 'A', which brings something,
    discover the quantum of truth in the sign "physical causality".
+
| 'B', its 'interpretant' sign determined or created
 +
| by it, into the same sort of correspondence with
 +
| something, 'C', its 'object', as that in which it
 +
| itself stands to 'C'.  It is from this definition,
 +
| together with a definition of "formal", that I
 +
| deduce mathematically the principles of logic.
 +
| I also make a historical review of all the
 +
| definitions and conceptions of logic, and show,
 +
| not merely that my definition is no novelty, but
 +
| that my non-psychological conception of logic has
 +
| 'virtually' been quite generally held, though not
 +
| generally recognized.  (CSP, NEM 4, 20-21).
 +
|
 +
| On the Definition of Logic [Version 2]
 +
|
 +
| Logic is 'formal semiotic'.  A sign is something,
 +
| 'A', which brings something, 'B', its 'interpretant'
 +
| sign, determined or created by it, into the same
 +
| sort of correspondence (or a lower implied sort)
 +
| with something, 'C', its 'object', as that in
 +
| which itself stands to 'C'.  This definition no
 +
| more involves any reference to human thought than
 +
| does the definition of a line as the place within
 +
| which a particle lies during a lapse of time.
 +
| It is from this definition that I deduce the
 +
| principles of logic by mathematical reasoning,
 +
| and by mathematical reasoning that, I aver, will
 +
| support criticism of Weierstrassian severity, and
 +
| that is perfectly evident.  The word "formal" in
 +
| the definition is also defined.  (CSP, NEM 4, 54).
 +
|
 +
| Charles Sanders Peirce,
 +
|'The New Elements of Mathematics', Volume 4,
 +
| Edited by Carolyn Eisele, Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
  
TJ: Perhaps I should know better than to ask this, but what the heck:
+
I will pick up from there next time.
    (a) What marks the EOI?  No more disagreements among members of
 
    the relevant community of inquiry (physicists, biologists, etc)?
 
    (b) Assuming we do reach an EOI in some subject area, what accounts
 
    for it?  Why have we stopped disagreeing?  Is it that, guided by the
 
    pragmatic principle, we have finally arrived at a set of statements
 
    that accurately represent/describe things as they really are?
 
  
These are good questions, part of what I tried
+
</pre>
to address in my dissertation ever in progress:
 
  
http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/awbrey/inquiry.htm
+
===DIEP. Discussion Note 7===
  
Whatever EOI be in the end, how it functions in the
+
<pre>
meantime is as a normative ideal.  I will round up
 
the usual Chapter & Peirce, but in the meanwhile
 
here is a 3-logy of good books on the subject:
 
  
Peter Skagestad, 'The Road of Inquiry:  [CSP]'s Pragmatic Realism'.
+
BM = Bernard Morand
Cheryl Misak, 'Truth and the End of Inquiry:  A Peircean Account of Truth'.
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
C.F. Delaney, 'Science, Knowledge, and Mind:  A Study in the Philosophy of [CSP]'.
 
  
The Big EOI can be understood on analogy with the
+
CSP: | It has come about through the agencies of development that man is
little EOI's that make up the "fixions of belief"
+
    | endowed with intelligence of such a nature that he can by ideal
that we reach every day in our everyday inquiries.
+
    | experiments ascertain that in a certain universe of logical
The primer canon shot on that score is found here:
+
    | possibility certain combinations occur while others do not
 +
    | occur.  Of those which occur in the ideal world some do
 +
    | and some do not occur in the real world;  but all that
 +
    | occur in the real world occur also in the ideal world.
 +
    | For the real world is the world of sensible experience,
 +
    | and it is a part of the process of sensible experience
 +
    | to locate its facts in the world of ideas. This is what
 +
    | I mean by saying that the sensible world is but a fragment
 +
    | of the ideal world.*
  
http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/fixation/fx-frame.htm
+
CSP: * For the simple reason that the real world is a part of the ideal world,
 +
    | namely, that part which sufficient experience would tend ultimately (and
 +
    | therefore definitively), to compel Reason to acknowledge as having a being
 +
    | independent of what he may arbitrarily, or willfully, create.
 +
    |
 +
    | C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
 +
    |"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 +
    | pp. 161-217, 1897.  * Marginal note, 1908.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM: Thanks Jon.  This marginal note is a very
 +
    important one and it deserves slow reflection.
  
DIEPDiscussion Note 5
+
BM: On one side, I was lead start from the beginning of my peircean studies
 +
    to think that such point could be a reason for me to differ radically
 +
    from PeirceI thought that such statements were reflecting two bias:
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM: 1.  they could support the critic that Peirce was some kind of
 +
        "intellectualist" who was ignorant of how things go in the
 +
        actual world:  there would be an ideal world the knowledge
 +
        of which could be attained in the long run by wise people.
  
GR = Gary Richmond
+
    2.  they were optimistic about the possibility of such
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
        a happy end.  I was wondering too if Peirce's thought
 +
        was not really representative of the major trends of
 +
        XIXth century that believed in an endless progress
 +
        of science, economics, welfare and so on.  A kind
 +
        of belief in some "age d'or" to become.
  
JA: Egged on a bit by Gary and John, I am only just starting to return to
+
BM: It is worth noticing that my background has been fed with marxism
     the question of modality, as that was never so compelling to me in math,
+
    for a long time and that I have no reason to think the contrary
     where one gets by with a "necessary" and a "sufficient" that seem to rank
+
     today, particularly from the economical standpoint as it was
    inane dismissal quotes in other people's ears, and so mood was never before
+
     developped in 'The Capital'.  In marxism too there is the
     so compelling to me as the cousin/cozen issues of intentionality, but here
+
     idea of communism as an ultimate stage of evolution where
    are some links to Peirce's derivation of information from logical grounds,
+
     all would be going fine.
    Peirce's 1865-1866 Lectures at Harvard and the Lowell Institute, where he
 
     introduces his newfangled notion of "information" and the theory thereof:
 
  
GR: This is very good news indeed, jon.
+
BM: But undoubtly, there are major differences between both,
 +
    namely according to the ways as the happy end could take
 +
    place (materialism vs pragmatism).  So I put the question
 +
    in some kind of provocative manner here:
 +
 
 +
BM: http://www.iutc3.unicaen.fr/~moranb/accueilperso51.htm
  
GR: Of course, you've already expressed that third term
+
BM: But, on the other hand, I am now less sure about all that.
     (beyond "necessary" and "sufficient").  And truly,
+
    From the Capital itself, there is nothing that states the
     logical breadth x logical depth = information.
+
    necessity of the happy end.  We have just two concluding
 +
     statements, first the necessity of the capitalism crisis
 +
    as a tendency and second, the statement that there are
 +
    "causes which go against this law" (Evidently, in his
 +
     political and social works, Marx is much less cautious).
  
GR: But that's not the whole picture by half, right?
+
BM: If we turn now to Peirce, the marginal note (written in 1908,
     Therefore, modality has finally to be taken up
+
     so it is not refering to some "young" Peirce) we get the idea
     with all that trichotomic semiosis ought imply.
+
     of tendency too.  But we get also the idea that it is the growth
 +
    of EXPERIENCE in the real world which will lead Reason to overcome.
  
GR: Personally, I'm glad that John and I have been "nudges" here.
+
BM: So, returning to my starting point, may be they were not so far one
 +
    of each other, but not for the reasons I had thought.  It seems that
 +
    they had in common an interest on the problematic of evolution, which
 +
    is after all a leading idea of the XIXth century too.  The fact that
 +
    one of them was revolutionary and the other a strong conservative is
 +
    not without interest here.
  
GR: I can hardly wait ...
+
When Peirce talks this way about the EOI, some people that I know
 +
will reflexively (not too reflectively) label him as an "idealist",
 +
and I take it that they mean this in a dismissive sense of the word.
  
Be careful what you wait for ...
+
I have always taken the concept of the EOI to be a "normative idealization",
 +
or a "regulative principle" in Kant's sense, which I imagine that someone so
 +
steeped in Kant as was Peirce must also have had in mind. In this connection
 +
normative idealizations are bound up with the principle of hope, which also
 +
corresponds to abductive reasoning in Peirce's categories. You will be
 +
thinking of the story of a soldier.
  
I had been putting off the gamma graphs until I was older.
+
Now the normative ideal or regulative principle of the EOI
I am older now.  But I don't know if I am old enough yet.
+
refers to an intentional objective in the far remote future,
Maybe when I'm aleph plus one ...
+
about the actualization of which we can of course know naught,
 +
but the ideal is embodied in those who maintain it and thus it
 +
has a very real action in the present, the "functional meaning"
 +
of the EOI, in the sociological sense of the word "functional".
  
I hadn't really been thinking about this much as I gathered the data.
+
I think of Peirce's marginal note as the "Venus de Milo" theory of the
For my part, and I think for Peirce most of the time, 2-valued logic
+
relations among the ideal world, the real world, and the sensible world.
of the good old-fashioned classical variety is good enough -- in the
 
beginning, and in the end, there are just two values of significance,
 
one begins with a distinction, one ends with a decision, and what it
 
means is that the question of uncertainty is always a meantime thing.
 
  
This is what I concluded long ago from my study of Peirce's essays
+
The ideal world is the unhewn block of Parian marble, from which
in 3-valued logics.  The possibility of it all occurred to me when
+
substrate the brute encounter of recalcitrant experience chips away
I was first learning topology, and there you have a 3-valued logic
+
everything that "does not look like Aphrodite", or some say Amphitrite,
of {interior, boundary, exterior} rather than classing every point
+
and this is the real that eternally endures, whatever vicissitudes happen
as {in, out}, 2-tomously in relation to a set, no ifs ands or buts.
+
to befall its concrete images, and yet we possess but a fragment of that in
 +
our sensible world, just barely enough to intimate the nature of that reality.
  
There was, and probably still is, a whole literature on "topo-logic",
+
Time to Muse the Facet:
just my pet name for it, that proceeds from basically this very same
 
intuition.  The issue did not force itself on my attention again, so
 
far as I can recall at the moment, in this mood, until I was writing
 
my Theme One program, or one of its early precursors.  There, in the
 
middle of a breadth-&-depth search function -- funny how those words
 
come up again -- what is frequently called a "beam search" algorithm,
 
I was led, wil-me, nil-me, to interject a "modal variable" of a type:
 
mode = (null, moot, firm).  See here:
 
  
http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000115.html
+
http://www.louvre.fr/img/photos/collec/ager/grande/ma0399.jpg
  
The use of the mode value dubbed "moot" is in the middle of a search,
+
</pre>
to register the fact that the absence or presence of the thing being
 
sought is not yet decided, though in the end you know that it has to
 
fall out one way or the other, by the very definition of the case.
 
  
That's all I can remember at the moment ...
+
==DIEP. De In Esse Predication &bull; Work Area==
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
DIEPDiscussion Note 6
+
011880, CP 4.12
 +
02.  1880, CP 4.13
 +
03.  1880, CP 4.14
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
04.  1896, CP 3.440
 +
05.  1896, CP 3.441
 +
06.  1896, CP 3.442
 +
07.  1896, CP 3.443
 +
08.  1896, CP 3.444-445
 +
09.  1885, CP 3.374
  
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
10.  1902, CP 2.323
TJ = Tom Johnston
+
11.  1895, CP 2.356
  
I will go back to your earlier questions and
+
12. 1903, CP 4.517
try to work out my own way of answering them.
 
There are readers of Peirce I know who would
 
probably give you a significantly different
 
collection of answers and interpretations,
 
so this can only be my own sense of it.
 
  
Review.
+
13.  1903, CP 3.606-608
 +
14.  1897, CP 3.526
 +
15.  1897, CP 3.527
 +
16.  1897, CP 3.527
 +
17.  ????, CP 2.361
 +
18.  1908, CP 3.527 note
 +
19.  1867, 1.559
 +
20.
  
Quiz 1.
+
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
  
CSP: | It must be remembered that
+
1.559     x
    | possibility and necessity
 
    | are relative to the state
 
    | of information.
 
    |
 
    | C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 4.517,
 
     |"The Gamma Part of Existential Graphs",
 
    |"Lowell Lectures of 1903", Lecture 4.
 
  
TJ: 1.1. Is Peirce saying here that there is necessity de dicto, but not de re?
+
2.323      x
    1.2. Is he saying that there are no Aristotelian essences?
+
2.347-349
    1.3. Is he distinguishing various kinds of necessity?
+
2.356      x
 +
2.361      x
 +
2.382
 +
2.394
 +
2.407-409
 +
2.418
 +
2.546
  
JA: My partially informed guesses:
+
2.
 +
323
 +
348
 +
349
 +
546
  
    1.1.  No
+
2.
    1.2.  No
+
231
    1.3.  Yes
+
250
 +
260
 +
293
 +
364
 +
409
 +
416
 +
418
 +
418n
  
It's not Molly Bloom, but 1 out of 3 ain't bad to my way of counting.
+
3.374      x
 +
3.375
 +
3.382
 +
3.384      Peirce's Law
 +
3.440-445  x
 +
3.446-448
 +
3.526-527  x
 +
3.606-608  x
  
TJ: For example, one might argue that physical causality is necessity de re, and
+
4.12-14    x
    is not influenced by how much information we have about physical processes.
+
4.21
 
+
4.49
JA: In the spirit of an even wilder guess, I think that he would say that there
+
4.372-376
    is a difference between what we are destined to believe, for example, about
+
4.401
    the objective referent, if any, of the phrase "physical causality" at the
+
4.454
    "end of inquiry" (EOI) and what we are likely to believe in that respect
+
4.514-523
    at the present time -- time being relative, too, of course -- and that
+
4.517      x
    it may form a useful analytic ideal or a "hypostatic independentity",
+
4.520
    to coin a phrase, to think of this "physical_causality_EOI" as being
+
4.564
    there all along, or not being there all along, waiting for us to
+
 
    discover the quantum of truth in the sign "physical causality".
+
6.450
  
Quiz 2.
+
</pre>
  
TJ: Perhaps I should know better than to ask this, but what the heck:
+
==HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction==
  
    2.1.  What marks the EOI?  No more disagreements among members of
+
===HAPA. Note 1===
          the relevant community of inquiry (physicists, biologists, etc)?
 
  
    2.2.1.  Assuming we do reach an EOI in some
+
<pre>
            subject area, what accounts for it?
+
| When we have analyzed a proposition so as to throw into the subject everything
 +
| that can be removed from the predicate, all that it remains for the predicate to
 +
| represent is the form of connection between the different subjects as expressed in
 +
| the propositional 'form'.  What I mean by "everything that can be removed from the
 +
| predicate" is best explained by giving an example of something not so removable.
 +
| But first take something removable.  "Cain kills Abel."  Here the predicate
 +
| appears as "--- kills ---."  But we can remove killing from the predicate
 +
| and make the latter "--- stands in the relation --- to ---."  Suppose we
 +
| attempt to remove more from the predicate and put the last into the form
 +
| "--- exercises the function of relate of the relation --- to ---" and then
 +
| putting "the function of relate to the relation" into a another subject leave
 +
| as predicate "--- exercises --- in respect to --- to ---."  But this "exercises"
 +
| expresses "exercises the function". Nay more, it expresses "exercises the function
 +
| of relate", so that we find that though we may put this into a separate subject, it
 +
| continues in the predicate just the same.  Stating this in another form, to say that
 +
| "A is in the relation R to B" is to say that A is in a certain relation to R.  Let
 +
| us separate this out thus:  "A is in the relation R^1 (where R^1 is the relation
 +
| of a relate to the relation of which it is the relate) to R to B".  But A is
 +
| here said to be in a certain relation to the relation R^1.  So that we can
 +
| expresss the same fact by saying, "A is in the relation R^1 to the relation
 +
| R^1 to the relation R to B", and so on 'ad infinitum'.  A predicate which
 +
| can thus be analyzed into parts all homogeneous with the whole I call
 +
| a 'continuous predicate'.  It is very important in logical analysis,
 +
| because a continuous predicate obviously cannot be a 'compound'
 +
| except of continuous predicates, and thus when we have carried
 +
| analysis so far as to leave only a continuous predicate, we
 +
| have carried it to its ultimate elements.
 +
|
 +
| Peirce, "Letters to Lady Welby", 14 Dec 1908, 'Selected Writings', pp. 396-397.
 +
|
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, "Letters to Lady Welby", pp. 380-432 in:
 +
|'Charles S. Peirce:  Selected Writings (Values in a Universe
 +
| of Chance)', Edited with an Introduction and Notes by
 +
| Philip P. Wiener, Dover, New York, NY, 1966.
 +
</pre>
  
    2.2.2.  Why have we stopped disagreeing?
+
===HAPA. Note 2===
  
    2.2.3Is it that, guided by the pragmatic principle,
+
<pre>
            we have finally arrived at a set of statements
+
| Another characteristic of mathematical thought is the extraordinary
            that accurately represent/describe things as
+
| use it makes of abstractions. Abstractions have been a favorite
            they really are?
+
| butt of ridicule in modern times. Now it is very easy to laugh
 
+
| at the old physician who is represented as answering the question,
JA: These are good questions, part of what I tried
+
| why opium puts people to sleep, by saying that it is because it
    to address in my dissertation ever in progress:
+
| has a dormative virtueIt is an answer that no doubt carries
 +
| vagueness to its last extreme.  Yet, invented as the story was
 +
| to show how little meaning there might be in an abstraction,
 +
| nevertheless the physician's answer does contain a truth
 +
| that modern philosophy has generally denied:  it does
 +
| assert that there really is in opium 'something' which
 +
| explains its always putting people to sleep.  This has,
 +
| I say, been denied by modern philosophers generally.
 +
| Not, of course, explicitly;  but when they say that
 +
| the different events of people going to sleep after
 +
| taking opium have really nothing in common, but
 +
| only that the mind classes them together -- and
 +
| this is what they virtually do say in denying
 +
| the reality of generals -- they do implicitly
 +
| deny that there is any true explanation of
 +
| opium's generally putting people to sleep.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.234, "The Simplest Mathematics",
 +
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
 +
</pre>
  
JA: http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/awbrey/inquiry.htm
+
===HAPA. Note 3===
  
JA: Whatever the EOI might be in the end,
+
<pre>
    how it functions in the meantime is
+
| Look through the modern logical treatises, and you will find that they
    effectively as a normative ideal.
+
| almost all fall into one or other of two errors, as I hold them to be;
 
+
| that of setting aside the doctrine of abstraction (in the sense in
JA: The Big EOI can be understood on analogy with the
+
| which an abstract noun marks an abstraction) as a grammatical topic
    little EOI's that make up the "fixions of belief"
+
| with which the logician need not particularly concern himself;  and
    that we reach every day in our everyday inquiries.
+
| that of confounding abstraction, in this sense, with that operation
    The primer canon shot on that score is found here:
+
| of the mind by which we pay attention to one feature of a percept to
 
+
| the disregard of others. The two things are entirely disconnected.
JA: http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/fixation/fx-frame.htm
+
|
 
+
| The most ordinary fact of perception, such as "it is light", involves
I get a handle on this subject with the following two hands:
+
| 'precisive' abstraction, or 'prescission'. But 'hypostatic' abstraction,
 
+
| the abstraction which transforms "it is light" into "there is light here",
On the 1st hand, Peirce's Theory Of Signs (PTOS).
+
| which is the sense which I shall commonly attach to the word abstraction
On the 2nd hand, Peirce's Theory Of Inquiry (PTOI).
+
| (since 'prescission' will do for precisive abstraction) is a very special
 
+
| mode of thought. It consists in taking a feature of a percept or percepts
PTOS.
+
| (after it has already been prescinded from the other elements of the percept),
 
+
| so as to take propositional form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon
The following is what I personally consider
+
| any judgment whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
to be the clearest and the most complete of
+
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another subject, which
all the definitions of a sign relation that
+
| has a mode of being that merely consists in the truth of propositions of
I've been able to find in Peirce's writings:
+
| which the corresponding concrete term is the predicate.
 
+
|
| A sign is something, 'A',
+
| Thus, we transform the proposition, "honey is sweet",
| which brings something, 'B',
+
| into "honey possesses sweetness".  "Sweetness" might be
| its 'interpretant' sign
+
| called a fictitious thing, in one sense.  But since the
| determined or created by it,
+
| mode of being attributed to it 'consists' in no more than
| into the same sort of correspondence
+
| the fact that some things are sweet, and it is not pretended,
| with something, 'C', its 'object',
+
| or imagined, that it has any other mode of being, there is,
| as that in which itself stands to 'C'.
+
| after all, no fiction.  The only profession made is that we
 +
| consider the fact of honey being sweet under the form of a
 +
| relation;  and so we really can.  I have selected sweetness
 +
| as an instance of one of the least useful of abstractions.
 +
| Yet even this is convenient.  It facilitates such thoughts
 +
| as that the sweetness of honey is particularly cloying;
 +
| that the sweetness of honey is something like the
 +
| sweetness of a honeymoon;  etc.
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, NEM 4, pp. 20-21, cf. p. 54, also available here:
+
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
| http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/L75/L75.htm
+
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
 +
</pre>
  
It is one of the few where Peirce is intrepid enough
+
===HAPA. Note 4===
to go boldly forward without any sop to psychologism.
 
  
More detail here:
+
<pre>
 
+
| Abstractions are particularly congenial to mathematics.  Everyday life
| On the Definition of Logic [Version 1]
+
| first, for example, found the need of that class of abstractions which
 +
| we call 'collections'.  Instead of saying that some human beings are
 +
| males and all the rest females, it was found convenient to say that
 +
| 'mankind' consists of the male 'part' and the female 'part'.  The
 +
| same thought makes classes of collections, such as pairs, leashes,
 +
| quatrains, hands, weeks, dozens, baker's dozens, sonnets, scores,
 +
| quires, hundreds, long hundreds, gross, reams, thousands, myriads,
 +
| lacs, millions, milliards, milliasses, etc.  These have suggested
 +
| a great branch of mathematics.*
 +
|
 +
| Again, a point moves:  it is by abstraction that the geometer says that
 +
| it "describes a line".  This line, though an abstraction, itself moves;
 +
| and this is regarded as generating a surface;  and so on.
 
|
 
|
| Logic will here be defined as 'formal semiotic'.
+
| So likewise, when the analyst treats operations as themselves subjects of
| A definition of a sign will be given which no more
+
| operations, a method whose utility will not be denied, this is another
| refers to human thought than does the definition
+
| instance of abstractionMaxwell's notion of a tension exercised upon
| of a line as the place which a particle occupies,
+
| lines of electrical force, transverse to them, is somewhat similar.
| part by part, during a lapse of timeNamely,
 
| a sign is something, 'A', which brings something,
 
| 'B', its 'interpretant' sign determined or created
 
| by it, into the same sort of correspondence with
 
| something, 'C', its 'object', as that in which it
 
| itself stands to 'C'.  It is from this definition,
 
| together with a definition of "formal", that I
 
| deduce mathematically the principles of logic.
 
| I also make a historical review of all the
 
| definitions and conceptions of logic, and show,
 
| not merely that my definition is no novelty, but
 
| that my non-psychological conception of logic has
 
| 'virtually' been quite generally held, though not
 
| generally recognized.  (CSP, NEM 4, 20-21).
 
 
|
 
|
| On the Definition of Logic [Version 2]
+
| These examples exhibit the great rolling billows of abstraction in the ocean
 +
| of mathematical thought;  but when we come to a minute examination of it,
 +
| we shall find, in every department, incessant ripples of the same form
 +
| of thought, of which the examples I have mentioned give no hint.
 
|
 
|
| Logic is 'formal semiotic'.  A sign is something,
+
|* Of course, the moment a collection is recognized as an abstraction we have
| 'A', which brings something, 'B', its 'interpretant'
+
|  to admit that even a percept is an abstraction or represents an abstraction,
| sign, determined or created by it, into the same
+
| if matter has partsIt therefore becomes difficult to maintain that all
| sort of correspondence (or a lower implied sort)
+
abstractions are fictions.
| with something, 'C', its 'object', as that in
 
| which itself stands to 'C'. This definition no
 
| more involves any reference to human thought than
 
| does the definition of a line as the place within
 
| which a particle lies during a lapse of time.
 
| It is from this definition that I deduce the
 
| principles of logic by mathematical reasoning,
 
| and by mathematical reasoning that, I aver, will
 
| support criticism of Weierstrassian severity, and
 
| that is perfectly evidentThe word "formal" in
 
| the definition is also defined. (CSP, NEM 4, 54).
 
 
|
 
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce,
+
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
|'The New Elements of Mathematics', Volume 4,
+
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
| Edited by Carolyn Eisele, Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
+
</pre>
  
I will pick up from there next time.
+
===HAPA. Note 5===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 +
| Hypostasis.  Literally the Greek word signifies that which stands under
 +
| and serves as a support.  In philosophy it means a singular substance,
 +
| also called a supposite, 'suppositum', by the Scholastics, especially
 +
| if the substance is a completely subsisting one, whether non-living
 +
| or living, irrational or rational.  However, a rational hypostasis
 +
| has the same meaning as the term, 'person'.
 +
|
 +
| J.J.R. [= J.J. Rolbiecki] in:
 +
|
 +
| Dagobert D. Runes (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy',
 +
| Littlefield, Adams, & Company, Totowa, NJ, 1972.
 +
</pre>
  
DIEP. Discussion Note 7
+
===HAPA. Note 6===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 +
| But the highest kind of synthesis is what the mind is compelled to make neither
 +
| by the inward attractions of the feelings or representations themselves, nor by
 +
| a transcendental force of necessity, but in the interest of intelligibility,
 +
| that is, in the interest of the synthesizing "I think" itself;  and this
 +
| it does by introducing an idea not contained in the data, which gives
 +
| connections which they would not otherwise have had.  This kind of
 +
| synthesis has not been sufficiently studied, and especially the
 +
| intimate relationship of its different varieties has not been
 +
| duly considered.  The work of the poet or novelist is not so
 +
| utterly different from that of the scientific man.  The artist
 +
| introduces a fiction;  but it is not an arbitrary one;  it exhibits
 +
| affinities to which the mind accords a certain approval in pronouncing
 +
| them beautiful, which if it is not exactly the same as saying that the
 +
| synthesis is true, is something of the same general kind.  The geometer
 +
| draws a diagram, which if not exactly a fiction, is at least a creation,
 +
| and by means of observation of that diagram he is able to synthesize and
 +
| show relations between elements which before seemed to have no necessary
 +
| connection.  The realities compel us to put some things into very close
 +
| relation and others less so, in a highly complicated, and in the [true?]
 +
| sense itself unintelligible manner;  but it is the genius of the mind,
 +
| that takes up all these hints of sense, adds immensely to them, makes
 +
| them precise, and shows them in intelligible form in the intuitions
 +
| of space and time.  Intuition is the regarding of the abstract in
 +
| a concrete form, by the realistic hypostatization of relations;
 +
| that is the one sole method of valuable thought.  Very shallow
 +
| is the prevalent notion that this is something to be avoided.
 +
| You might as well say at once that reasoning is to be avoided
 +
| because it has led to so much error;  quite in the same philistine
 +
| line of thought would that be;  and so well in accord with the spirit
 +
| of nominalism that I wonder some one does not put it forward.  The true
 +
| precept is not to abstain from hypostatization, but to do it intelligently ...
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CP 1.383, "A Guess at the Riddle",
 +
| circa 1890, 'Collected Papers', CP 1.354-416.
 +
</pre>
  
BM = Bernard Morand
+
===HAPA. Note 7===
JA = Jon Awbrey
 
  
CSP: | It has come about through the agencies of development that man is
+
<pre>
    | endowed with intelligence of such a nature that he can by ideal
+
| Exceedingly important are the relatives signifying "-- is a quality of --"
    | experiments ascertain that in a certain universe of logical
+
| and "-- is a relation of -- to --".  It may be said that mathematical
    | possibility certain combinations occur while others do not
+
| reasoning (which is the only deductive reasoning, if not absolutely,
    | occurOf those which occur in the ideal world some do
+
| at least eminently) almost entirely turns on the consideration of
    | and some do not occur in the real world;  but all that
+
| abstractions as if they were objectsThe protest of nominalism
    | occur in the real world occur also in the ideal world.
+
| against such hypostatisation, although, if it knew how to formulate
    | For the real world is the world of sensible experience,
+
| itself, it would be justified as against much of the empty disputation
    | and it is a part of the process of sensible experience
+
| of the medieval Dunces, yet, as it was and is formulated, is simply a
    | to locate its facts in the world of ideas.  This is what
+
| protest against the only kind of thinking that has ever advanced human
    | I mean by saying that the sensible world is but a fragment
+
| culture.  Nobody will work long with the logic of relatives -- unless
    | of the ideal world.*
+
| he restricts the problems of his studies very much -- without seeing
 +
| that this is true.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CP 3.509, "The Logic of Relatives",
 +
|'The Monist', vol. 7, pp. 161-217, 1897.
 +
|'Collected Papers', CP 3.456-552.
 +
</pre>
  
CSP: * For the simple reason that the real world is a part of the ideal world,
+
===HAPA. Note 8===
    | namely, that part which sufficient experience would tend ultimately (and
 
    | therefore definitively), to compel Reason to acknowledge as having a being
 
    | independent of what he may arbitrarily, or willfully, create.
 
    |
 
    | C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
 
    |"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 
    | pp. 161-217, 1897.  * Marginal note, 1908.
 
  
BM: Thanks JonThis marginal note is a very
+
<pre>
    important one and it deserves slow reflection.
+
| The logical term 'subjectal abstraction' here requires a
 +
| word of explanation;  for there are few treatises on logic
 +
| which notice subjectal abstraction under any name, except so
 +
| far as to confuse it with precisive abstraction which is an
 +
| entirely different logical functionWhen we say that the
 +
| Columbia library building is 'large', this remark is a result
 +
| of precisive abstraction by which the man who makes the remark
 +
| leaves out of account all the other features of his image of
 +
| the building, and takes the word "large" which is entirely
 +
| unlike that image -- and when I say the word is unlike the
 +
| image, I mean that the general signification of the word is
 +
| utterly disparate from the image, which involves no predicates
 +
| at all.  Such is 'precisive abstraction'.  But now if this man
 +
| goes on to remark that the largeness of the building is very
 +
| impressive, he converts the applicability of that predicate
 +
| from being a way of thinking about the building to being
 +
| itself a subject of thought, and that operation is
 +
| 'subjectal abstraction'.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.332, "Ordinals", circa 1905.
 +
</pre>
  
BM: On one side, I was lead start from the beginning of my peircean studies
+
===HAPA. Note 9===
    to think that such point could be a reason for me to differ radically
 
    from Peirce. I thought that such statements were reflecting two bias:
 
  
BM: 1. they could support the critic that Peirce was some kind of
+
<pre>
        "intellectualist" who was ignorant of how things go in the
+
| Predicate.
        actual world: there would be an ideal world the knowledge
+
|
        of which could be attained in the long run by wise people.
+
| The view which pragmatic logic takes of the predicate, in consequence of
 +
| its assuming that the entire purpose of deductive logic is to ascertain
 +
| the necessary conditions of the truth of signs, without any regard to
 +
| the accidents of Indo-European grammar, will be here briefly stated.
 +
| Cf. Negation [CP 2.378-380].
 +
|
 +
| In any proposition, i.e., any statement which must be true or false,
 +
| let some parts be struck out so that the remnant is not a proposition,
 +
| but is such that it becomes a proposition when each blank is filled by
 +
| a proper name. The erasures are not to be made in a mechanical way, but
 +
| with such modifications as may be necessary to preserve the partial sense
 +
| of the fragment.  Such a residue is a 'predicate'.  The same proposition
 +
| may be mutilated in various ways so that different fragments will appear
 +
| as predicates.  Thus, take the proposition "Every man reveres some woman."
 +
| This contains the following predicates, among others:
 +
|
 +
|    ". . . reveres some woman."
 +
|
 +
|    ". . . is either not a man or reveres some woman."
 +
|
 +
|    "Any previously selected man reveres . . ."
 +
|
 +
|    "Any previously selected man is . . ."
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.358, in dictionary entry for "Predicate",
 +
| J.M. Baldwin (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy & Psychology', vol. 2, pp. 325-326.
 +
</pre>
  
    2.  they were optimistic about the possibility of such
+
===HAPA. Note 10===
        a happy end.  I was wondering too if Peirce's thought
 
        was not really representative of the major trends of
 
        XIXth century that believed in an endless progress
 
        of science, economics, welfare and so on.  A kind
 
        of belief in some "age d'or" to become.
 
  
BM: It is worth noticing that my background has been fed with marxism
+
<pre>
    for a long time and that I have no reason to think the contrary
+
| Relatives Of Second Intention
    today, particularly from the economical standpoint as it was
+
|
    developped in 'The Capital'.  In marxism too there is the
+
| The general method of graphical representation of propositions has now
    idea of communism as an ultimate stage of evolution where
+
| been given in all its essential elements, except, of course, that we
    all would be going fine.
+
| have not, as yet, studied any truths concerning special relatives;
 
+
| for to do so would seem, at first, to be "extralogical".  Logic in
BM: But undoubtly, there are major differences between both,
+
| this stage of its development may be called 'paradisaical logic',
    namely according to the ways as the happy end could take
+
| because it represents the state of Man's cognition before the
    place (materialism vs pragmatism)So I put the question
+
| Fall. For although, with this apparatus, it easy to write
    in some kind of provocative manner here:
+
| propositions necessarily true, it is absolutely impossible
 
+
| to write any which is necessarily false, or, in any way
BM: http://www.iutc3.unicaen.fr/~moranb/accueilperso51.htm
+
| which that stage of logic affords, to find out that
 
+
| anything is falseThe mind has not as yet eaten
BM: But, on the other hand, I am now less sure about all that.
+
| of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Truth
    From the Capital itself, there is nothing that states the
+
| and Falsity.
    necessity of the happy endWe have just two concluding
+
|
    statements, first the necessity of the capitalism crisis
+
| Probably it will not be doubted that every child in
    as a tendency and second, the statement that there are
+
| its mental development necessarily passes through
    "causes which go against this law" (Evidently, in his
+
| a stage in which he has some ideas, but yet has
    political and social works, Marx is much less cautious).
+
| never recognised that an idea may be erroneous;
 +
| and a stage that every child necessarily passes
 +
| through must have been formerly passed through
 +
| by the race in its adult developmentIt may
 +
| be doubted whether many of the lower animals
 +
| have any clear and steady conception of
 +
| falsehood;  for their instincts work
 +
| so unerringly that there is little
 +
| to force it upon their attention.
 +
| Yet plainly without a knowledge
 +
| of falsehood no development
 +
| of discursive reason can
 +
| take place.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.488,
 +
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 +
| pp. 161-217, 1897.
 +
</pre>
  
BM: If we turn now to Peirce, the marginal note (written in 1908,
+
===HAPA. Note 11===
    so it is not refering to some "young" Peirce) we get the idea
 
    of tendency too.  But we get also the idea that it is the growth
 
    of EXPERIENCE in the real world which will lead Reason to overcome.
 
  
BM: So, returning to my starting point, may be they were not so far one
+
<pre>
    of each other, but not for the reasons I had thought. It seems that
+
| Relatives Of Second Intention (cont.)
    they had in common an interest on the problematic of evolution, which
+
|
    is after all a leading idea of the XIXth century too.  The fact that
+
| This paradisaical logic appears in the study of non-relative formal logic.
    one of them was revolutionary and the other a strong conservative is
+
| But 'there' no possible avenue appears by which the knowledge of falsehood
    not without interest here.
+
| could be brought into this Garden of Eden except by the arbitrary and
 
+
| inexplicable introduction of the Serpent in the guise of a proposition
When Peirce talks this way about the EOI, some people that I know
+
| necessarily false. The logic of relatives affords such an avenue,
will reflexively (not too reflectively) label him as an "idealist",
+
| and 'that', the very avenue by which in actual development,
and I take it that they mean this in a dismissive sense of the word.
+
| this stage of logic supervenes.  It is the avenue of
 
+
| experience and logical reflexion.
I have always taken the concept of the EOI to be a "normative idealization",
+
|
or a "regulative principle" in Kant's sense, which I imagine that someone so
+
| By 'logical' reflexion, I mean the observation of thoughts
steeped in Kant as was Peirce must also have had in mindIn this connection
+
| in their expressionsAquinas remarked that this sort of
normative idealizations are bound up with the principle of hope, which also
+
| reflexion is requisite to furnish us with those ideas
corresponds to abductive reasoning in Peirce's categories. You will be
+
| which, from lack of contrast, ordinary external
thinking of the story of a soldier.
+
| experience fails to bring into prominence.
 
+
| He called such ideas 'second intentions'.
Now the normative ideal or regulative principle of the EOI
+
|
refers to an intentional objective in the far remote future,
+
| It is by means of 'relatives of second intention'
about the actualization of which we can of course know naught,
+
| that the general method of logical representation
but the ideal is embodied in those who maintain it and thus it
+
| is to find completion.
has a very real action in the present, the "functional meaning"
+
|
of the EOI, in the sociological sense of the word "functional".
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.489-490,
 
+
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'The Monist', vol. 7,
I think of Peirce's marginal note as the "Venus de Milo" theory of the
+
| pp. 161-217, 1897.
relations among the ideal world, the real world, and the sensible world.
 
 
 
The ideal world is the unhewn block of Parian marble, from which
 
substrate the brute encounter of recalcitrant experience chips away
 
everything that "does not look like Aphrodite", or some say Amphitrite,
 
and this is the real that eternally endures, whatever vicissitudes happen
 
to befall its concrete images, and yet we possess but a fragment of that in
 
our sensible world, just barely enough to intimate the nature of that reality.
 
 
 
Time to Muse the Facet:
 
 
 
http://www.louvre.fr/img/photos/collec/ager/grande/ma0399.jpg
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
  
 
+
===HAPA. Note 12===
==HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction==
 
  
 
<pre>
 
<pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| One branch of deductive logic, of which from the nature of
 
+
| things ordinary logic could give no satisfactory account,
HAPA.  Note 1
+
| relates to the vitally important matter of abstraction.
 
+
|
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| Indeed, the student of ordinary logic naturally regards abstraction,
 
+
| or the passage from "the rose smells sweet" to "the rose has perfume",
| When we have analyzed a proposition so as to throw into the subject everything
+
| to be a quasi-grammatical matter, calling for little or no notice from
| that can be removed from the predicate, all that it remains for the predicate to
+
| the logicianThe fact is, however, that almost every great step in
| represent is the form of connection between the different subjects as expressed in
+
| mathematical reasoning derives its importance from the fact that it
| the propositional 'form'.  What I mean by "everything that can be removed from the
+
| involves an abstraction.
| predicate" is best explained by giving an example of something not so removable.
+
|
| But first take something removable.  "Cain kills Abel."  Here the predicate
+
| For by means of abstraction, the transitory elements of thought,
| appears as "--- kills ---."  But we can remove killing from the predicate
+
| the 'epea pteroenta' [winged words], are made substantive elements,
| and make the latter "--- stands in the relation --- to ---." Suppose we
+
| as James terms them, 'epea apteroenta' [plucked words].* It thus
| attempt to remove more from the predicate and put the last into the form
+
| becomes possible to study their relations and to apply to these
| "--- exercises the function of relate of the relation --- to ---" and then
+
| relations discoveries already made respecting analogous relations.
| putting "the function of relate to the relation" into a another subject leave
+
| In this way, for example, operations become themselves the subjects
| as predicate "--- exercises --- in respect to --- to ---."  But this "exercises"
+
| of operations.
| expresses "exercises the function"Nay more, it expresses "exercises the function
 
| of relate", so that we find that though we may put this into a separate subject, it
 
| continues in the predicate just the same.  Stating this in another form, to say that
 
| "A is in the relation R to B" is to say that A is in a certain relation to R. Let
 
| us separate this out thus:  "A is in the relation R^1 (where R^1 is the relation
 
| of a relate to the relation of which it is the relate) to R to B".  But A is
 
| here said to be in a certain relation to the relation R^1.  So that we can
 
| expresss the same fact by saying, "A is in the relation R^1 to the relation
 
| R^1 to the relation R to B", and so on 'ad infinitum'.  A predicate which
 
| can thus be analyzed into parts all homogeneous with the whole I call
 
| a 'continuous predicate'. It is very important in logical analysis,
 
| because a continuous predicate obviously cannot be a 'compound'
 
| except of continuous predicates, and thus when we have carried
 
| analysis so far as to leave only a continuous predicate, we
 
| have carried it to its ultimate elements.
 
 
|
 
|
| Peirce, "Letters to Lady Welby", 14 Dec 1908, 'Selected Writings', pp. 396-397.
+
|* William James, 'Principles of Psychology', vol. 1, p. 243.
 
|
 
|
| Charles S. Peirce, "Letters to Lady Welby", pp. 380-432 in:
+
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.642, in dictionary entry for "Relatives",
|'Charles S. Peirce:  Selected Writings (Values in a Universe
+
| J.M. Baldwin (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy & Psychology', vol. 2, pp. 447-450.
| of Chance)', Edited with an Introduction and Notes by
+
 
| Philip P. Wiener, Dover, New York, NY, 1966.
+
Incidental Musement:
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Hom.+Il.+1.172
 +
</pre>
  
HAPA. Note 2
+
==HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction &bull; Discussion==
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===HAPA. Discussion Note 1===
  
| Another characteristic of mathematical thought is the extraordinary
+
<pre>
| use it makes of abstractions.  Abstractions have been a favorite
+
Referring to a few of Peirce's standard discussions
| butt of ridicule in modern times.  Now it is very easy to laugh
+
of "hypostatic abstraction" (HA), the main thing
| at the old physician who is represented as answering the question,
+
about HA is that it turns an adjective or some
| why opium puts people to sleep, by saying that it is because it
+
part of a predicate into an extra subject,
| has a dormative virtue.  It is an answer that no doubt carries
+
upping the arity of the main predicate
| vagueness to its last extreme.  Yet, invented as the story was
+
in the process.
| to show how little meaning there might be in an abstraction,
+
 
| nevertheless the physician's answer does contain a truth
+
For example, a typical case of HA occurs in the transformation
| that modern philosophy has generally denied:  it does
+
from "honey is sweet" to "honey possesses sweetness", which we
| assert that there really is in opium 'something' which
+
could choose to represent in several different ways as follows:
| explains its always putting people to sleep. This has,
+
 
| I say, been denied by modern philosophers generally.
+
Sweet(honey) ~~~> Possesses(honey, sweetness)
| Not, of course, explicitly;  but when they say that
 
| the different events of people going to sleep after
 
| taking opium have really nothing in common, but
 
| only that the mind classes them together -- and
 
| this is what they virtually do say in denying
 
| the reality of generals -- they do implicitly
 
| deny that there is any true explanation of
 
| opium's generally putting people to sleep.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.234, "The Simplest Mathematics",
 
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
S(h) ~~~> P(h, s)
  
HAPA. Note 3
+
  S          P
 +
o          o
 +
|  ~~~>  |
 +
o          o
 +
h        <h,s>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
            ^
 +
[S]  ~~~>  /P\
 +
|        o->-o
 +
|        |  | 
 +
o       o   o
 +
h        h  s
  
| Look through the modern logical treatises, and you will find that they
+
The chief thing about this form of grammatical transformation is that we
| almost all fall into one or other of two errors, as I hold them to be;
+
abstract the adjective "sweet" from the main predicate, thus arriving at
| that of setting aside the doctrine of abstraction (in the sense in
+
a new, increased-arity predicate "possesses", and as a by-product of the
| which an abstract noun marks an abstraction) as a grammatical topic
+
reaction, as it were, precipitating out the substantive "sweetness" as a
| with which the logician need not particularly concern himself;  and
+
new subject of the new predicate.
| that of confounding abstraction, in this sense, with that operation
+
</pre>
| of the mind by which we pay attention to one feature of a percept to
 
| the disregard of others.  The two things are entirely disconnected.
 
|
 
| The most ordinary fact of perception, such as "it is light", involves
 
| 'precisive' abstraction, or 'prescission'.  But 'hypostatic' abstraction,
 
| the abstraction which transforms "it is light" into "there is light here",
 
| which is the sense which I shall commonly attach to the word abstraction
 
| (since 'prescission' will do for precisive abstraction) is a very special
 
| mode of thought.  It consists in taking a feature of a percept or percepts
 
| (after it has already been prescinded from the other elements of the percept),
 
| so as to take propositional form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon
 
| any judgment whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
 
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another subject, which
 
| has a mode of being that merely consists in the truth of propositions of
 
| which the corresponding concrete term is the predicate.
 
|
 
| Thus, we transform the proposition, "honey is sweet",
 
| into "honey possesses sweetness".  "Sweetness" might be
 
| called a fictitious thing, in one sense.  But since the
 
| mode of being attributed to it 'consists' in no more than
 
| the fact that some things are sweet, and it is not pretended,
 
| or imagined, that it has any other mode of being, there is,
 
| after all, no fiction.  The only profession made is that we
 
| consider the fact of honey being sweet under the form of a
 
| relation;  and so we really can.  I have selected sweetness
 
| as an instance of one of the least useful of abstractions.
 
| Yet even this is convenient.  It facilitates such thoughts
 
| as that the sweetness of honey is particularly cloying;
 
| that the sweetness of honey is something like the
 
| sweetness of a honeymoon;  etc.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
 
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===HAPA. Discussion Note 2===
  
HAPA.  Note 4
+
<pre>
 +
Abstractions And Their Deciduation Problems
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
I have studied mathematics one way or another most of my life,
 +
and mathematics is nothing if not the study of abstract objects,
 +
yet I do not believe that I am ready to venture my own definition
 +
of "abstract object", not just yet, and I honestly do not know if
 +
I ever will be, but what I have been attempting intermittently to
 +
do all this while is to transmit the sort of information that the
 +
typical backwoodsman in the wild wold of logic and mathematics
 +
might regard as being analogous to a botanical key, useful in
 +
recognizing various species of abstract objects, with which
 +
I can genuinely say that I have some acquaintance, although
 +
I would prefer to defer, in my reference, in my reverence,
 +
to ones who I know know vastly more.  So forgive a quote:
  
| Abstractions are particularly congenial to mathematics.  Everyday life
+
| To most otherwise "forest-minded" folk, the approach of autumn
| first, for example, found the need of that class of abstractions which
+
| with its showers of many-colored leaves, spells the end of the
| we call 'collections'Instead of saying that some human beings are
+
| season's activities in the indentification [sic] of deciduous
| males and all the rest females, it was found convenient to say that
+
| trees and shrubsWithout leaves, the members of the forest
| 'mankind' consists of the male 'part' and the female 'part'The
+
| community, unless they be relatively large, seem to lose
| same thought makes classes of collections, such as pairs, leashes,
+
| much of their summer's identity and may even descend to
| quatrains, hands, weeks, dozens, baker's dozens, sonnets, scores,
+
| the level of "brush"This is in reality not the case,
| quires, hundreds, long hundreds, gross, reams, thousands, myriads,
+
| as may be easily discovered by examining any leafless
| lacs, millions, milliards, milliasses, etc.  These have suggested
+
| twig with a 10-x pocket lens, or even with the naked
| a great branch of mathematics.*
+
| eye.  A casual glance at Plate 1 will also serve to
 +
| show that woody plants in winter are anything but
 +
| featureless.
 
|
 
|
| Again, a point moves:  it is by abstraction that the geometer says that
+
| Harlow, William M.,
| it "describes a line". This line, though an abstraction, itself moves;
+
|"Twig Key to the Deciduous Woody Plants of Eastern North America",
| and this is regarded as generating a surface;  and so on.
+
| 4th ed., reprinted in 'Fruit Key and Twig Key to Trees and Shrubs',
|
+
| Dover, New York, NY, 1959. Originally published by the author 1954.
| So likewise, when the analyst treats operations as themselves subjects of
+
</pre>
| operations, a method whose utility will not be denied, this is another
+
 
| instance of abstraction. Maxwell's notion of a tension exercised upon
+
===HAPA. Discussion Note 3===
| lines of electrical force, transverse to them, is somewhat similar.
 
|
 
| These examples exhibit the great rolling billows of abstraction in the ocean
 
| of mathematical thought;  but when we come to a minute examination of it,
 
| we shall find, in every department, incessant ripples of the same form
 
| of thought, of which the examples I have mentioned give no hint.
 
|
 
|* Of course, the moment a collection is recognized as an abstraction we have
 
|  to admit that even a percept is an abstraction or represents an abstraction,
 
|  if matter has parts. It therefore becomes difficult to maintain that all
 
|  abstractions are fictions.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
 
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 +
I think that it would be useful at this time to run back through
 +
one of Peirce's best descriptions of the two kinds of abstraction,
 +
and try to tackle it line by line.
  
HAPANote 5
+
The first and simpler type of abstraction is "prescisive abstraction" --
 +
where here I have taken something like the running average of several
 +
different spellings of the term -- that merely extracts or selectively
 +
attends to a feature or a property of a more concrete objectIn this
 +
case one passes from an object to one of its properties, very analogous
 +
to the sort of mathematical operation that is usually called "projection".
 +
Here, one speaks of "prescinding" the property in question from the object,
 +
whereby prescisive abstraction acquires the equivalent name of "prescission".
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
The second, more substantial type of abstraction is "hypostatic abstraction".
 +
This is the operation that we regard as bringing the abstract object proper
 +
into being, or into the sphere of human thought, or at least into the frame
 +
of a particular discussion.  In this case one passes from a concrete object
 +
or situation, via a selection of properties, to end with an abstract object.
  
| Hypostasis.  Literally the Greek word signifies that which stands under
+
| Look through the modern logical treatises, and you will find that they
| and serves as a support.  In philosophy it means a singular substance,
+
| almost all fall into one or other of two errors, as I hold them to be;
| also called a supposite, 'suppositum', by the Scholastics, especially
+
| that of setting aside the doctrine of abstraction (in the sense in
| if the substance is a completely subsisting one, whether non-living
+
| which an abstract noun marks an abstraction) as a grammatical topic
| or living, irrational or rational. However, a rational hypostasis
+
| with which the logician need not particularly concern himself; and
| has the same meaning as the term, 'person'.
+
| that of confounding abstraction, in this sense, with that operation
|
+
| of the mind by which we pay attention to one feature of a percept to
| J.J.R. [= J.J. Rolbiecki] in:
+
| the disregard of others. The two things are entirely disconnected.
|
 
| Dagobert D. Runes (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy',
 
| Littlefield, Adams, & Company, Totowa, NJ, 1972.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Here Peirce gives a first description of the two types of abstraction
 +
and emphasizes the importance of distinguishing them one from another.
  
HAPA. Note 6
+
| The most ordinary fact of perception, such as "it is light",
 +
| involves 'precisive' abstraction, or 'prescission'.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
In other words, all attention is selective to some degree,
 +
so any perception, such as that which we typically express
 +
by means of the sentence "It is light" involves prescission,
 +
a trimming of the whole experience to crop an observed fact.
  
| But the highest kind of synthesis is what the mind is compelled to make neither
+
| But 'hypostatic' abstraction, the abstraction which transforms
| by the inward attractions of the feelings or representations themselves, nor by
+
| "it is light" into "there is light here", which is the sense
| a transcendental force of necessity, but in the interest of intelligibility,
+
| which I shall commonly attach to the word abstraction (since
| that is, in the interest of the synthesizing "I think" itself;  and this
+
| 'prescission' will do for precisive abstraction) is a very
| it does by introducing an idea not contained in the data, which gives
+
| special mode of thought.
| connections which they would not otherwise have had.  This kind of
 
| synthesis has not been sufficiently studied, and especially the
 
| intimate relationship of its different varieties has not been
 
| duly considered.  The work of the poet or novelist is not so
 
| utterly different from that of the scientific man.  The artist
 
| introduces a fiction;  but it is not an arbitrary one;  it exhibits
 
| affinities to which the mind accords a certain approval in pronouncing
 
| them beautiful, which if it is not exactly the same as saying that the
 
| synthesis is true, is something of the same general kind.  The geometer
 
| draws a diagram, which if not exactly a fiction, is at least a creation,
 
| and by means of observation of that diagram he is able to synthesize and
 
| show relations between elements which before seemed to have no necessary
 
| connection.  The realities compel us to put some things into very close
 
| relation and others less so, in a highly complicated, and in the [true?]
 
| sense itself unintelligible manner;  but it is the genius of the mind,
 
| that takes up all these hints of sense, adds immensely to them, makes
 
| them precise, and shows them in intelligible form in the intuitions
 
| of space and time.  Intuition is the regarding of the abstract in
 
| a concrete form, by the realistic hypostatization of relations;
 
| that is the one sole method of valuable thought.  Very shallow
 
| is the prevalent notion that this is something to be avoided.
 
| You might as well say at once that reasoning is to be avoided
 
| because it has led to so much error;  quite in the same philistine
 
| line of thought would that be;  and so well in accord with the spirit
 
| of nominalism that I wonder some one does not put it forward.  The true
 
| precept is not to abstain from hypostatization, but to do it intelligently ...
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, CP 1.383, "A Guess at the Riddle",
 
| circa 1890, 'Collected Papers', CP 1.354-416.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
In the transformation from "It is light" to "There is light here",
 +
the spelling "light" is transformed from an adjective into a noun.
 +
This is the typical grammatical clue that an underlying operation
 +
of "hypostatic" or "subjectal" abstraction has been accomplished.
 +
 
 +
| It consists in taking a feature of a percept or percepts (after it has
 +
| already been prescinded from the other elements of the percept), so as
 +
| to take propositional form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon
 +
| any judgment whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
 +
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another subject, which
 +
| has a mode of being that merely consists in the truth of propositions of
 +
| which the corresponding concrete term is the predicate.
 +
 
 +
This is very significant.  It marks not just a grammatical
 +
transformation that happens to be taking place in a given
 +
example of hypostatic abstraction, but describes the very
 +
form of a certain transformation that took place all along
 +
the frontiers of thought in the formal sciences beginning
 +
toward the middle of the Nineteenth Century, a development
 +
in which C.S. Peirce was a major force and prime expositor.
  
HAPA. Note 7
+
But I'll need to save the rest of that story for tomorrow.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Reference:
  
| Exceedingly important are the relatives signifying "-- is a quality of --"
+
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
| and "-- is a relation of -- to --". It may be said that mathematical
+
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
| reasoning (which is the only deductive reasoning, if not absolutely,
 
| at least eminently) almost entirely turns on the consideration of
 
| abstractions as if they were objects.  The protest of nominalism
 
| against such hypostatisation, although, if it knew how to formulate
 
| itself, it would be justified as against much of the empty disputation
 
| of the medieval Dunces, yet, as it was and is formulated, is simply a
 
| protest against the only kind of thinking that has ever advanced human
 
| culture.  Nobody will work long with the logic of relatives -- unless
 
| he restricts the problems of his studies very much -- without seeing
 
| that this is true.
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 3.509, "The Logic of Relatives",
+
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html
|'The Monist', vol. 7, pp. 161-217, 1897.
+
</pre>
|'Collected Papers', CP 3.456-552.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===HAPA. Discussion Note 4===
  
HAPA.  Note 8
+
<pre>
 +
By way of starting to compile a "key to abstractions and relatives"
 +
in the spirit of an old-fashioned field study key, I have gone back
 +
through our neck of the woulds and gathered these initial specimens:
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
1.  HIROTUFIA.  Handy Indexical Rules Of Thumb Used For Identifying Abstractions
  
| The logical term 'subjectal abstraction' here requires a
+
1.1.  One of the features that points to an abstract object or
| word of explanation;  for there are few treatises on logic
+
      a hypostatic abstraction is its being known by description,
| which notice subjectal abstraction under any name, except so
+
      in other words, by the predicates that are attributed to it
| far as to confuse it with precisive abstraction which is an
+
      in remote reports of some variety, or in the various stories
| entirely different logical function.  When we say that the
+
      and theories that are spun about it, instead of being known
| Columbia library building is 'large', this remark is a result
+
      more concretely and directly by acquaintance.  That is one
| of precisive abstraction by which the man who makes the remark
+
      of the marks of all of the things that I mentioned before:
| leaves out of account all the other features of his image of
+
      dormitive virtues, egos, numbers, quarks, sweetness, the
| the building, and takes the word "large" which is entirely
+
      Starship Enterprise, and last not not least, unicorns.
| unlike that image -- and when I say the word is unlike the
+
 
| image, I mean that the general signification of the word is
+
1.2CSP on HA: "It consists in taking a feature of a percept
| utterly disparate from the image, which involves no predicates
+
      or percepts (after it has already been prescinded from the
| at allSuch is 'precisive abstraction'. But now if this man
+
      other elements of the percept), so as to take propositional
| goes on to remark that the largeness of the building is very
+
      form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon any judgment
| impressive, he converts the applicability of that predicate
+
      whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
| from being a way of thinking about the building to being
+
      relation between the subject of that judgment and another
| itself a subject of thought, and that operation is
+
      subject, which has a mode of being that merely consists
| 'subjectal abstraction'.
+
      in the truth of propositions of which the corresponding
|
+
      concrete term is the predicate."
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.332, "Ordinals", circa 1905.
+
 
 +
2. HIROTUFIR. Handy Indexical Rules Of Thumb Used For Identifying Relatives
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
2.1.  A practical test of whether a property of a thing
 +
      is a relative property of a thing is that one needs
 +
      additional information, beyond that which identifies
 +
      the thing, in order to make a decision about whether
 +
      the thing in question has the property in question.
  
HAPANote 9
+
2.2Let me just throw out this thought:  Words and phrases like
 +
      "ego", "number", "quark", "unicorn", "Starship Enterprise",
 +
      along with all of the rest of the words and phrases that
 +
      we use, have no meaning at all outside of some community,
 +
      context, or framework of interpretation, so all of their
 +
      meanings and all of their specifications on any semantic
 +
      or semiotic feature, like "abstract" or "concrete", are
 +
      relative to the given community, context, or framework
 +
      of interpretation that gives them those meanings and
 +
      those specifications.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===HAPA. Discussion Note 5===
  
| Predicate.
+
<pre>
|
+
BM = Bernard Morand
| The view which pragmatic logic takes of the predicate, in consequence of
+
 
| its assuming that the entire purpose of deductive logic is to ascertain
+
| CSP on HA:  "It consists in taking a feature of a percept
| the necessary conditions of the truth of signs, without any regard to
+
| or percepts (after it has already been prescinded from the
| the accidents of Indo-European grammar, will be here briefly stated.
+
| other elements of the percept), so as to take propositional
| Cf. Negation [CP 2.378-380].
+
| form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon any judgment
|
+
| whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
| In any proposition, i.e., any statement which must be true or false,
+
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another
| let some parts be struck out so that the remnant is not a proposition,
+
| subject, which has a mode of being that merely consists
| but is such that it becomes a proposition when each blank is filled by
+
| in the truth of propositions of which the corresponding
| a proper name.  The erasures are not to be made in a mechanical way, but
+
| concrete term is the predicate."
| with such modifications as may be necessary to preserve the partial sense
+
 
| of the fragment.  Such a residue is a 'predicate'. The same proposition
+
BM: Could you give the source of this passage?
| may be mutilated in various ways so that different fragments will appear
+
 
| as predicates.  Thus, take the proposition "Every man reveres some woman."
+
This came up in the context of several different threads on the SUO and
| This contains the following predicates, among others:
+
Ontology Lists that involved different people's ideas about abstraction:
|
+
Cathy Legg mentioned HA a la Cyc and/or Davidson that piqued my interest,
|    ". . . reveres some woman."
+
but I am still waiting for clarification of its relation to Peirce's HA;
|
+
Matthew West has a distinction between the categories of <abstract_object>
|    ". . . is either not a man or reveres some woman."
+
and <possible_individual> in his Lifecycle Integration Schema, a datamodel
|
+
and/or ontology that is currently being considered by the SUO working group;
|    "Any previously selected man reveres . . ."
+
John Sowa dreams of a divine apportionment of every thing between the domain
|
+
of Physical Earth and the realm of Abstract Heaven in his Philosophy, Horatio.
|    "Any previously selected man is . . ."
+
 
|
+
Here is the stem cell of the LIS filiation:
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.358, in dictionary entry for "Predicate",
 
| J.M. Baldwin (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy & Psychology', vol. 2, pp. 325-326.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
LIS.  Lifecycle Integration Schema -- Matthew West
  
HAPANote 10
+
01http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10712.html
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Here are the links to the source materials
 +
and discussion notes that have accumulated
 +
up to this point on HA and PA:
  
| Relatives Of Second Intention
+
HAPA.  Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction
|
+
 
| The general method of graphical representation of propositions has now
+
01.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05089.html -- Cain and Abel
| been given in all its essential elements, except, of course, that we
+
02http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05090.html -- Dormative Virtue
| have not, as yet, studied any truths concerning special relatives;
+
03http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html -- Honey is Sweet
| for to do so would seem, at first, to be "extralogical"Logic in
+
04.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05093.html -- Math Abstraction
| this stage of its development may be called 'paradisaical logic',
+
05.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05100.html -- Reading Runes
| because it represents the state of Man's cognition before the
+
06http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05101.html -- Hypostatization
| FallFor although, with this apparatus, it easy to write
+
07.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05105.html -- Abstract Objects
| propositions necessarily true, it is absolutely impossible
+
08.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05108.html -- Subjectal Abstraction
| to write any which is necessarily false, or, in any way
+
 
| which that stage of logic affords, to find out that
+
D1.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05092.html -- Metaphormazes
| anything is falseThe mind has not as yet eaten
+
D2.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05110.html -- Deciduation Problems
| of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Truth
+
D3.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05111.html -- Recapitulation
| and Falsity.
+
D4http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05112.html -- Key To Abstraction
|
+
D5. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05113.html -- Self Reference?
| Probably it will not be doubted that every child in
+
 
| its mental development necessarily passes through
+
The passage that you mention is quoted initially at No. 3, and
| a stage in which he has some ideas, but yet has
+
it is discussed further at D1, D3, D4, and prospectively at D5.
| never recognised that an idea may be erroneous;
+
 
| and a stage that every child necessarily passes
+
Have to break fast for breakfast as I am still semi-asleep ...
| through must have been formerly passed through
 
| by the race in its adult developmentIt may
 
| be doubted whether many of the lower animals
 
| have any clear and steady conception of
 
| falsehood; for their instincts work
 
| so unerringly that there is little
 
| to force it upon their attention.
 
| Yet plainly without a knowledge
 
| of falsehood no development
 
| of discursive reason can
 
| take place.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.488,
 
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
 
| pp. 161-217, 1897.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM = Bernard Morand
  
HAPA. Note 11
+
BM: I wonder whether Peirce is refering here to second
 +
    intention or namely to hypostatic abstraction (HA).
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM: If we take as a starting case:
  
| Relatives Of Second Intention (cont.)
+
    (1) "Opium puts to sleep",
|
 
| This paradisaical logic appears in the study of non-relative formal logic.
 
| But 'there' no possible avenue appears by which the knowledge of falsehood
 
| could be brought into this Garden of Eden except by the arbitrary and
 
| inexplicable introduction of the Serpent in the guise of a proposition
 
| necessarily false.  The logic of relatives affords such an avenue,
 
| and 'that', the very avenue by which in actual development,
 
| this stage of logic supervenes.  It is the avenue of
 
| experience and logical reflexion.
 
|
 
| By 'logical' reflexion, I mean the observation of thoughts
 
| in their expressions.  Aquinas remarked that this sort of
 
| reflexion is requisite to furnish us with those ideas
 
| which, from lack of contrast, ordinary external
 
| experience fails to bring into prominence.
 
| He called such ideas 'second intentions'.
 
|
 
| It is by means of 'relatives of second intention'
 
| that the general method of logical representation
 
| is to find completion.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.489-490,
 
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'The Monist', vol. 7,
 
| pp. 161-217, 1897.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
    in order to transform it by HA, we get:
  
HAPA. Note 12
+
    (2) "Opium has a dormitive virtue".
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM: I see it as the transformation of a fact into
 +
    a more abstract concept, or say something like
 +
    "opium has the general property of putting to sleep".
 +
    It is hypostatic in the sense that it requires no further
 +
    proposition than (1) and that the transformation relies on
 +
    an "ens rationis".  But from (2) we can also get for example:
  
| One branch of deductive logic, of which from the nature of
+
    (3) "this discourse has a dormitive virtue",
| things ordinary logic could give no satisfactory account,
 
| relates to the vitally important matter of abstraction.
 
|
 
| Indeed, the student of ordinary logic naturally regards abstraction,
 
| or the passage from "the rose smells sweet" to "the rose has perfume",
 
| to be a quasi-grammatical matter, calling for little or no notice from
 
| the logician.  The fact is, however, that almost every great step in
 
| mathematical reasoning derives its importance from the fact that it
 
| involves an abstraction.
 
|
 
| For by means of abstraction, the transitory elements of thought,
 
| the 'epea pteroenta' [winged words], are made substantive elements,
 
| as James terms them, 'epea apteroenta' [plucked words].*  It thus
 
| becomes possible to study their relations and to apply to these
 
| relations discoveries already made respecting analogous relations.
 
| In this way, for example, operations become themselves the subjects
 
| of operations.
 
|
 
|* William James, 'Principles of Psychology', vol. 1, p. 243.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.642, in dictionary entry for "Relatives",
 
| J.M. Baldwin (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy & Psychology', vol. 2, pp. 447-450.
 
  
Incidental Musement:
+
    which requires a second subject (a fact about discourse).
 +
    I would be tempted to call this latter transformation
 +
    second intention, and it seems to fit with your quote
 +
    before.  But going from (2) to (3) doesn't seem to be
 +
    an hypostatic abstraction stricly speaking.
  
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Hom.+Il.+1.172
+
BM: Thanks for throwing some light on this if possible.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===HAPA. Discussion Note 6===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
BM = Bernard Morand
 +
 
 +
The genealogy of this circle of thoughts goes a bit like this:
 +
 
 +
| Bentham's "Theory of Fictions" begat (paraphrastically)
 +
| Schönfinkel's "Bausteine" and this begat (independently)
 +
| Church's "Lambda Calculus" and this begat (in good time)
 +
| McCarthy's "Lisp" and all the rest is AI and IEEE ...
 +
 
 +
It is no accident, at least not from the right "state of information" (SOI),
 +
how lambda abstraction got its tale, as it is truly most pertinently tagged.
 +
It is said that the lambda came from Russell('s) and Whitehead's employment
 +
of a caret (^) to mark a cousin operation of relational conversion, but let
 +
me try to look that up later. At any rate, the main idea has been stock in
 +
trade of mathematics for as long as anybody can remember, and in philosophy
 +
more generally (or vaguely, I can never remember which) the laurel is often
 +
placed on Bentham for his idea of paraphrasis. Here's a general/vague link:
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/b/bentham.htm
  
HAPA. Note 13
+
What we see here is the very same thing going on
 +
in the colloquial homilies that Peirce attempted
 +
to use to adumbrate the spirit of abstraction in
 +
the formal sciences.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM: I wonder whether Peirce is refering here to second
 +
    intention or namely to hypostatic abstraction (HA).
  
 +
BM: If we take as a starting case:
  
 +
    (1) "Opium puts to sleep",
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
    in order to transform it by HA, we get:
  
HAPA. Discussion Note 1
+
    (2) "Opium has a dormitive virtue".
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Here is the diagram that I drew for the analogous case
 +
of "virtus dulcitiva", in lay terminology, "sweetness".
  
 
Referring to a few of Peirce's standard discussions
 
Referring to a few of Peirce's standard discussions
Line 2,012: Line 2,118:
 
  o        o  o
 
  o        o  o
 
  h        h  s
 
  h        h  s
 +
 +
Figs.  Are Sweet.  If served in season.  At just the right temps.
  
 
The chief thing about this form of grammatical transformation is that we
 
The chief thing about this form of grammatical transformation is that we
Line 2,019: Line 2,127:
 
new subject of the new predicate.
 
new subject of the new predicate.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM: I see it as the transformation of a fact into a more abstract concept, or
 +
    say something like "opium has the general property of putting to sleep".
 +
 
 +
Sticking, sweetly, if you will, to the notion that a concept is a mental symbol,
 +
some might say that a sufficently "precise" abstract concept is already present
 +
in the predicate "is_sweet", but HA takes a step beyond that, as some would say,
 +
onto the flypaper of "abstract but substantial objects" like 'virtus dulcitiva'.
 +
 
 +
BM: It is hypostatic in the sense that it requires no further
 +
    proposition than (1) and that the transformation relies on
 +
    an "ens rationis".
  
HAPA. Discussion Note 2
+
Yes, this is the critical observation.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM: But from (2) we can also get for example:
  
Abstractions And Their Deciduation Problems
+
    (3) "this discourse has a dormitive virtue",
  
I have studied mathematics one way or another most of my life,
+
    which requires a second subject (a fact about discourse).
and mathematics is nothing if not the study of abstract objects,
 
yet I do not believe that I am ready to venture my own definition
 
of "abstract object", not just yet, and I honestly do not know if
 
I ever will be, but what I have been attempting intermittently to
 
do all this while is to transmit the sort of information that the
 
typical backwoodsman in the wild wold of logic and mathematics
 
might regard as being analogous to a botanical key, useful in
 
recognizing various species of abstract objects, with which
 
I can genuinely say that I have some acquaintance, although
 
I would prefer to defer, in my reference, in my reverence,
 
to ones who I know know vastly more. So forgive a quote:
 
  
| To most otherwise "forest-minded" folk, the approach of autumn
+
This is known as "application of the abstraction to another argument",
| with its showers of many-colored leaves, spells the end of the
+
and it is analogous to the other half of the lambda calculus paradigm.
| season's activities in the indentification [sic] of deciduous
 
| trees and shrubs.  Without leaves, the members of the forest
 
| community, unless they be relatively large, seem to lose
 
| much of their summer's identity and may even descend to
 
| the level of "brush".  This is in reality not the case,
 
| as may be easily discovered by examining any leafless
 
| twig with a 10-x pocket lens, or even with the naked
 
| eye.  A casual glance at Plate 1 will also serve to
 
| show that woody plants in winter are anything but
 
| featureless.
 
|
 
| Harlow, William M.,
 
|"Twig Key to the Deciduous Woody Plants of Eastern North America",
 
| 4th ed., reprinted in 'Fruit Key and Twig Key to Trees and Shrubs',
 
| Dover, New York, NY, 1959.  Originally published by the author 1954.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM: I would be tempted to call this latter transformation
 +
    second intention, and it seems to fit with your quote
 +
    before.  But going from (2) to (3) doesn't seem to be
 +
    an hypostatic abstraction stricly speaking.
  
HAPA. Discussion Note 3
+
As for the matter of intentional orders, I foggily peirceive
 +
but the clue that it has something to do with the operations
 +
that I throw together under the name of "reflection", and by
 +
this plurality of reflection to say I abstract some fraction
 +
of my action's contentious tensor that here-to-fore had been
 +
too obsistently refractory to all of my previous reflections.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM: Thanks for throwing some light on this if possible.
  
I think that it would be useful at this time to run back through
+
And thank you for a very peirceptive set of questions.
one of Peirce's best descriptions of the two kinds of abstraction,
+
</pre>
and try to tackle it line by line.
 
  
The first and simpler type of abstraction is "prescisive abstraction" --
+
===HAPA. Discussion Note 7===
where here I have taken something like the running average of several
 
different spellings of the term -- that merely extracts or selectively
 
attends to a feature or a property of a more concrete object.  In this
 
case one passes from an object to one of its properties, very analogous
 
to the sort of mathematical operation that is usually called "projection".
 
Here, one speaks of "prescinding" the property in question from the object,
 
whereby prescisive abstraction acquires the equivalent name of "prescission".
 
  
The second, more substantial type of abstraction is "hypostatic abstraction".
+
<pre>
This is the operation that we regard as bringing the abstract object proper
+
I will pick up from where I left off with Peirce's "sweetness and light"
into being, or into the sphere of human thought, or at least into the frame
+
example, illustrating the difference between prescisive abstraction and
of a particular discussion. In this case one passes from a concrete object
+
hypostatic abstraction, and articulating the relationship between them,
or situation, via a selection of properties, to end with an abstract object.
+
because there are many important things going on all at the same time
 +
in this example that I have yet to sort out and explain clearly enough.
 +
But Bernard Morand's observation about the link to "second intentional"
 +
or "second order" logic is very helpful in drawing out the main ideas.
  
| Look through the modern logical treatises, and you will find that they
+
| CSP on HA:  "It consists in taking a feature of a percept
| almost all fall into one or other of two errors, as I hold them to be;
+
| or percepts (after it has already been prescinded from the
| that of setting aside the doctrine of abstraction (in the sense in
+
| other elements of the percept), so as to take propositional
| which an abstract noun marks an abstraction) as a grammatical topic
+
| form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon any judgment
| with which the logician need not particularly concern himself;  and
+
| whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
| that of confounding abstraction, in this sense, with that operation
+
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another
| of the mind by which we pay attention to one feature of a percept to
+
| subject, which has a mode of being that merely consists
| the disregard of others. The two things are entirely disconnected.
+
| in the truth of propositions of which the corresponding
 +
| concrete term is the predicate."
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
 +
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
 +
|
 +
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html
  
Here Peirce gives a first description of the two types of abstraction
+
As a thematic development in logic, this might be called the "relational turn".
and emphasizes the importance of distinguishing them one from another.
+
It involves a change of perspective that changes how one describes the same
 +
situation, passing from an expression that uses one subject and a monadic
 +
predicate to an expression that uses two subjects and a dyadic predicate.
 +
You can see a graphic illustration of the same sort of thing occurring
 +
in the transition from Euler's circles, that retain a residue of the
 +
asymmetric or inhomogeneous syllogistic form of one subject and one
 +
predicate, to the more symmetric or homogeneous relational form of
 +
the Venn diagram, that expresses a relation between two subjects
 +
in the same intentional order or at the same ontological level.
 +
In category theory, perspectival changes involve the concepts
 +
of "functors" and of "natural transformations" between them.
 +
</pre>
  
| The most ordinary fact of perception, such as "it is light",
+
===HAPA. Discussion Note 8===
| involves 'precisive' abstraction, or 'prescission'.
 
  
In other words, all attention is selective to some degree,
+
<pre>
so any perception, such as that which we typically express
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
by means of the sentence "It is light" involves prescission,
+
JS = John Sowa
a trimming of the whole experience to crop an observed fact.
+
OS = Oliver Sacks
  
| But 'hypostatic' abstraction, the abstraction which transforms
+
Yes, very true, at least about the rhematic abstraction,
| "it is light" into "there is light here", which is the sense
+
which is more or less the same as what Frege described
| which I shall commonly attach to the word abstraction (since
+
by talking of "saturated" and "unsaturated" expressions.
| 'prescission' will do for precisive abstraction) is a very
 
| special mode of thought.
 
  
In the transformation from "It is light" to "There is light here",
+
But still, there seems to be a difference between the
the spelling "light" is transformed from an adjective into a noun.
+
prescisive extraction of the predicate "__ is sweet",
This is the typical grammatical clue that an underlying operation
+
and the hypostatic precipitate of the abstract object
of "hypostatic" or "subjectal" abstraction has been accomplished.
+
"sweetness".  I am still trying to clarify the residue
 +
of what remains a cloudy suspension, but it seems like
 +
this has something to do with the interpretation of the
 +
syntactic abstraction as actually denoting an object,
 +
as a lambda abstraction denotes a real-live function,
 +
an 'ens rationis'.
  
| It consists in taking a feature of a percept or percepts (after it has
+
CP 2.358 is Peirce's Baldwin Dictionary definition of "predicate".
| already been prescinded from the other elements of the percept), so as
+
CP 3.465 is a short summary of these poly-unsaturated "polyads".
| to take propositional form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon
+
CP 3.469 mentions the chemical analogy with "unsaturated bonds".
| any judgment whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
 
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another subject, which
 
| has a mode of being that merely consists in the truth of propositions of
 
| which the corresponding concrete term is the predicate.
 
  
This is very significant.  It marks not just a grammatical
+
JS: I would put Peirce much closer to the beginning of that
transformation that happens to be taking place in a given
+
    process with his writings on relations in the 1870s:
example of hypostatic abstraction, but describes the very
 
form of a certain transformation that took place all along
 
the frontiers of thought in the formal sciences beginning
 
toward the middle of the Nineteenth Century, a development
 
in which C.S. Peirce was a major force and prime expositor.
 
  
But I'll need to save the rest of that story for tomorrow.
+
JA: Bentham's "Theory of Fictions" begat (paraphrastically)
 +
    Schönfinkel's "Bausteine" and this begat (independently)
 +
    Church's "Lambda Calculus" and this begat (in good time)
 +
    McCarthy's "Lisp" and all the rest is AI and IEEE ...
  
Reference:
+
JS: Peirce constructed relational abstractions from sentences
 +
    simply by replacing any constituent with a blank.  He called
 +
    the various constituents "logical subjects".  For example,
 +
    start with an arbitrary sentence that states a proposition:
  
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
+
    John gave a book to Mary.
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
 
|
 
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JS: The proposition as a whole is a medad (0-adic relation).
 +
    By erasing one logical subject, you get a monad or
 +
    monadic relation:
  
HAPA. Discussion Note 4
+
    John gave ____ to Mary.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JS: By erasing two sujects, you get a dyad or dyadic relation:
 
+
 
By way of starting to compile a "key to abstractions and relatives"
+
    ____ gave ____ to Mary.
in the spirit of an old-fashioned field study key, I have gone back
+
 
through our neck of the woulds and gathered these initial specimens:
+
JS: By erasing three subjects, you get a triad or triadic relation:
  
1. HIROTUFIA.  Handy Indexical Rules Of Thumb Used For Identifying Abstractions
+
    ____ gave ____ to ____.
  
1.1.  One of the features that points to an abstract object or
+
JS: Peirce described this process many times in many different places over
      a hypostatic abstraction is its being known by description,
+
    the years, but I don't happen to have any quotations handyHe does
      in other words, by the predicates that are attributed to it
+
    allude to this process in his tutorial on existential graphs:
      in remote reports of some variety, or in the various stories
 
      and theories that are spun about it, instead of being known
 
      more concretely and directly by acquaintanceThat is one
 
      of the marks of all of the things that I mentioned before:
 
      dormitive virtues, egos, numbers, quarks, sweetness, the
 
      Starship Enterprise, and last not not least, unicorns.
 
  
1.2. CSP on HA:  "It consists in taking a feature of a percept
+
JS: http://www.jfsowa.com/peirce/ms514.htm -- Existential Graphs
      or percepts (after it has already been prescinded from the
 
      other elements of the percept), so as to take propositional
 
      form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon any judgment
 
      whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
 
      relation between the subject of that judgment and another
 
      subject, which has a mode of being that merely consists
 
      in the truth of propositions of which the corresponding
 
      concrete term is the predicate."
 
  
2HIROTUFIR.  Handy Indexical Rules Of Thumb Used For Identifying Relatives
+
JS: As another interesting example, following is an excerpt from the
 +
    book 'Seeing Voices' by Oliver SacksHe reports the case of an
 +
    11-year-old deaf boy, who had not had the benefit of sign language
 +
    for his first 10 years:
  
2.1. A practical test of whether a property of a thing
+
OS: Joseph saw, distinguished, categorized, used; he had no problems with
      is a relative property of a thing is that one needs
+
    perceptual categorization or generalization, but he could not, it seemed,
      additional information, beyond that which identifies
+
    go much beyond this, hold abstract ideas in mind, reflect, play, plan.
      the thing, in order to make a decision about whether
+
    He seemed completely literal -— unable to juggle images or hypotheses
      the thing in question has the property in question.
+
    or possibilities, unable to enter an imaginative or figurative realm ...
 +
    He seemed, like an animal, or an infant, to be stuck in the present,
 +
    to be confined to literal and immediate perception, though made
 +
    aware of this by a consciousness that no infant could have.
  
2.2.  Let me just throw out this thought: Words and phrases like
+
JS: This example highlights the importance of language in abstraction.
      "ego", "number", "quark", "unicorn", "Starship Enterprise",
+
</pre>
      along with all of the rest of the words and phrases that
 
      we use, have no meaning at all outside of some community,
 
      context, or framework of interpretation, so all of their
 
      meanings and all of their specifications on any semantic
 
      or semiotic feature, like "abstract" or "concrete", are
 
      relative to the given community, context, or framework
 
      of interpretation that gives them those meanings and
 
      those specifications.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===HAPA. Discussion Note 9===
  
HAPA. Discussion Note 5
+
<pre>
 +
"Inhomogeneopus", you say? -- That's Greek for "having two left feet".
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Here's a corrected version:
  
BM = Bernard Morand
+
As a thematic development in logic, this might be called the "relational turn".
 +
It involves a change of perspective that changes how one describes the same
 +
situation, passing from an expression that uses one subject and a monadic
 +
predicate to an expression that uses two subjects and a dyadic predicate.
 +
You can see a graphic illustration of the same sort of thing occurring
 +
in the transition from Euler's circles, that retain a residue of the
 +
asymmetric or inhomogeneous syllogistic form of one subject and one
 +
predicate, to the more symmetric or homogeneous relational form of
 +
the Venn diagram, that expresses a relation between two subjects
 +
in the same intentional order or at the same ontological level.
 +
In category theory, perspectival changes involve the concepts
 +
of "functors" and of "natural transformations" between them.
  
| CSP on HA:  "It consists in taking a feature of a percept
+
I think I'll while away the morning by copying out the very
| or percepts (after it has already been prescinded from the
+
instructive passages from Peirce that I mentioned last time:
| other elements of the percept), so as to take propositional
 
| form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon any judgment
 
| whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
 
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another
 
| subject, which has a mode of being that merely consists
 
| in the truth of propositions of which the corresponding
 
| concrete term is the predicate."
 
  
BM: Could you give the source of this passage?
+
| CP 2.358 is Peirce's Baldwin Dictionary definition of "predicate".
 +
| CP 3.465 is a short summary of these poly-unsaturated "polyads".
 +
| CP 3.469 mentions the chemical analogy with "unsaturated bonds".
 +
</pre>
  
This came up in the context of several different threads on the SUO and
+
===HAPA. Discussion Note 10===
Ontology Lists that involved different people's ideas about abstraction:
 
Cathy Legg mentioned HA a la Cyc and/or Davidson that piqued my interest,
 
but I am still waiting for clarification of its relation to Peirce's HA;
 
Matthew West has a distinction between the categories of <abstract_object>
 
and <possible_individual> in his Lifecycle Integration Schema, a datamodel
 
and/or ontology that is currently being considered by the SUO working group;
 
John Sowa dreams of a divine apportionment of every thing between the domain
 
of Physical Earth and the realm of Abstract Heaven in his Philosophy, Horatio.
 
  
Here is the stem cell of the LIS filiation:
+
<pre>
 +
There are a several things of note that leap to mind
 +
in reading Peirce's dictionary entry for "Predicate":
  
LIS. Lifecycle Integration Schema -- Matthew West
+
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11239.html
  
01http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10712.html
+
1It is not so much a definition in the sense of stating logically
 +
    necessary and sufficient conditions for a thing to be a predicate
 +
    as it is a "key", an operational definition that tells you how to
 +
    recognize a predicate if you encounter one in the wild, or better
 +
    yet, a "recipe", a sequence of instructions that tells you how to
 +
    construct all the examples of predicates that you might ever need.
  
Here are the links to the source materials
+
2.  It is clear that we are looking at one of the precursors of what
and discussion notes that have accumulated
+
    would in the fullness of time became a standard socket wrench in
up to this point on HA and PA:
+
    the AI toolbox, namely, frame-&-slot-&-filler systems.  Peirce's
 +
    objection to this precursory distinction would probably take the
 +
    form of a long list of proto-precursors from which he would say
 +
    that he borrowed the tool, or derived the materials to build it.
  
HAPAHypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction
+
3It is clear, too, that the precursor has already given rather
 +
    more thought to the nature of the rhematic construction than
 +
    most of his postcursors have yet to do.  For example, Peirce
 +
    advises "The erasures are not to be made in a mechanical way,
 +
    but with such modifications as may be necessary to preserve
 +
    the partial sense of the fragment".  This means that the
 +
    construction of the predicate is not a purely syntactic
 +
    operation, whereby one perforates in a perfunctory way
 +
    one isolated sentence at a time, but instead a fully
 +
    sign-relational (referential, semiotic, or pragmatic)
 +
    operation, working on whole equivalence classes of
 +
    sentences at a time.
 +
</pre>
  
01. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05089.html -- Cain and Abel
+
===HAPA. Discussion Note 11===
02.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05090.html -- Dormative Virtue
 
03.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html -- Honey is Sweet
 
04.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05093.html -- Math Abstraction
 
05.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05100.html -- Reading Runes
 
06.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05101.html -- Hypostatization
 
07.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05105.html -- Abstract Objects
 
08.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05108.html -- Subjectal Abstraction
 
  
D1.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05092.html -- Metaphormazes
+
<pre>
D2.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05110.html -- Deciduation Problems
+
"You can't get there from here"
D3.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05111.html -- Recapitulation
 
D4.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05112.html -- Key To Abstraction
 
D5.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05113.html -- Self Reference?
 
  
The passage that you mention is quoted initially at No. 3, and
+
Let us recall why we might be interested in Peirce's
it is discussed further at D1, D3, D4, and prospectively at D5.
+
formulation of "hypostatic abstraction" (HA), a term
 +
that he cannot be blamed for coining because he only
 +
borrowed it from established traditions of prior use.
  
Have to break fast for breakfast as I am still semi-asleep ...
+
The concept of an "abstract object" is dreamt of in
 +
many of our faniced and our favored ontologies, the
 +
theories of what is and the theories of what may be
 +
that we strain to snatch from out the thin air into
 +
which, so we dream, they were erstwhile disappeared,
 +
and by this dream to say we are led to believe that
 +
these "abstract objects" can be recognized by their
 +
lack of existence in space and time, or so they say.
  
BM = Bernard Morand
+
Now, asking for enlightenment about abstract objects
 +
and being told that their distinctive characteristic
 +
is their failure to exist in space and time, and not
 +
just our space and time -- as if to say "they're not
 +
from around here" -- but their remove from all space
 +
and time -- as if to say "they're not from anywhere" --
 +
is just about as useful as asking for directions and
 +
being wrily informed "you can't get there from here".
  
BM: I wonder whether Peirce is refering here to second
+
Whatever else you say about this description of abstract objects,
    intention or namely to hypostatic abstraction (HA).
+
for instance, whether it's true or false to its ostensible object --
 +
for who, indeed, could demonstrate the fact one way or the other? --
 +
this is not what is commonly meant by an "operational definition",
 +
since there is no hint of a feasible operation that is used in it,
 +
no where, no when, no how.
  
BM: If we take as a starting case:
+
So the search continues for a key or a recipe to abstract objects.
 +
</pre>
  
    (1) "Opium puts to sleep",
+
==HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction &bull; Work Area==
  
    in order to transform it by HA, we get:
+
===HAPA. Work Area 1===
  
    (2) "Opium has a dormitive virtue".
+
<pre>
  
BM: I see it as the transformation of a fact into
+
Subj: Re: ification
    a more abstract concept, or say something like
+
Date:  Mon, 13 Nov 2000 16:16:02 -0500
    "opium has the general property of putting to sleep".
+
From:  Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
    It is hypostatic in the sense that it requires no further
+
  To:  Stand Up Ontology <standard-upper-ontology@ieee.org>
    proposition than (1) and that the transformation relies on
 
    an "ens rationis". But from (2) we can also get for example:
 
  
    (3) "this discourse has a dormitive virtue",
+
Just enough time to insert a genealogical note:
  
    which requires a second subject (a fact about discourse).
+
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/b/bentham.htm
    I would be tempted to call this latter transformation
 
    second intention, and it seems to fit with your quote
 
    before. But going from (2) to (3) doesn't seem to be
 
    an hypostatic abstraction stricly speaking.
 
  
BM: Thanks for throwing some light on this if possible.
+
Bentham's "Theory of Fictions" begat (paraphrastically)
 +
Schönfinkel's "Bausteine" and this begat (independently)
 +
Church's "Lambda Calculus" and this begat (in good time)
 +
McCarthy's "Lisp" and all the rest is AI and IEEE ...
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
By way of stuffing the e-lectural ballot boxes just a little bit better
 +
I will attach here some bits of an ongoing dialectric that a few of the
 +
denizens of the Peirce List, most especially Tom Gollier and yours truly,
 +
have been carrying on intermittently for quite some time now, regarding
 +
this most atmospheric of all topics of our current concern, to wit, the
 +
question of hypostatic electricity, of how or whether it can ever stick.
  
HAPA. Discussion Note 6
+
This will also serve to throw a new synonym into the mix:  "subjectal abstraction".
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Subj:  Re: Varieties of Abstraction
 +
Date:  Thu, 15 Jun 2000 01:23:31 -0400
 +
From:  Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
 +
  To:  TGollier@aol.com
  
BM = Bernard Morand
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
 +
TG = Tom Gollier
  
The genealogy of this circle of thoughts goes a bit like this:
+
TG: I knew there was no sense getting carried away until you'd had a chance
 +
    to straighten out the context, and your mathematical orientation, which
 +
    is not foreign to Peirce's either, was clear in our previous exchanges
 +
    on the list.  But I don't think mathematicians are to be trusted in
 +
    this regard;  not from any moral flaw in their characters but
 +
    because they're treating this subject of generalization
 +
    within an abstract realm, and hence they feel no need
 +
    or compulsion to make a distinction between the two.
  
| Bentham's "Theory of Fictions" begat (paraphrastically)
+
JA: For me, generalization begins in a fairly concrete realm --
| Schönfinkel's "Bausteine" and this begat (independently)
+
    I take "concrete" to mean "grown together", suggesting the
| Church's "Lambda Calculus" and this begat (in good time)
+
    concrescence of attributes or the fusion of features that
| McCarthy's "Lisp" and all the rest is AI and IEEE ...
+
    go to constitute a definite, particulate, and vivid object --
 +
    the action passes through a series of mental affections or
 +
    cognitive impressions -- the only place where such a passage
 +
    is possible without actually destroying the original object --
 +
    toward a conceptual symbol that has a more abstract reference,
 +
    to wit, a selection of the attributes, characters, features,
 +
    marks, or properties that were initially conceived to make up
 +
    the object.  There is a common form to this general direction
 +
    of thought, whether the objects are apples and oranges being
 +
    generalized under the nomen of fruits, or whether the objects
 +
    are numbers under addition and numbers under multiplication
 +
    being generalized under the the nomen of groups.
  
It is no accident, at least not from the right "state of information" (SOI),
+
JA: Generalization is a relative notion, and there is no more need
how lambda abstraction got its tale, as it is truly most pertinently tagged.
+
    for an absolute ground here than there is for a non-inferential
It is said that the lambda came from Russell('s) and Whitehead's employment
+
    perception at the origin of thought. But the distinction between
of a caret (^) to mark a cousin operation of relational conversion, but let
+
    precisive (or prescindive) abstraction and hypostatic (or subjectal)
me try to look that up later.  At any rate, the main idea has been stock in
+
    abstraction is independent of how abstracted already, how far along
trade of mathematics for as long as anybody can remember, and in philosophy
+
    the continuum or the spectrum of abstraction, happens to be the object
more generally (or vaguely, I can never remember which) the laurel is often
+
    of thought with which one begins.
placed on Bentham for his idea of paraphrasis. Here's a general/vague link:
 
  
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/b/bentham.htm
+
JA: Again, hypostatic abstraction is a two-edged sword -- a "subject"
 +
    is now and henceforth "supposed" to "stand its own ground beneath"
 +
    the flight of sorcery of the nominal property that is prescinded
 +
    by the flightier fancy of generalization.
  
What we see here is the very same thing going on
+
JA: This occurs in concrete domains and in vivid realms as much as in the
in the colloquial homilies that Peirce attempted
+
    other sort, if there is any other sort.  For instance, I do not know
to use to adumbrate the spirit of abstraction in
+
    you as a person, in person, and all I know of you are these signs
the formal sciences.
+
    that issue from my computer under your name.  Naturally, I suppose
 +
    that there is a person who stands behind them, someone who is indeed
 +
    responsible for their generation, as their hypothetical perpetrator --
 +
    this is my act of "hypostation", or abstractive hypostasis -- in one of
 +
    its senses, and this is no accident, "hypostasis" = "person", and anyone
 +
    can look it up!  The supposition of a person, an interpretive performer,
 +
    who generates the signs that one passively interprets, indeed, the very
 +
    supposition that there is a person called onself who affords the medium,
 +
    gives a local habitation and a name, and lends a substance to all of the
 +
    signs that constitute the experiences that one calls one's own, well,
 +
    those are acts of "drawing away to stand under" that are fundamental
 +
    to our "under-standing" of ourselves, however fallible, malfeasant,
 +
    and self-deceptive this form of understanding often is.
  
BM: I wonder whether Peirce is refering here to second
+
JA: Four short paragraphs and I have already put myself to sleep --
     intention or namely to hypostatic abstraction (HA).
+
    you can supply your own joke about dormitive virtues here --
 +
    I pity the person who finds this stuff in his morning post --
 +
    warning:  do not drive or operate heavy machinery while under
 +
     the influence of this philosophy, or any such stuff as these
 +
    dreams are made on!
  
BM: If we take as a starting case:
+
Subj: Re: Varieties of Abstraction
 +
Date:  Mon, 19 Jun 2000 23:07:04 -0400
 +
From:  Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
 +
  To:  TGollier@aol.com
  
    (1) "Opium puts to sleep",
+
CP = Charles Peirce
 +
JA = Jon Awbrey
  
    in order to transform it by HA, we get:
+
CP: CP 4.332  [Subjectal Abstraction = Hypostatic Abstraction]
  
     (2) "Opium has a dormitive virtue".
+
JA: I think that the relation between 'hypostation', that mode of mental operation
 +
     that passes from a verb in action to a noun in stasis, that turn or that style
 +
    of thoughtful conduct that converts a "way of thinking" (WOT) about some thing
 +
    into a "subject of thought" (SOT) itself, and 'reflection', that "bending back"
 +
    and "folding over" of thought on itself, is strikingly clear in this depiction.
  
Here is the diagram that I drew for the analogous case
+
Subj:  Re: Varieties of Abstraction
of "virtus dulcitiva", in lay terminology, "sweetness".
+
Date:  Thu, 22 Jun 2000 00:24:07 -0400
 +
From:  Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
 +
  To:  TGollier@aol.com
  
Referring to a few of Peirce's standard discussions
+
JA: Now, this is where I came in -- that is, it is just the point that I had reached
of "hypostatic abstraction" (HA), the main thing
+
    in my thinking at the end of last year when I decided to take a little break from
about HA is that it turns an adjective or some
+
    my day to day mental grind to see what sorts of diversion I might find on the web.
part of a predicate into an extra subject,
+
    Little did I know how the play would play out!  But the place in question, where
upping the arity of the main predicate
+
    a peculiar form of reflexive complication found itself tied and once again begins
in the process.
+
    to tighten, is the place where one rises from an ongoing activity, whatever it is,
 +
    to reflect on what one is doing, perhaps with a critical eye, and this is where the
 +
    activity that one was cast into, thrown into, willy nilly, and not entirely awarely,
 +
    begins to appear, by virtue of the reflective image that is formed by the reflection,
 +
    like an object, that is, an objective form of conduct, like a chess game, that one
 +
    can choose to play or not, and even consider how to generalize and how to transform.
  
For example, a typical case of HA occurs in the transformation
+
JA: Not too coincidentally, this is the place where the mental operations that implement
from "honey is sweet" to "honey possesses sweetness", which we
+
    precisive and subjectal abstraction, namely, selection and reflection, respectively,
could choose to represent in several different ways as follows:
+
    begin to highlight the importance that Dewey placed on a favorite couple of words of
 +
    his, namely, "activity" and "reflection".  An ongoing activity gradually acquires an
 +
    activity of reflection as a parallel rider, then the activity of reflection is turned,
 +
    chiasmatically, into a reflection on activity.  As far as I am concerned, this is the
 +
    true significance of hypostatic abstraction, that takes us from a point in medias res,
 +
    of an action that engages us, to a stance that is just a little bit outside the action,
 +
    a change of attitude or a shift of status toward the activity that is marked by our
 +
    ability to name the action or the state of becoming by means of an abstract noun.
  
Sweet(honey) ~~~> Possesses(honey, sweetness)
+
JA: In my case, it is the activity of inquiry that I am wondering how and thus beginning
 +
    to reflect on, and this reflection is a critical component of the inquiry into inquiry.
 +
    That is a very nice description, I think, so far as it goes, but how can I teach this
 +
    skill of reflection to a rock, of the sort that we mine from silicon valley?
  
S(h) ~~~> P(h, s)
+
JA: Like I said, this is where I came in,
 +
    and I seem to be leaving by the very
 +
    same door by which I entered.
  
S          P
+
Previously under this skein, a sampler:
o          o
 
|  ~~~>  |
 
o          o
 
h        <h,s>
 
  
            ^
+
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00739.html
[S]  ~~~>  /P\
+
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00792.html
|        o->-o
+
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00815.html
|        |  | 
+
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00828.html
o        o  o
+
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00829.html
h        h  s
+
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00836.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00892.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00893.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00894.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00933.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00977.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00979.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00980.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01010.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01011.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01680.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01684.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01687.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01689.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01707.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01791.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01837.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01842.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01845.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01858.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01870.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01890.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01891.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01901.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01902.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01931.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01940.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01955.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01964.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01965.html
 +
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01968.html
  
Figs. Are Sweet. If served in season. At just the right temps.
+
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ASC/
 +
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ASC/Reification.html
 +
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ASC/SYSTEM.html
  
The chief thing about this form of grammatical transformation is that we
+
http://www.bestweb.net/~sowa/ontology/
abstract the adjective "sweet" from the main predicate, thus arriving at
+
http://www.bestweb.net/~sowa/ontology/causal.htm
a new, increased-arity predicate "possesses", and as a by-product of the
+
http://www.bestweb.net/~sowa/ontology/mthworld.gif
reaction, as it were, precipitating out the substantive "sweetness" as a
 
new subject of the new predicate.
 
  
BM: I see it as the transformation of a fact into a more abstract concept, or
+
http://www.iso18876.org/
    say something like "opium has the general property of putting to sleep".
+
http://www.nist.gov/sc4/
 +
http://www.iso18876.org/iso18876/
 +
http://www.iso18876.org/architecture/index.html
 +
http://www.pdtsolutions.co.uk/standard/wg10/n307/wg10n307.pdf
  
Sticking, sweetly, if you will, to the notion that a concept is a mental symbol,
+
http://www.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/L75/L75.htm
some might say that a sufficently "precise" abstract concept is already present
 
in the predicate "is_sweet", but HA takes a step beyond that, as some would say,
 
onto the flypaper of "abstract but substantial objects" like 'virtus dulcitiva'.
 
  
BM: It is hypostatic in the sense that it requires no further
+
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/generality.html
    proposition than (1) and that the transformation relies on
+
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node1.html
    an "ens rationis".
+
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node2.html
 +
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node3.html
 +
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node4.html
 +
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node5.html
 +
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node6.html
 +
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node7.html
  
Yes, this is the critical observation.
+
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/design.html
 +
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node1.html
 +
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node2.html
 +
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node3.html
 +
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node4.html
 +
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node5.html
 +
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node6.html
 +
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node15.html
 +
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node16.html
 +
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node17.html
 +
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node18.html
  
BM: But from (2) we can also get for example:
+
http://blather.newdream.net/r/reification.html
 +
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/b/bentham.htm
  
    (3) "this discourse has a dormitive virtue",
+
</pre>
  
    which requires a second subject (a fact about discourse).
+
===HAPA. Work Area 2===
  
This is known as "application of the abstraction to another argument",
+
<pre>
and it is analogous to the other half of the lambda calculus paradigm.
 
  
BM: I would be tempted to call this latter transformation
+
CP 3.642
    second intention, and it seems to fit with your quote
+
CP 4.463-465
    before. But going from (2) to (3) doesn't seem to be
 
    an hypostatic abstraction stricly speaking.
 
  
As for the matter of intentional orders, I foggily peirceive
+
CP 2.358 is Peirce's Baldwin Dictionary definition of "predicate".
but the clue that it has something to do with the operations
+
CP 3.465 is a short summary of these poly-unsaturated "polyads".
that I throw together under the name of "reflection", and by
+
CP 3.469 mentions the chemical analogy with "unsaturated bonds".
this plurality of reflection to say I abstract some fraction
 
of my action's contentious tensor that here-to-fore had been
 
too obsistently refractory to all of my previous reflections.
 
  
BM: Thanks for throwing some light on this if possible.
+
| The most ordinary fact of perception, such as "it is light", involves
 +
| 'precisive' abstraction, or 'prescission'.  But 'hypostatic' abstraction,
 +
| the abstraction which transforms "it is light" into "there is light here",
 +
| which is the sense which I shall commonly attach to the word abstraction
 +
| (since 'prescission' will do for precisive abstraction) is a very special
 +
| mode of thought.  It consists in taking a feature of a percept or percepts
 +
| (after it has already been prescinded from the other elements of the percept),
 +
| so as to take propositional form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon
 +
| any judgment whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
 +
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another subject, which
 +
| has a mode of being that merely consists in the truth of propositions of
 +
| which the corresponding concrete term is the predicate.
 +
|
 +
| Thus, we transform the proposition, "honey is sweet",
 +
| into "honey possesses sweetness".  "Sweetness" might be
 +
| called a fictitious thing, in one sense.  But since the
 +
| mode of being attributed to it 'consists' in no more than
 +
| the fact that some things are sweet, and it is not pretended,
 +
| or imagined, that it has any other mode of being, there is,
 +
| after all, no fiction.  The only profession made is that we
 +
| consider the fact of honey being sweet under the form of a
 +
| relation;  and so we really can.  I have selected sweetness
 +
| as an instance of one of the least useful of abstractions.
 +
| Yet even this is convenient.  It facilitates such thoughts
 +
| as that the sweetness of honey is particularly cloying;
 +
| that the sweetness of honey is something like the
 +
| sweetness of a honeymoon;  etc.
  
And thank you for a very peirceptive set of questions.
+
Reference:
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
HAPA.  Discussion Note 7
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
I will pick up from where I left off with Peirce's "sweetness and light"
 
example, illustrating the difference between prescisive abstraction and
 
hypostatic abstraction, and articulating the relationship between them,
 
because there are many important things going on all at the same time
 
in this example that I have yet to sort out and explain clearly enough.
 
But Bernard Morand's observation about the link to "second intentional"
 
or "second order" logic is very helpful in drawing out the main ideas.
 
  
| CSP on HA:  "It consists in taking a feature of a percept
 
| or percepts (after it has already been prescinded from the
 
| other elements of the percept), so as to take propositional
 
| form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon any judgment
 
| whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
 
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another
 
| subject, which has a mode of being that merely consists
 
| in the truth of propositions of which the corresponding
 
| concrete term is the predicate."
 
|
 
 
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
 
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
 
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
 
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
Line 2,431: Line 2,665:
 
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html
 
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html
  
As a thematic development in logic, this might be called the "relational turn".
+
</pre>
It involves a change of perspective that changes how one describes the same
 
situation, passing from an expression that uses one subject and a monadic
 
predicate to an expression that uses two subjects and a dyadic predicate.
 
You can see a graphic illustration of the same sort of thing occurring
 
in the transition from Euler's circles, that retain a residue of the
 
asymmetric or inhomogeneous syllogistic form of one subject and one
 
predicate, to the more symmetric or homogeneous relational form of
 
the Venn diagram, that expresses a relation between two subjects
 
in the same intentional order or at the same ontological level.
 
In category theory, perspectival changes involve the concepts
 
of "functors" and of "natural transformations" between them.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
==JITL. Just In Time Logic==
  
HAPA. Discussion Note 8
+
===JITL. Note 1===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 
+
| [On Time and Thought, MS 215, 08 Mar 1873]
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
|
JS = John Sowa
+
| Every mind which passes from doubt to belief must have ideas which follow
OS = Oliver Sacks
+
| after one another in time.  Every mind which reasons must have ideas which
 
+
| not only follow after others but are caused by them.  Every mind which is
Yes, very true, at least about the rhematic abstraction,
+
| capable of logical criticism of its inferences, must be aware of this
which is more or less the same as what Frege described
+
| determination of its ideas by previous ideas.  But is it pre-supposed
by talking of "saturated" and "unsaturated" expressions.
+
| in the conception of a logical mind, that the temporal succession in
 
+
| its ideas is continuous, and not by discrete steps?  A continuum such
But still, there seems to be a difference between the
+
| as we suppose time and space to be, is defined as something any part
prescisive extraction of the predicate "__ is sweet",
+
| of which itself has parts of the same kind.  So that the point of time
and the hypostatic precipitate of the abstract object
+
| or the point of space is nothing but the ideal limit towards which we
"sweetness"I am still trying to clarify the residue
+
| approach, but which we can never reach in dividing time or space;  and
of what remains a cloudy suspension, but it seems like
+
| consequently nothing is true of a pointmical which is not true of a space or
this has something to do with the interpretation of the
+
| a time.  A discrete quantum, on the other hand, has ultimate parts which
syntactic abstraction as actually denoting an object,
+
| differ from any other part of the quantum in their absolute separation from
as a lambda abstraction denotes a real-live function,
+
| one another.  If the succession of images in the mind is by discrete steps,
an 'ens rationis'.
+
| time for that mind will be made up of indivisible instants.  Any one idea
 
+
| will be absolutely distinguished from every other idea by its being present
CP 2.358 is Peirce's Baldwin Dictionary definition of "predicate".
+
| only in the passing moment.  And the same idea can not exist in two different
CP 3.465 is a short summary of these poly-unsaturated "polyads".
+
| moments, however similar the ideas felt in the two different moments may, for
CP 3.469 mentions the chemical analogy with "unsaturated bonds".
+
| the sake of argument, be allowed to be.  Now an idea exists only so far as the
 +
| mind thinks it;  and only when it is present to the mind.  An idea therefore
 +
| has no characters or qualities but what the mind thinks of it at the time
 +
| when it is present to the mind.  It follows from this that if the succession
 +
| of time were by separate steps, no idea could resemble another;  for these
 +
| ideas if they are distinct, are present to the mind at different times.
 +
| Therefore at no time when one is present to the mind, is the other present.
 +
| Consequently the mind never compares them nor thinks them to be alike;  and
 +
| consequently they are not alike;  since they are only what they are thought
 +
| to be at the time when they are present. It may be objected that though the
 +
| mind does not directly think them to be alike;  yet it may think together
 +
| reproductions of them, and thus think them to be alike.  This would be a
 +
| valid objection were it not necessary, in the first place, in order that
 +
| one idea should be the representative of another, that it should resemble
 +
| that idea, which it could only do by means of some representation of it
 +
| again, and so on to infinity;  the link which is to bind the first two
 +
| together which are to be pronounced alike, never being found.  In short
 +
| the resemblance of ideas implies that some two ideas are to be thought
 +
| together which are present to the mind at different times.  And this
 +
| never can be, if instants are separated from one another by absolute
 +
| stepsThis conception is therefore to be abandoned, and it must be
 +
| acknowledged to be already presupposed in the conception of a logical
 +
| mind that the flow of time should be continuous.  Let us consider then
 +
| how we are to conceive what is present to the mind.  We are accustomed
 +
| to say that nothing is present but a fleeting instant, a point of time.
 +
| But this is a wrong view of the matter because a point differs in no
 +
| respect from a space of time, except that it is the ideal limit which,
 +
| in the division of time, we never reach.  It can not therefore be that
 +
| it differs from an interval of time in this respect that what is present
 +
| is only in a fleeting instant, and does not occupy a whole interval of
 +
| time, unless what is present be an ideal something which can never be
 +
| reached, and not something real.  The true conception is, that ideas
 +
| which succeed one another during an interval of time, become present
 +
| to the mind through the successive presence of the ideas which occupy
 +
| the parts of that time. So that the ideas which are present in each
 +
| of these parts are more immediately present, or rather less mediately
 +
| present than those of the whole time.  And this division may be carried
 +
| to any extent. But you never reach an idea which is quite immediately
 +
| present to the mind, and is not made present by the ideas which occupy
 +
| the parts of the time that it occupies.  Accordingly, it takes time
 +
| for ideas to be present to the mind.  They are present during a time.
 +
| And they are present by means of the presence of the ideas which are
 +
| in the parts of that time. Nothing is therefore present to the mind
 +
| in an instant, but only during a time.  The events of a day are less
 +
| mediately present to the mind than the events of a year;  the events
 +
| of a second less mediately present than the events of a day.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 68-70.
 +
|
 +
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 215, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 68-71 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
JS: I would put Peirce much closer to the beginning of that
+
===JITL. Note 2===
    process with his writings on relations in the 1870s:
 
  
JA: Bentham's "Theory of Fictions" begat (paraphrastically)
+
<pre>
    Schönfinkel's "Bausteine" and this begat (independently)
+
| [On Time and Thought, MS 215, 08 Mar 1873] (cont.)
    Church's "Lambda Calculus" and this begat (in good time)
+
|
    McCarthy's "Lisp" and all the rest is AI and IEEE ...
+
| It remains to show that, adopting this conception, the possibility of the
 +
| resemblance of two ideas becomes intelligible;  and that therefore it is not
 +
| inconceivable that one idea should follow after another, according to a general
 +
| rule.  In the first place, then, it is to be observed that under this conception,
 +
| two ideas may be both present to the mind during a longer interval, while they are
 +
| separately present in shorter intervals which make up the longer interval.  During
 +
| this longer interval they are present to the mind as different.  They are thought
 +
| as different.  And this longer interval embraces still shorter intervals than
 +
| those hitherto considered, during which there are ideas which agree in the
 +
| respects which are defined by each of the two ideas, which are seen to be
 +
| different.  During the longer interval therefore, the ideas of these shortest
 +
| intervals are thought as partly alike and partly different.  There is therefore
 +
| no difficulty in the conception of the resemblance of ideas.  Let us now see what
 +
| is necessary in order that ideas should determine one another, and that the mind
 +
| should be aware that they determine one another.  In order that there should be
 +
| any likeness among ideas, it is necessary that during an interval of time there
 +
| should be some constant element in thought or feeling.  If I imagine something
 +
| red, it requires a certain time for me to do so.  And if the other elements
 +
| of the image vary during that time, in one part it must be invariable, it
 +
| must be constantly red.  And therefore it is proper to say that the idea
 +
| of red is present to the mind at every instant.  For we are not now saying
 +
| that an idea is present to the mind in an instant in the objectionable sense
 +
| which has been referred to above, according to which an instant would differ
 +
| from an interval of time;  but we are only saying that the idea is present at
 +
| an instant, in the sense that it is present in every part of a certain interval
 +
| of time;  however short that part may be.  The first thing that is requisite
 +
| therefore to a logical mind, is that there should be elements of thought which
 +
| are present at instants in this sense.  The second thing that is requisite is,
 +
| that what is present one instant should have an effect upon what is present
 +
| during the lapse of time which follows that instant.  This effect can only be
 +
| a reproduction of a part of what was present at the instant;  because what is
 +
| present at the instant, is present during an interval of time during the whole
 +
| of which the effect will be present.  And therefore since all that is present
 +
| during this interval is present at each instant, it follows that the effect
 +
| of what is present at each instant is present at that instant.  So that this
 +
| effect is a part of the idea which produces it.  In other words, it is merely
 +
| a reproduction of a part of that idea.  This effect is memory, in its most
 +
| elementary form.  But something more than this is required in order that the
 +
| conclusion shall be produced from a premiss;  namely, an effect produced by
 +
| the succession of one idea upon another.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 70-71.
 +
|
 +
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 215, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 68-71 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
JS: Peirce constructed relational abstractions from sentences
+
===JITL. Note 3===
    simply by replacing any constituent with a blank. He called
 
    the various constituents "logical subjects".  For example,
 
    start with an arbitrary sentence that states a proposition:
 
  
    John gave a book to Mary.
+
<pre>
 
+
| [On Time and Thought, MS 216, 08 Mar 1873]
JS: The proposition as a whole is a medad (0-adic relation).
+
|
    By erasing one logical subject, you get a monad or
+
| Any mind which has the power of investigation, and which therefore passes from
    monadic relation:
+
| doubt to belief, must have its ideas follow after one another in time. And if
 
+
| there is to be any distinction of a right and a wrong method of investigation,
    John gave ____ to Mary.
+
| it must have some control over the process. So that there must be such a thing
 
+
| as the production of one idea from another which was previously in the mind.
JS: By erasing two sujects, you get a dyad or dyadic relation:
+
| This is what takes place in reasoning, where the conclusion is brought into the
 
+
| mind by the premisses.  We may imagine a mind which should reason and never know
    ____ gave ____ to Mary.
+
| that it reasoned;  never being aware that its conclusion was a conclusion, or was
 
+
| derived from anything which went before.  For such a mind there might be a right
JS: By erasing three subjects, you get a triad or triadic relation:
+
| and a wrong method of thinking;  but it could not be aware that there was such
 
+
| a distinction, nor criticize in any degree its own operations.  To be capable of
    ____ gave ____ to ____.
+
| logical criticism, the mind must be aware that one idea is determined by another.
 
+
| Now when this happens after the first idea comes the second. There is a process
JS: Peirce described this process many times in many different places over
+
| which can only take place in a space of time;  but an idea is not present to the
    the years, but I don't happen to have any quotations handyHe does
+
| mind during a space of time -- at least not during a space of time in which this
    allude to this process in his tutorial on existential graphs:
+
| idea is replaced by another;  for when the moment of its being present is passed,
 
+
| it is no longer in the mind at all. Therefore, the fact that one idea succeeds
JS: http://www.jfsowa.com/peirce/ms514.htm -- Existential Graphs
+
| another is not a thing which in itself can be present to the mind, any more than
 
+
| the experiences of a whole day or of a year can be said to be present to the mind.
JS: As another interesting example, following is an excerpt from the
+
| It is something which can be lived through;  but not be present in any one instant;
    book 'Seeing Voices' by Oliver SacksHe reports the case of an
+
| and therefore, which can not be present to the mind at all;  for nothing is present
    11-year-old deaf boy, who had not had the benefit of sign language
+
| but the passing moment, and what it contains. The only way therefore in which we can
    for his first 10 years:
+
| be aware of a process of inference, or of any other process, is by its producing some
 
+
| idea in us.  Not only therefore is it necessary that one idea should produce another;
OS: Joseph saw, distinguished, categorized, used; he had no problems with
+
| but it is also requisite that a mental process should produce an idea.  These three
    perceptual categorization or generalization, but he could not, it seemed,
+
| things must be found in every logical mind:  First, ideas;  second, determinations
    go much beyond this, hold abstract ideas in mind, reflect, play, plan.
+
| of ideas by previous ideas;  third, determinations of ideas by previous processes.
    He seemed completely literal -— unable to juggle images or hypotheses
+
| And nothing will be found which does not come under one of these three heads.
    or possibilities, unable to enter an imaginative or figurative realm ...
+
| The determination of one thing by another, implies that the former not only
    He seemed, like an animal, or an infant, to be stuck in the present,
+
| follows after the latter, but follows after it according to a general rule,
    to be confined to literal and immediate perception, though made
+
| in consequence of which, every such idea would be followed by such a second one.
    aware of this by a consciousness that no infant could have.
+
| There can therefore be no determination of one idea by another except so far as
 +
| ideas can be distributed into classes, or have some resemblancesBut how can
 +
| one idea resemble another?  An idea can contain nothing but what is present to
 +
| the mind in that idea.  Two ideas exist at different times;  consequently what is
 +
| present to the mind in one is present only at that time, and is absent at the time
 +
| when the other idea is present. Literally, therefore, one idea contains nothing
 +
| of another idea;  and in themselves they can have no resemblance. They certainly
 +
| do not resemble one another except so far as the mind can detect a resemblance;
 +
| for they exist only in the mind, and are nothing but what they are thought to
 +
| be.  Now when each is present to the mind the other is not in the mind at all.
 +
| No reference to it is in the mind, and no idea of it is in the mind.  Neither
 +
| idea therefore when it is in the mind, is thought to resemble the other which
 +
| is not present in the mindAnd an idea can not be thought, except when it is
 +
| present in the mind.  And, therefore, one idea can not be thought to resemble
 +
| another, strictly speaking.  In order to escape from this paradox, let us see
 +
| how we have been led into it.  Causation supposes a general rule, and therefore
 +
| similarity.  Now so long as we suppose that what is present to the mind at one
 +
| time is absolutely distinct from what is present to the mind at another time,
 +
| our ideas are absolutely individual, and without any similarity.  It is necessary,
 +
| therefore, that we should conceive a process as present to the mind. And this
 +
| process consists of parts existing at different times and absolutely distinct.
 +
| And during the time that one part is in the mind, the other is not in the mind.
 +
| To unite them, we have to suppose that there is a consciousness running through
 +
| the time.  So that of the succession of ideas which occur in a second of time,
 +
| there is but one consciousness, and of the succession of ideas which occurs in
 +
| a minute of time there is another consciousness, and so on, perhaps indefinitely.
 +
| So that there may be a consciousness of the events that happened in a whole day or
 +
| a whole life time.  According to this, two parts of a process separated in time --
 +
| though they are absolutely separate, in so far as there is a consciousness of the
 +
| one, from which the other is entirely excluded -- are yet so far not separate,
 +
| that there is a more general consciousness of the two together. This conception
 +
| of consciousness is something which takes up time. It seems forced upon us to
 +
| escape the contradictions which we have just encountered. And if consciousness
 +
| has a duration, then there is no such thing as an instantaneous consciousness;
 +
| but all consciousness relates to a process.  And no thought, however simple, is
 +
| at any instant present to the mind in its entirety, but it is something which we
 +
| live through or experience as we do the events of a day.  And as the experiences
 +
| of a day are made up of the experiences of shorter spaces of time so any thought
 +
| whatever is made up of more special thoughts which in their turn are themselves
 +
| made up by others and so on indefinitely.  It may indeed very likely be that there
 +
| is some minimum space of time within which in some sense only an indivisible thought
 +
| can exist and as we know nothing of such a fact at present we may content ourselves
 +
| with the simpler conception of an indefinite continuity in consciousness.  ...
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 72-74.
 +
|
 +
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 216, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 72-75 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
JS: This example highlights the importance of language in abstraction.
+
===JITL. Note 4===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 
+
| [On Time and Thought, MS 216, 08 Mar 1873] (cont.)
HAPADiscussion Note 9
+
|
 
+
| It will easily be seen that when this conception is once grasped the
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| process of the determination of one idea by another becomes explicable.
 +
| What is present to the mind during the whole of an interval of time is
 +
| something generally consisting of what there was in common in what was
 +
| present to the mind during the parts of that interval.  And this may be
 +
| the same with what is present to the mind during any interval of time;
 +
| or if not the same, at least similar -- that is, the two may be such
 +
| that they have much in common.  These two thoughts which are similar
 +
| may be followed by others that are similar and according to a general
 +
| law by which every thought similar to either of these is followed by
 +
| another similar to those by which they are followed.  If a succession
 +
| of thoughts have any thing in common this may belong to every part of
 +
| these thoughts however minute, and therefore it may be said to be present
 +
| at every instant.  This element of consciousness which belongs to a whole
 +
| only so far as it belongs to its parts is termed the matter of thought.
 +
| There is besides this a causation running through our consciousness by
 +
| which the thought of any one moment determines the thought of the next
 +
| moment no matter how minute these moments may be.  And this causation
 +
| is necessarily of the nature of a reproduction;  because if a thought
 +
| of a certain kind continues for a certain length of time as it must
 +
| do to come into consciousness the immediate effect produced by this
 +
| causality must also be present during the whole time, so that it is a
 +
| part of that thought.  Therefore when this thought ceases, that which
 +
| continues after it by virtue of this action is a part of the thought
 +
| itself.  In addition to this there must be an effect produced by the
 +
| following of one idea after a different idea otherwise there would be
 +
| no process of inference except that of the reproduction of the premisses.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 74-75.
 +
|
 +
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 216, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 72-75 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
"Inhomogeneopus", you say? -- That's Greek for "having two left feet".
+
===JITL. Note 5===
  
Here's a corrected version:
+
<pre>
 
+
| [Lecture on Practical Logic, MS 191, Summer-Fall 1872]
As a thematic development in logic, this might be called the "relational turn".
+
|
It involves a change of perspective that changes how one describes the same
+
| I suppose that the fundamental proposition from which all metaphysics
situation, passing from an expression that uses one subject and a monadic
+
| takes its rise is that opinions tend to an ultimate settlement & that
predicate to an expression that uses two subjects and a dyadic predicate.
+
| a predestinate one.  Upon most subjects at least sufficient experience,
You can see a graphic illustration of the same sort of thing occurring
+
| discussion, and reasoning will bring men to an agreement;  and another
in the transition from Euler's circles, that retain a residue of the
+
| set of men by an independent investigation with sufficient experience,
asymmetric or inhomogeneous syllogistic form of one subject and one
+
| discussion, and reasoning will be brought to the same agreement as the
predicate, to the more symmetric or homogeneous relational form of
+
| first set.
the Venn diagram, that expresses a relation between two subjects
+
|
in the same intentional order or at the same ontological level.
+
| Hence we infer that there is something which determines
In category theory, perspectival changes involve the concepts
+
| opinions and which does not depend upon them. To this
of "functors" and of "natural transformations" between them.
+
| we give the name of the 'real'.  Now this 'real' may
 +
| be regarded from two opposite points of view.
 +
|
 +
| In the first place, to say that thought tends to come to a determinate conclusion,
 +
| is to say that it tends to an end or is influenced by a 'final cause'.  This final
 +
| cause, the ultimate opinion, is independent of how you, I, or any number of men
 +
| think.  Let whole generations think as perversely as they will;  they can only
 +
| put off the ultimate opinion but cannot change its character.  So the ultimate
 +
| conclusion is that which determines opinions and does not depend upon them and
 +
| so is the real object of cognition. This is idealism since it supposes the
 +
| real to be of the nature of thought.
 +
|
 +
| But, in the second place, a cause precedes its effect.  And moreover the ultimate
 +
| conclusion though independent of this or that mind is not independent of mind in
 +
| general.  The real, therefore, which determines thought but does not depend upon it,
 +
| is not the last conclusion but the first premiss or what produces the first premiss,--
 +
| a something out of the mind and incommensurable with thought.
 +
|
 +
| Since experience proceeds from the less general to the more general, the
 +
| last conclusion is general, and so the first view is realistic, while the
 +
| second from a like reason is individualistic.  In the first view, the real
 +
| is in one sense never realized since though opinion may in fact have reached
 +
| a settlment in reference to any question, there always remains a possibility
 +
| that more experience, discussion, and reasoning would change any given opinion.
 +
| In the second view also the real is a species of fiction for that which is
 +
| logically singular,-- or is determined with reference to every quality,--
 +
| can from the continual change which is constantly taking place not remain
 +
| for any time however short, (Daniel Webster, for example, is a class embracing
 +
| Daniel Webster under 50 years of age & Daniel Webster over 50 years of age) and
 +
| consequently does not exist as absolutely determinate at all.
 +
|
 +
| Upon either view therefore the real is something ideal and never actually exists.
 +
| But it is true on the one hand that thought tends to a determinate conclusion and
 +
| on the other that if anything is true, true determinations without number are true
 +
| of it.  We ought therefore to discard the conception of the real as something actual
 +
| and to say simply that only thought actually exists and it has a law which no more
 +
| determines it than it by the mode in which it acts makes the law.  Only this law
 +
| is such that in a sufficient time it will determine thought to any extent.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 8-9.
 +
|
 +
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 191, 1872, ["Lecture on Practical Logic"], pp. 8-9 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
I think I'll while away the morning by copying out the very
+
===JITL. Note 6===
instructive passages from Peirce that I mentioned last time:
 
  
| CP 2.358 is Peirce's Baldwin Dictionary definition of "predicate".
+
<pre>
| CP 3.465 is a short summary of these poly-unsaturated "polyads".
+
| [Logic, Truth, and the Settlement of Opinion, MS 179, Winter-Spring 1872]
| CP 3.469 mentions the chemical analogy with "unsaturated bonds".
+
|
 
+
| Logic is the doctrine of truth, its nature and
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| the manner in which it is to be discovered.
 +
|
 +
| The first condition of learning is to know that we are ignorant.
 +
| A man begins to inquire and to reason with himself as soon as he
 +
| really questions anything and when he is convinced he reasons no more.
 +
| Elementary geometry produces formal proofs of propositions which nobody
 +
| doubts, but that cannot properly be caled reasoning which does not carry us
 +
| from the known to the unknown, and the only value in the first demonstrations
 +
| of geometry is that they exhibit the dependence of certain theorems on certain
 +
| axioms, a thing which is not clear without the demonstrations. When two men
 +
| discuss a question, each first endeavors to raise a doubt in the mind of the
 +
| other, and that is often half the battle.  When the doubt ceases there is no
 +
| use in further discussion.  Thus real inquiry begins when genuine doubt begins
 +
| and ends when this doubt ends.  And the premisses of the reasoning are facts
 +
| not doubted.  It is therefore idle to tell a man to begin by doubting familiar
 +
| beliefs, unless you say something which shall cause him really to doubt them.
 +
| Again, it is false to say that reasoning must rest either on first principles
 +
| or on ultimate facts. For we cannot go behind what we are unable to doubt,
 +
| but it would be unphilosophical to suppose that any particular fact will
 +
| never be brought into doubt.
 +
|
 +
| It is easy to see what truth would be for a mind which could not doubt.  That mind
 +
| could not regard anything as possible except what it believed in.  By all existing
 +
| things it would mean only what it thought existed, and everything else would be what
 +
| it would mean by 'non-existent'.  It would, therefore, be omniscient in its universe.
 +
| To say that an omniscient being is necessarily destitute of the faculty of reason,
 +
| sounds paradoxical;  yet if the act of reasoning must be directed to an end, when
 +
| that end is attained the act naturally becomes impossible.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 14-15.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, MS 179, 1872, ["Logic, Truth, Settlement of Opinion"], pp. 14-16 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
HAPA. Discussion Note 10
+
===JITL. Note 7===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 
+
| [Logic, Truth, and the Settlement of Opinion, MS 179, Winter-Spring 1872] (cont.)
There are a several things of note that leap to mind
+
|
in reading Peirce's dictionary entry for "Predicate":
+
| The only justification for reasoning is that it settles doubts,
 
+
| and when doubt finally ceases, no matter how, the end of reasoning
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11239.html
+
| is attained.  Let a man resolve never to change his existing opinions,
 
+
| let him obstinately shut his eyes to all evidence against them, and if
1.  It is not so much a definition in the sense of stating logically
+
| his will is strong enough so that he actually does not waver in his faith,
    necessary and sufficient conditions for a thing to be a predicate
+
| he has no motive for reasoning at all, and it would be absurd for him to
    as it is a "key", an operational definition that tells you how to
+
| do it.  That is method number one for attaining the end of reasoning, and
    recognize a predicate if you encounter one in the wild, or better
+
| it is a method which has been much practised and highly approved, especially
    yet, a "recipe", a sequence of instructions that tells you how to
+
| by people whose experience has been that reasoning only leads from doubt to
    construct all the examples of predicates that you might ever need.
+
| doubt. There is no valid objection to this proceedure if it only succeeds.
 +
| It is true it is utterly irrational;  that is to say it is foolish from the
 +
| point of view of those who do reason. But to assume that point of view is
 +
| to beg the question.  In fact, however, it does not succeed;  and the first
 +
| cause of failure is that different people have different opinions and the
 +
| man who sees this begins to feel uncertain.  It is therefore desirable to
 +
| produce unanimity of opinion and this gives rise to method number two, which
 +
| is to force people by fire and sword to adopt one belief, to massacre all who
 +
| dissent from it and burn their books.  This way of bringing about a catholic
 +
| consent has proved highly successful for centuries in some cases, but it is
 +
| not practicable in our days.  A modification of this is method number three,
 +
| to cultivate a public opinion by oratory and preaching and by fostering
 +
| certain sentiments and passions in the minds of the young.  This method
 +
| is the most generally successful in our day.  The fourth and last method
 +
| is that of reasoning.  It will never be adopted when any of the others will
 +
| succeed and it has itself been successful only in certain spheres of thought.
 +
| Nevertheless those who reason think that it must be successful in the end,
 +
| & so it would if all men could reason.  There is this to be said in favor
 +
| of it.  He who reasons will regard the opinions of the majority of mankind
 +
| with contemptuous indifference;  they will not in the least disturb his
 +
| opinions.  He will also neglect the beliefs of those who are not informed,
 +
| and among the small residue he may fairly expect some unanimity on many
 +
| questions.
 +
|
 +
| I hope it will now be plain to the reader, that the only rational
 +
| ground for preferring the method of reasoning to the other methods
 +
| is that it fixes belief more surely.  A man who proposes to adopt the
 +
| first method may consistently do so simply because he chooses to do so.
 +
| But if we are to decide in favor of reasoning, we ought to do so on
 +
| rational grounds.  Now if belief is fixed, no matter how, doubt has
 +
| as a matter of fact ceased, & there is no motive, rational or other,
 +
| for reasoning any more.  Any settlement of opinion, therefore, if it
 +
| is full and perfect, is entirely satisfactory and nothing could be
 +
| better.  It is the peculiarity of the method of reasoning, that if
 +
| a man thinks that it will not burn him to put his hand in the fire,
 +
| reasoning will not confirm that belief but will change it.  This is
 +
| a vast advantage to the mind of a rationalist.  But the advocate of
 +
| any one of the first three methods, will be able to say (if either
 +
| of those methods will yield a fixed belief) either that he 'knows'
 +
| by his method that fire will burn, so that reasoning is inferior to
 +
| his method in that it may permit a man for a moment to doubt this, or
 +
| else that he 'knows' that fire will not burn, so that reasoning leads
 +
| all astray.  In either case therefore he will conceive that that which
 +
| to the rationalist seems the great advantage of reasoning, to be a great
 +
| fault.  Thus the only ground of a fair decision between the methods must
 +
| be that one actually succeeds while the others break up and dissolve.
 +
| Bryant expresses the philosophy of the matter perfectly:
 +
|
 +
| | Truth struck to earth shall rise again
 +
| | The eternal years of God are hers
 +
| | While error ... writhes in pain
 +
| | And dies amidst her worshippers.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 15-16.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, MS 179, 1872, ["Logic, Truth, Settlement of Opinion"], pp. 14-16 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
2It is clear that we are looking at one of the precursors of what
+
===JITL. Note 8===
    would in the fullness of time became a standard socket wrench in
+
 
    the AI toolbox, namely, frame-&-slot-&-filler systemsPeirce's
+
<pre>
    objection to this precursory distinction would probably take the
+
| Chapter 1 (Enlarged Abstract) [MS 182, Winter-Spring 1872]
    form of a long list of proto-precursors from which he would say
+
|
    that he borrowed the tool, or derived the materials to build it.
+
| The very first of distinctions which logic supposes is between doubt and belief,
 
+
| a question and a propositionDoubt and belief are two states of mind which
3It is clear, too, that the precursor has already given rather
+
| feel different, so that we can distinguish them by immediate sensation.
    more thought to the nature of the rhematic construction than
+
| We almost always know without any experiment when we are in doubt and
    most of his postcursors have yet to doFor example, Peirce
+
| when we are convinced.  This is such a difference as there is between
    advises "The erasures are not to be made in a mechanical way,
+
| red and blue, or pleasure & painWere this the whole distinction,
    but with such modifications as may be necessary to preserve
+
| it would be almost without significance.  But in point of fact the
    the partial sense of the fragment". This means that the
+
| mere sensible distinguishability is attended with an important
    construction of the predicate is not a purely syntactic
+
| practical difference.  When we believe there is a proposition
    operation, whereby one perforates in a perfunctory way
+
| which according to some rule determines our actions, so that
    one isolated sentence at a time, but instead a fully
+
| our belief being known, the way in which we shall behave
    sign-relational (referential, semiotic, or pragmatic)
+
| may be surely deduced, but in the case of doubt we have
    operation, working on whole equivalence classes of
+
| such a proposition more or less distinctly in our minds
    sentences at a time.
+
| but do not act from itThere is something further
 +
| removed from belief than doubt, that is to say not
 +
| to conceive the proposition at all.  Nor is doubt
 +
| wholly without effect upon our conductIt makes
 +
| us waver.  Conviction determines us to act in a
 +
| particular way while pure unconscious ignorance
 +
| alone which is the true contrary of belief has
 +
| no effect at all.
 +
|
 +
| Belief and doubt may be conceived to be distinguished only in degree.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 20-21.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, MS 182, 1872, "Chapter 1 (Enlarged Abstract)", pages 20-21 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===JITL. Note 9===
  
HAPADiscussion Note 11
+
<pre>
 
+
| Chapter 2.  Of Inquiry
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
|
 
+
| The irritation of doubt causes a struggle to attain a state of belief.
"You can't get there from here"
+
| This struggle I shall term 'inquiry', though it must be admitted that
 +
| this is sometimes not a very apt designation.
 +
|
 +
| The irritation of doubt is the only immediate motive for the struggle
 +
| to attain belief.  It is certainly best for us that our beliefs should
 +
| be such as may truly guide our actions so as to satisfy our desires;  and
 +
| this reflection will make us reject any belief which does not seem to have
 +
| been so formed as to insure this result.  But it will only do so by creating
 +
| a doubt in place of that belief.  With the doubt therefore the struggle begins
 +
| and with the cessation of doubt it endsHence, the sole object of inquiry is
 +
| the settlement [...]
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, p. 23.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Chapter 2. Of Inquiry", MS 188, May-June 1872, pages 23-24 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
Let us recall why we might be interested in Peirce's
+
===JITL. Note 10===
formulation of "hypostatic abstraction" (HA), a term
 
that he cannot be blamed for coining because he only
 
borrowed it from established traditions of prior use.
 
  
The concept of an "abstract object" is dreamt of in
+
<pre>
many of our faniced and our favored ontologies, the
+
| Chapter 3.  Four Methods of Settling Opinion
theories of what is and the theories of what may be
+
|
that we strain to snatch from out the thin air into
+
| If the settlement of opinion is the sole object of inquiry, and if belief is
which, so we dream, they were erstwhile disappeared,
+
| of the nature of a habit, why should we not attain the desired end, by taking
and by this dream to say we are led to believe that
+
| any answer to a question which we may fancy, and constantly reiterating it to
these "abstract objects" can be recognized by their
+
| ourselves, by dwelling on all which may conduce to that belief and learning to
lack of existence in space and time, or so they say.
+
| turn with contempt and hatred from anything which might disturb it? This simple
 
+
| and direct method is really pursued by many men. ...
Now, asking for enlightenment about abstract objects
+
|
and being told that their distinctive characteristic
+
| But this method of fixing belief, which may be called the
is their failure to exist in space and time, and not
+
| method of obstinacy, will be unable to hold its ground in
just our space and time -- as if to say "they're not
+
| practice.  The social impulse is against it...
from around here" -- but their remove from all space
+
|
and time -- as if to say "they're not from anywhere" --
+
| Let the will of the state act then, instead of that of the individual...
is just about as useful as asking for directions and
+
|
being wrily informed "you can't get there from here".
+
| In judging this method of fixing belief, which may be called
 
+
| the method of despotism, we must in the first place allow its
Whatever else you say about this description of abstract objects,
+
| immeasurable mental and moral superiority to the method of
for instance, whether it's true or false to its ostensible object --
+
| obstinacy.  ...
for who, indeed, could demonstrate the fact one way or the other? --
 
this is not what is commonly meant by an "operational definition",
 
since there is no hint of a feasible operation that is used in it,
 
no where, no when, no how.
 
 
 
So the search continues for a key or a recipe to abstract objects.
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
HAPA. Work Area 2
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
CP 3.642
 
CP 4.463-465
 
 
 
CP 2.358 is Peirce's Baldwin Dictionary definition of "predicate".
 
CP 3.465 is a short summary of these poly-unsaturated "polyads".
 
CP 3.469 mentions the chemical analogy with "unsaturated bonds".
 
 
 
| The most ordinary fact of perception, such as "it is light", involves
 
| 'precisive' abstraction, or 'prescission'But 'hypostatic' abstraction,
 
| the abstraction which transforms "it is light" into "there is light here",
 
| which is the sense which I shall commonly attach to the word abstraction
 
| (since 'prescission' will do for precisive abstraction) is a very special
 
| mode of thoughtIt consists in taking a feature of a percept or percepts
 
| (after it has already been prescinded from the other elements of the percept),
 
| so as to take propositional form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon
 
| any judgment whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
 
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another subject, which
 
| has a mode of being that merely consists in the truth of propositions of
 
| which the corresponding concrete term is the predicate.
 
 
|
 
|
| Thus, we transform the proposition, "honey is sweet",
+
| But no institution can undertake to regulate opinions upon every subject.
| into "honey possesses sweetness""Sweetness" might be
+
| Only the most important ones can be attended to, and on the rest men's minds
| called a fictitious thing, in one senseBut since the
+
| must be left to the action of natural causes.  This imperfection [...] may
| mode of being attributed to it 'consists' in no more than
+
| affect every manAnd though these affections are necessarily as various
| the fact that some things are sweet, and it is not pretended,
+
| as are individual conditions yet the method must be such that the ultimate
| or imagined, that it has any other mode of being, there is,
+
| conclusion of every man shall be the same.  This is called the scientific
| after all, no fiction.  The only profession made is that we
+
| method.  Its fundamental hypothesis stated in more familiar language is this.
| consider the fact of honey being sweet under the form of a
+
| There are real things, whose characters are entirely independent of our opinions
| relation;  and so we really can.  I have selected sweetness
+
| about them; those realities affect our senses, according to regular laws, and
| as an instance of one of the least useful of abstractions.
+
| though our sensations are as different as our relations to the objects, yet by
| Yet even this is convenientIt facilitates such thoughts
+
| taking advantage of the laws which subsist we can ascertain by reasoning how
| as that the sweetness of honey is particularly cloying;
+
| the things really are, and any man if he have sufficient experience and reason
| that the sweetness of honey is something like the
+
| enough about it, will be led to the one true conclusion.  The new conception here
| sweetness of a honeymoon; etc.
+
| involved is that of reality.  It may be asked how I know there are any realities.
 +
| If this hypothesis is the sole support of my method of inquiry, my method of
 +
| inquiry must not be used to support my hypothesis.  The reply is this.  1st,
 +
| If investigation cannot be regarded as proving that there are real things,
 +
| it at least does not lead to a contrary conclusion;  but the method and the
 +
| conception on which it is based remain ever in harmony.  No doubts of the
 +
| method, therefore, necessarily arise from its practice, as is the case
 +
| with all the others.  2nd, the feeling which gives rise to any method
 +
| of fixing belief, is a dissatisfaction at two repugnant propositions.
 +
| But here already is a vague concession that there is some one thing to
 +
| which a proposition should conform.  Nobody, therefore, can really doubt
 +
| that there are realities, or if he did, doubt would not be a source of
 +
| dissatisfaction.  The hypothesis therefore is one which every mind admits.
 +
| So that the social impulse does not cause me to doubt it.  3rd, Everybody
 +
| uses the scientific method about a great many things and only ceases to use
 +
| it when he does not know how to apply it.  4th, Experience of the method has
 +
| not led me to doubt it but on the contrary scientific investigation has had
 +
| the most wonderful triumphs in the way of settling opinion.  These afford
 +
| the explanation of my not doubting either the method or the hypothesis
 +
| which it supposes, and not having any doubt nor believing that anybody
 +
| else whom I could influence has, it would be the merest babble for me
 +
| to say more about itIf there be anybody with a living doubt upon
 +
| the subject, let him consider it.
 +
|
 +
| To describe the method of scientific investigation is the object of this book.
 +
| In this chapter, I shall only notice some points of contrast between it and
 +
| other methods of inquiry.
 +
|
 +
| This is the only one of the four methods which presents any distinction of a right
 +
| and a wrong way. If I adopt the method of obstinacy and shut myself out from all
 +
| influences, no matter what I think necessary to doing this, is necessary according
 +
| to that methodSo with the method of despotism, the state may try to put down
 +
| heresy by means which from a scientific point of view seem very ill-calculated
 +
| to accomplish its purpose, but the only test 'on that method' is what the state
 +
| thinks, so that it cannot pursue the method wrongly.  So with the 'a priori'
 +
| method.  If I endeavor to lay my susceptibilities of belief perfectly open to
 +
| the influences which work upon them, I cannot on those principles go wrong.
 +
| But with the scientific method, the case is different.  I may start with
 +
| known and observed facts to proceed to the unknown; and yet the rules
 +
| which I follow in doing so may not be such as investigation would
 +
| approve.  The test of whether I am truly following the method
 +
| is not an immediate appeal to my feelings and purposes,
 +
| but on the contrary itself involves the application
 +
| of the method.  Hence it is that bad reasoning
 +
| as well as good reasoning is possible;  and
 +
| this fact is the foundation of the
 +
| practical side of logic.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 24-28.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Four Methods of Settling Opinion", MS 189, May-June 1872, pp. 24-28 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
Reference:
+
===JITL. Note 11===
  
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
+
<pre>
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
+
| Chapter 4. Of Reality
 
|
 
|
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html
+
| Investigation supposes a true and a false,
 
+
| truth and falsity being independent of all
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| opinion upon the matter.  The name 'real'
 +
| is applied to that which is independent
 +
| of how you or I or any number of minds
 +
| think it to be.
 +
|
 +
| It is a truism to say that the character of what I think
 +
| depends entirely on what I think it to be.  The real is
 +
| not, therefore, 'per se' an immediate object of thought,
 +
| even though my thought may happen to coincide with it.
 +
| Yet the real must influence thought or I could not by
 +
| following any rules of reasoning arrive at any truth.
 +
|
 +
| Investigation consists necessarily of two parts, one by which a
 +
| belief is generated from other beliefs, which is called 'reasoning';
 +
| and another by which new elements of belief are brought into the mind,
 +
| which is called 'observation'.  Thus, the conclusions depend entirely
 +
| upon the observations.  But while the ultimate conclusion is one and
 +
| the same in the minds of all who push investigation far enough, the
 +
| observations on which it hangs are for every man private and peculiar.
 +
| The observations which I made yesterday are not the same that I make today;
 +
| nor are simultaneous observations from different situations or with other
 +
| different circumstances the same.  Two men cannot therefore make the same
 +
| observation.  We may go further and say that no two observations are in
 +
| themselves in any degree alike.  The judgment that they are alike is not
 +
| contained in either observation (since they do not relate to one another)
 +
| but is a belief generated by the two beliefs in which the two observations
 +
| immediately result, so that it is an inference of reasoning, as that has just
 +
| been defined.  Thus our reasonings begin with the most various premisses, which
 +
| have not in themselves anything in common, but which so determine our beliefs as
 +
| to lead us at last to one destined conclusion.
 +
|
 +
| Here is the whole statement of facts from which we must infer whatever we can know
 +
| of the mode of being of the real.  But there is no additional fact which we can
 +
| infer from these facts.  For these embrace everything which takes place in
 +
| thought, and as to anything out of thought we can know nothing.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 60-61.
 +
|
 +
| Charles Sanders Peirce, "Chapter 4. Of Reality", MS 205, Fall 1872, pp. 60-61 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
HAPA. Work Area 1
+
===JITL. Note 12===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 
+
| Chapter ___.  The List of Categories
Subj: Re: ification
+
|
Date: Mon, 13 Nov 2000 16:16:02 -0500
+
| In the doctrines which have thus far been developed, are implicitly
From: Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
+
| involved certain conceptions of such universal applicability and such
  To: Stand Up Ontology <standard-upper-ontology@ieee.org>
+
| importance in logic, that I propose to consider them especially in this
 
+
| chapter under the name of 'Categories'.
Just enough time to insert a genealogical note:
+
|
 +
| In the ideal final opinion which would perfectly represent the reality of things,
 +
| all possible doubt would be resolved.  It follows that the reality is something
 +
| entirely definite.  'Ens est unum.' An object may be conceived to have this
 +
| character without being real, that is without being in accord with the
 +
| opinion to which observations are fated to tend, and I shall call this
 +
| the 'being' of things.  A griffin 'is' a fabulous animal. That is,
 +
| a griffin is supposed to be a definite object. You may ask as many
 +
| questions as you please about a griffin and supply answers according
 +
| to some rule and if all the questions which could be invented were
 +
| thus answered, the animal would possess as perfect a being as if
 +
| it were real, and yet be a mere creature of the imagination.
 +
|
 +
| In every doubt there is one thing fixed and one thing vague;
 +
| the thing which we doubt something about is fixed, what we
 +
| doubt about it is vague. These two things must equally be
 +
| distinguished in the belief in which the doubt is resolved.
 +
| Consequently, every being has elements which are distinguished
 +
| from it but which belong to it, in short it has 'qualities'.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, p. 61.
 +
|
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, "The List of Categories", MS 207, Winter 1872-73, p. 61 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/b/bentham.htm
+
===JITL. Note 13===
  
Bentham's "Theory of Fictions" begat (paraphrastically)
+
<pre>
Schönfinkel's "Bausteine" and this begat (independently)
+
| On Representations
Church's "Lambda Calculus" and this begat (in good time)
+
|
McCarthy's "Lisp" and all the rest is AI and IEEE ...
+
| A representation is an object which stands for another so that
 
+
| an experience of the former affords us a knowledge of the latter.
By way of stuffing the e-lectural ballot boxes just a little bit better
+
| There are three essential conditions to which every representation
I will attach here some bits of an ongoing dialectric that a few of the
+
| must conform.  It must in the first place like any other object have
denizens of the Peirce List, most especially Tom Gollier and yours truly,
+
| qualities independent of its meaning.  It is only through a knowledge
have been carrying on intermittently for quite some time now, regarding
+
| of these that we acquire any information concerning the object it
this most atmospheric of all topics of our current concern, to wit, the
+
| represents.  Thus, the word "man" as printed, has three letters;
question of hypostatic electricity, of how or whether it can ever stick.
+
| these letters have certain shapes, and are black.  I term such
 
+
| characters, the material qualities of the representation. In the
This will also serve to throw a new synonym into the mix:  "subjectal abstraction".
+
| 2nd place a representation must have a real causal connection with
 
+
| its object. If a weathercock indicates the direction of the wind
Subj:  Re: Varieties of Abstraction
+
| it is because the wind really turns it round. If the portrait of
DateThu, 15 Jun 2000 01:23:31 -0400
+
| a man of a past generation tells me how he looked it is because
From:  Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
+
| his appearance really determined the appearance of the picture
  To:  TGollier@aol.com
+
| by a train of causation, acting through the mind of the painter.
 +
| If a prediction is trustworthy it is because those antecedents of
 +
| which the predicted event is the necessary consequence had a real
 +
| effect in producing the prediction.  In the third place, every
 +
| representation addresses itself to a mind.  It is only in so
 +
| far as it does this that it is a representation.  The idea of
 +
| the representation itself excites in the mind another idea and
 +
| in order that it may do this it is necessary that some principle
 +
| of association between the two ideas should already be established
 +
| in that mind.  These three conditions serve to define the nature of
 +
| a representation.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, p. 62.
 +
|
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, "On Representations", MS 212, Winter-Spring 1873, p. 62 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. PeirceA Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
===JITL. Note 14===
TG = Tom Gollier
 
  
TG: I knew there was no sense getting carried away until you'd had a chance
+
<pre>
    to straighten out the context, and your mathematical orientation, which
+
| I begin with the soul of man.  For we first learn that brutes have souls from
    is not foreign to Peirce's either, was clear in our previous exchanges
+
| the facts of the human soul.  What brutes and other men do & suffer would be
    on the listBut I don't think mathematicians are to be trusted in
+
| quite unintelligible to us, if we had not a standard within ourselves with
    this regardnot from any moral flaw in their characters but
+
| which to measure others.
    because they're treating this subject of generalization
+
|
    within an abstract realm, and hence they feel no need
+
| At the first dawn of cognition we began to compare and consider the objects about us.
    or compulsion to make a distinction between the two.
+
| Our thought first assigned to things their right places and reduced the wild chaos
 
+
| of sensuous impressions to a luminous order.  But after thought had classified
JA: For me, generalization begins in a fairly concrete realm --
+
| everything a residuum was left over, which had no place in the classification.
    I take "concrete" to mean "grown together", suggesting the
+
| This was thought itself.  What is this which is left over?  After thought
    concrescence of attributes or the fusion of features that
+
| has considered everything, it is obliged next to think of itself.  Here
    go to constitute a definite, particulate, and vivid object --
+
| it is at once means and end.  The question is, 'what' is thought, --
    the action passes through a series of mental affections or
+
| and the question can only be answered 'by means of' thought.
    cognitive impressions -- the only place where such a passage
+
|
    is possible without actually destroying the original object --
+
| This is a noticeable circumstanceHow can thought think of itself, it is
    toward a conceptual symbol that has a more abstract reference,
+
| askedthat would be an insoluble contradiction.  It is as though a tone
    to wit, a selection of the attributes, characters, features,
+
| should be heard of itself, or a beam of light be seen by itself.  But this
    marks, or properties that were initially conceived to make up
+
| objection reminds one of the efforts of the man who tried to look at his
    the object.  There is a common form to this general direction
+
| own eye. After great difficulty he got so far as to see the end of his
    of thought, whether the objects are apples and oranges being
+
| nose, forgetting that it would be much simpler to hold up a looking-glass
    generalized under the nomen of fruits, or whether the objects
+
| to his face.  Common sense, which usually hits the nail on the head, has
    are numbers under addition and numbers under multiplication
+
| long ago held that looking-glass up to thought.  If I wish to represent to
    being generalized under the the nomen of groups.
+
| myself what my thought is, (says common sense) I have only to act as though
 +
| my thought were an external object which I can consider as I should consider
 +
| something not a part of myself.  Thought thus objectively considered common
 +
| sense terms the soul.  So if we are to investigate in a scientific manner
 +
| the nature of thought, we //need/can// do nothing else than consider the
 +
| soul as if it were an object of experience.
 +
|
 +
| Everyone grants that thought is a sort of experience;  otherwise, we
 +
| could not know that we think.  Everyone further sees that we have in
 +
| thought a very varied experience, for it changes both with the object
 +
| thought of and with mental development which we have attained.  Thus,
 +
| we bring together all the experiences which thought has in itself &
 +
| subject them to the consideration of our thoughts.  There are also
 +
| other experiences, not properly thoughts, such as sensations and
 +
| feelings which we term phenomena of the soul, because we recognize
 +
| them as immediate products of an activity within us, which according
 +
| to our observation cannot be separated from the activity of thought.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 10-11.
 +
|
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, "Third Lecture", MS 192, Summer-Fall 1872, pages 10-11 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
JA: Generalization is a relative notion, and there is no more need
+
===JITL. Note 15===
    for an absolute ground here than there is for a non-inferential
 
    perception at the origin of thought.  But the distinction between
 
    precisive (or prescindive) abstraction and hypostatic (or subjectal)
 
    abstraction is independent of how abstracted already, how far along
 
    the continuum or the spectrum of abstraction, happens to be the object
 
    of thought with which one begins.
 
  
JA: Again, hypostatic abstraction is a two-edged sword -- a "subject"
+
<pre>
    is now and henceforth "supposed" to "stand its own ground beneath"
+
| Chapter 11.  On Logical Breadth and Depth
    the flight of sorcery of the nominal property that is prescinded
+
|
    by the flightier fancy of generalization.
+
| As Logic is the study of the laws of signs so far as these denote things --
 
+
| those laws of signs which determine what things they denote and what
JA: This occurs in concrete domains and in vivid realms as much as in the
+
| they do not -- it is necessary in Logic to pay especial attention to
    other sort, if there is any other sortFor instance, I do not know
+
| those terms which denote signs.  Such terms are genus species &c.
    you as a person, in person, and all I know of you are these signs
+
| No thing is a genus but as there are terms such as man and tree
    that issue from my computer under your nameNaturally, I suppose
+
| which denote some one thing leaving it more or less indeterminate
    that there is a person who stands behind them, someone who is indeed
+
| what one so we may speak of whatever may be denoted by such a general
    responsible for their generation, as their hypothetical perpetrator --
+
| term as a genus or class.  Such terms are called 'terms of second intention'.
    this is my act of "hypostation", or abstractive hypostasis -- in one of
+
| The first intention is the mental act by which an object is conceived.  The
    its senses, and this is no accident, "hypostasis" = "person", and anyone
+
| second intention is the mental act by which the first conception is made an
    can look it up! The supposition of a person, an interpretive performer,
+
| object of conception in reference to its relation to its object. A term of
    who generates the signs that one passively interprets, indeed, the very
+
| second intention does not so much signify the sign itself as it signifies
    supposition that there is a person called onself who affords the medium,
+
| whatever is denoted by a sign of a certain description.  As signs differ
    gives a local habitation and a name, and lends a substance to all of the
+
| in their logical characters we may define an object by means of the
    signs that constitute the experiences that one calls one's own, well,
+
| logical characters of the sign which denotes it and in that case
    those are acts of "drawing away to stand under" that are fundamental
+
| it is pointed out with a peculiar kind of generality which
    to our "under-standing" of ourselves, however fallible, malfeasant,
+
| requires special attentionTwo of the most important
    and self-deceptive this form of understanding often is.
+
| characters of general terms are their logical breadth
 
+
| and depth.  The breadth of a term in general is that of
JA: Four short paragraphs and I have already put myself to sleep --
+
| which the term can be predicatedThe depth of a term is
    you can supply your own joke about dormitive virtues here --
+
| that which can be predicated of it.  The breadth therefore
    I pity the person who finds this stuff in his morning post --
+
| may be considered as a collection of objects -- real things --
    warning:  do not drive or operate heavy machinery while under
+
| though it can also be considered as consisting of the terms
    the influence of this philosophy, or any such stuff as these
+
| which may be made subject of a true proposition of which
    dreams are made on!
+
| the given term is the predicate.  The depth of a term
 
+
| cannot be considered as a collection of things but
Subj:  Re: Varieties of Abstraction
+
| can only be considered as a complex of terms or of
Date: Mon, 19 Jun 2000 23:07:04 -0400
+
| attributes. The term attribute, character, mark, or
From:  Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
+
| quality is a term of second intention.  Two things are
  To: TGollier@aol.com
+
| alike in a certain respect that is to say the same predicate
 
+
| can be applied to either of them.  Then the capacity of having that
CP = Charles Peirce
+
| predicate applied to it with truth is called an attribute that is a thing
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
| to which it can be applied.  The attribute is therefore an abstract term.
 
+
| Terms are divisible into concrete and abstract.  The concrete are such
CP: CP 4.332  [Subjectal Abstraction = Hypostatic Abstraction]
+
| as white virtuous &c. the abstract such as whiteness virtue, etc.
 
+
| Abstract terms do not denote any real thing but they denote
JA: I think that the relation between 'hypostation', that mode of mental operation
+
| fictitious things.  An object's being white is conceived
    that passes from a verb in action to a noun in stasis, that turn or that style
+
| as being due to its being in some relation with a certain
    of thoughtful conduct that converts a "way of thinking" (WOT) about some thing
+
| fictitious thing whiteness.  In point of fact that the object
    into a "subject of thought" (SOT) itself, and 'reflection', that "bending back"
+
| is white may in a certain sense be said to be due to its connection
    and "folding over" of thought on itself, is strikingly clear in this depiction.
+
| with the sign or predicate white that is to say it must be in such a
 +
| relation to the name white that this name may be applied to it with
 +
| truth or else it cannot be white.  There is no falsity in this
 +
| statement although it is more natural to state the matter
 +
| in the inverse way and to say that its having that
 +
| connection with that name is due to the fact
 +
| that it is white. One statement is as true
 +
| as the otherIn the latter more natural mode
 +
| of statement the existence of the thing is looked
 +
| upon as the ultimate fact but we have seen in the chapter
 +
| upon reality that the final information is the ultimate fact,
 +
| that final information consisting in applying a certain sign
 +
| to certain objects in the predication and therefore it is
 +
| perfectly correct to say that the thing's being white
 +
| is due to and consists of the applicability of
 +
| a certain predicate to a certain thing.
 +
| A attribute or quality is not precisely
 +
| the same as a predicate inasmuch as when we
 +
| use the word predicate we have in mind the fact
 +
| that the predicate is something extraneous to the thing
 +
| which does not belong to it as it exists but belongs to it as it is
 +
| thought whereas an attribute is considered as belonging to a thing whatever
 +
| is thought.  But upon our view of the nature of reality this is a distinction
 +
| of very slight moment because existence is thus not independent of all thought
 +
| and what is affirmed in the final judgment is the same as what really exists.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 98-99
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873, pp. 98-102 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
Subj:  Re: Varieties of Abstraction
+
===JITL. Note 16===
Date:  Thu, 22 Jun 2000 00:24:07 -0400
 
From:  Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
 
  To:  TGollier@aol.com
 
  
JA: Now, this is where I came in -- that is, it is just the point that I had reached
+
<pre>
     in my thinking at the end of last year when I decided to take a little break from
+
Cf: JITL 15.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000732.html
    my day to day mental grind to see what sorts of diversion I might find on the web.
+
In: JITL.     http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#712
    Little did I know how the play would play out!  But the place in question, where
 
    a peculiar form of reflexive complication found itself tied and once again begins
 
    to tighten, is the place where one rises from an ongoing activity, whatever it is,
 
    to reflect on what one is doing, perhaps with a critical eye, and this is where the
 
    activity that one was cast into, thrown into, willy nilly, and not entirely awarely,
 
    begins to appear, by virtue of the reflective image that is formed by the reflection,
 
    like an object, that is, an objective form of conduct, like a chess game, that one
 
    can choose to play or not, and even consider how to generalize and how to transform.
 
  
JA: Not too coincidentally, this is the place where the mental operations that implement
+
| Chapter 11.  On Logical Breadth and Depth (cont.)
    precisive and subjectal abstraction, namely, selection and reflection, respectively,
+
|
    begin to highlight the importance that Dewey placed on a favorite couple of words of
+
| Thus in considering the breadth and depth of terms
    his, namely, "activity" and "reflection". An ongoing activity gradually acquires an
+
| it is desirable to make a number of distinctions.
    activity of reflection as a parallel rider, then the activity of reflection is turned,
+
|
    chiasmatically, into a reflection on activity. As far as I am concerned, this is the
+
| By the "informed breadth" of a term I shall mean all the
    true significance of hypostatic abstraction, that takes us from a point in medias res,
+
| real objects of which it is predicable with logical truth
    of an action that engages us, to a stance that is just a little bit outside the action,
+
| in the supposed state of information as our knowledge is
    a change of attitude or a shift of status toward the activity that is marked by our
+
| never absolute but consists only of probabilities that
    ability to name the action or the state of becoming by means of an abstract noun.
+
| all the information at hand must be taken into account
 +
| and those things of which there is not on the whole
 +
| reason to believe that the term is truly predicable
 +
| are not to be reckoned as part of its breadth.
 +
|
 +
| If T be a term which is predicable only of S_1, S_2, and S_3
 +
| then the S_1's, S_2's, and S_3's will constitute the informed
 +
| breadth of T.
 +
|
 +
| If there be a second term T' which is predicable only of S_1 and S_2
 +
| and if it is not known that S_3 is entirely included under S_1 and S_2
 +
| then T is considered to have a greater informed breadth than T'.
 +
|
 +
| If it is known that the S_3's are not all among the S_1's and S_2's the
 +
| excess of breadth is certain but if it is not known whether or not this
 +
| is the case it is "doubtful".
 +
|
 +
| If certain S_3's are known to exist which are not known to be either
 +
| S_1's or S_2's, T is said to have a greater actual breadth than T'
 +
| but if all the S_3's which are known to exist are also known to
 +
| be S_1's and S_2's though there are other S_3's which are not
 +
| S_1 or S_2 then T is said to have greater potential breadth
 +
| than T'.
 +
|
 +
| If T and T' are conceptions in different minds
 +
| or in different states of the same mind then T
 +
| may have a doubtful excess of breadth in one
 +
| mind and no excess at all in the other mind.
 +
| In that case the conception is said to be
 +
| more extensively distinct to the latter
 +
| mind.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 99-100
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873,
 +
| Chapter 11 from ["Toward a Logic Book, 1872-1873"], pp. 14-108 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Vol. 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
  
JA: In my case, it is the activity of inquiry that I am wondering how and thus beginning
+
NB.  I have substituted S_1, S_2, S_3 for Peirce's S', S'', S''', respectively.
    to reflect on, and this reflection is a critical component of the inquiry into inquiry.
+
</pre>
    That is a very nice description, I think, so far as it goes, but how can I teach this
 
    skill of reflection to a rock, of the sort that we mine from silicon valley?
 
  
JA: Like I said, this is where I came in,
+
===JITL. Note 17===
    and I seem to be leaving by the very
 
    same door by which I entered.
 
  
Previously under this skein, a sampler:
+
<pre>
 
+
| Chapter 11.  On Logical Breadth and Depth (cont.)
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00739.html
+
|
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00792.html
+
| By the "informed depth" of a term I mean all the real characters in
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00815.html
+
| contradistinction to mere synonimous names which can be predicated of
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00828.html
+
| it with logical truth in the supposed state of information no character
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00829.html
+
| being counted twice over knowingly. The depth like the breadth will be
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00836.html
+
| certainly doubtful and there is a comprehensive distinctness corresponding
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00892.html
+
| to extensive distinctness.
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00893.html
+
|
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00894.html
+
| The informed breadth and depth suppose a state of information which lies
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00933.html
+
| somewhere between two imaginary extremes. There are first the state of
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00977.html
+
| knowledge in which no fact should be known but only the meanings of terms
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00979.html
+
| and, second, the state of information in which every fact should be known.
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00980.html
+
| This suggests two other sorts of breadth and depth corresponding to the two
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01010.html
+
| essential states of information which I shall term accordingly the essential
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01011.html
+
| and the substantial breadth and depth.
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01680.html
+
|
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01684.html
+
| The essential depth of a term which is sometimes called
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01687.html
+
| its essence consists of the really conceivable qualities
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01689.html
+
| predicated of it in its definition. This is one of the
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01707.html
+
| most important features of logic.
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01791.html
+
|
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01837.html
+
| Suppose the definition of the term T be this: "In T is at once
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01842.html
+
| P_1, P_2, and P_3". This sums up the whole meaning of T. It may
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01845.html
+
| not be known that there is no such thing as P_1 and therefore the
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01858.html
+
| meaning of T does not imply its existence. On the other hand we
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01870.html
+
| must know that P_1, P_2, and P_3 are neither of them coextensive
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01890.html
+
| with the whole conception of being for we know the qualities of
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01891.html
+
| things only by comparison with their opposites hence we must
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01901.html
+
| know that there is something which is not P_1 and that this
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01902.html
+
| is not T, that there is something which is not P_2 and that
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01931.html
+
| this is not T, and that there is something which is not P_3
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01940.html
+
| and that this is not T.
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01955.html
+
|
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01964.html
+
| Accordingly if we define the essential breadth of a term as "those real things
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01965.html
+
| of which according to its every meaning a term is predicable" then "not T" has
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01968.html
+
| an essential breadth that is to say its very meaning implies that there are
 +
| things of which it is predicable. Thus T is a term which has essential depth
 +
| but no essential breadth -- "not T" is a term which has essential breadth
 +
| but not essential depth and all terms may be divided into two classes,
 +
| the "essential positive" and "essential negative", the former having
 +
| essential depth but not essential breadth, the latter having essential
 +
| breadth but not essential depth. There are some terms which are
 +
| affirmative in form but which according to this definition are
 +
| essentially negative and vice versa. As examples of this we
 +
| may allude particularly to the terms "being" and "nothing"
 +
| both of which are terms of second intention.
 +
|
 +
| As every term has breadth and the breadth of one term is greater
 +
| than that of another we may conceive of a term the breadth of
 +
| which includes that of every other other term so that it is
 +
| predicable of anything whatever. This is the definition
 +
| of the term "being". Its definition therefore gives it
 +
| breadth but not depth and accordingly it is essentially
 +
| negative.
 +
|
 +
| We may also conceive of a term whose depth includes the depth of all
 +
| other terms so that anything whatever may be predicated of it without
 +
| any falsity and this is the definition of the term "nothing". For you
 +
| may say what you please of nothing and if it is clearly understood that
 +
| what you speak of has no existence there is no falsity in what you assert
 +
| because you have not made any assertion whatever. "Nothing" therefore is
 +
| a term which has essential depth without any breadth and is according to
 +
| our definition essentially affirmative.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 100-101
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873,
 +
| Chapter 11 from ["Toward a Logic Book, 1872-1873"], pp. 14-108 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A Chronological Edition, Vol. 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
 
 +
NB. I have substituted P_1, P_2, P_3 for Peirce's P', P'', P''', respectively.
 +
</pre>
  
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ASC/
+
===JITL. Note 18===
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ASC/Reification.html
 
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ASC/SYSTEM.html
 
  
http://www.bestweb.net/~sowa/ontology/
+
<pre>
http://www.bestweb.net/~sowa/ontology/causal.htm
+
| Chapter 11.  On Logical Breadth and Depth (concl.)
http://www.bestweb.net/~sowa/ontology/mthworld.gif
+
|
 +
| If two terms have the same essential breadth or the same essential depth
 +
| logic recognizes no distinction between them.  They are synonimous.  They
 +
| may differ rhetorically.  One of these words may be associated in our minds
 +
| with certain feelings with which the other is not associated but logic has
 +
| nothing to do with such distinctions.  But two terms may be indistinctly
 +
| conceived so that it is not known whether they have the same essential
 +
| breadth and depth or not and in this case the distinction must be
 +
| admitted even in logic.
 +
|
 +
| We now come to the "substantial breadth and depth".
 +
| The substantial breadth is the aggregate of real
 +
| substance of which alone a term is predicable
 +
| with absolute truth.  Substantial depth is
 +
| the real character as it exists in the
 +
| object, which belongs to every thing
 +
| of which a term is predicable with
 +
| absolute truth.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 101-102
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873,
 +
| Chapter 11 from ["Toward a Logic Book, 1872-1873"], pp. 14-108 in:
 +
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A Chronological Edition, Vol. 3, 1872-1878',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 +
</pre>
  
http://www.iso18876.org/
+
==NEKS. New Elements &bull; Kaina Stoicheia==
http://www.nist.gov/sc4/
 
http://www.iso18876.org/iso18876/
 
http://www.iso18876.org/architecture/index.html
 
http://www.pdtsolutions.co.uk/standard/wg10/n307/wg10n307.pdf
 
  
http://www.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/L75/L75.htm
+
===NEKS. Note 1===
  
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/generality.html
+
<pre>
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node1.html
 
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node2.html
 
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node3.html
 
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node4.html
 
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node5.html
 
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node6.html
 
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node7.html
 
  
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/design.html
+
| I now proceed to explain the difference between a theoretical
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node1.html
+
| and a practical proposition, together with the two important
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node2.html
+
| parallel distinctions between 'definite' and 'vague', and
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node3.html
+
| 'individual' and 'general', noting, at the same time,
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node4.html
+
| some other distinctions connected with these.
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node5.html
+
|
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node6.html
+
| A 'sign' is connected with the "Truth", i.e. the entire Universe
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node15.html
+
| of being, or, as some say, the Absolute, in three distinct ways.
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node16.html
+
|
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node17.html
+
| In the first place, a sign is not a real thing.
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node18.html
+
| It is of such a nature as to exist in 'replicas'.
 +
| Look down a printed page, and every 'the' you see
 +
| is the same word, every 'e' the same letter. A real
 +
| thing does not so exist in replica. The being of a
 +
| sign is merely 'being represented'.  Now 'really being'
 +
| and 'being represented' are very different. Giving to
 +
| the word 'sign' the full scope that reasonably belongs
 +
| to it for logical purposes, a whole book is a sign;  and
 +
| a translation of it is a replica of the same sign. A whole
 +
| literature is a sign. The sentence "Roxana was the queen of
 +
| Alexander" is a sign of Roxana and of Alexander, and though
 +
| there is a grammatical emphasis on the former, logically the
 +
| name "Alexander" is as much 'a subject' as is the name "Roxana";
 +
| and the real persons Roxana and Alexander are 'real objects' of
 +
| the sign.
 +
|
 +
| Every sign that is sufficiently complete refers refers to sundry
 +
| real objects. All these objects, even if we are talking of Hamlet's
 +
| madness, are parts of one and the same Universe of being, the "Truth".
 +
| But so far as the "Truth" is merely the 'object' of a sign, it is merely
 +
| the Aristotelian 'Matter' of it that is so.
 +
|
 +
| In addition however to 'denoting' objects every
 +
| sign sufficiently complete 'signifies characters',
 +
| or qualities.
 +
|
 +
| We have a direct knowledge of real objects in every
 +
| experiential reaction, whether of 'Perception' or of
 +
| 'Exertion' (the one theoretical, the other practical).
 +
| These are directly 'hic et nunc'. But we extend the
 +
| category, and speak of numberless real objects with
 +
| which we are not in direct reaction.
 +
|
 +
| We have also direct knowledge of qualities in feeling,
 +
| peripheral and visceral. But we extend this category
 +
| to numberless characters of which we have no immediate
 +
| consciousness.
 +
|
 +
| All these characters are elements of the "Truth".
 +
| Every sign signifies the "Truth". But it is only
 +
| the Aristotelian 'Form' of the universe that it
 +
| signifies.
 +
|
 +
| The logician is not concerned with any metaphysical
 +
| theory;  still less, if possible, is the mathematician.
 +
| But it is highly convenient to express ourselves in terms
 +
| of a metaphysical theory;  and we no more bind ourselves to
 +
| an acceptance of it than we do when we use substantives such
 +
| as "humanity", "variety", etc. and speak of them as if they
 +
| were substances, in the metaphysical sense.
 +
|
 +
| But, in the third place, every sign is intended to determine a
 +
| sign of the same object with the same signification or 'meaning'.
 +
| Any sign, 'B', which a sign, 'A', is fitted so to determine, without
 +
| violation of its, 'A's, purpose, that is, in accordance with the "Truth",
 +
| even though it, 'B', denotes but a part of the objects of the sign, 'A', and
 +
| signifies but a part of its, 'A's, characters, I call an 'interpretant' of 'A'.
 +
|
 +
| What we call a "fact" is something having the structure of a proposition,
 +
| but supposed to be an element of the very universe itself. The purpose
 +
| of every sign is to express "fact", and by being joined with other signs,
 +
| to approach as nearly as possible to determining an interpretant which
 +
| would be the 'perfect Truth', the absolute Truth, and as such (at least,
 +
| we may use this language) would be the very Universe.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle gropes for a conception of perfection, or 'entelechy',
 +
| which he never succeeds in making clear. We may adopt the word
 +
| to mean the very fact, that is, the ideal sign which should be
 +
| quite perfect, and so identical, -- in such identity as a sign
 +
| may have, -- with the very matter denoted united with the very
 +
| form signified by it.  The entelechy of the Universe of being,
 +
| then, the Universe 'qua' fact, will be that Universe in its
 +
| aspect as a sign, the "Truth" of being. The "Truth", the
 +
| fact that is not abstracted but complete, is the ultimate
 +
| interpretant of every sign.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 238-240
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 +
|
 +
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Note 2===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
  
http://blather.newdream.net/r/reification.html
+
| Of the two great tasks of humanity, 'Theory' and 'Practice', the former sets out
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/b/bentham.htm
+
| from a sign of a real object with which it is 'acquainted', passing from this,
 +
| as its 'matter', to successive interpretants embodying more and more fully its
 +
| 'form', wishing ultimately to reach a direct 'perception' of the entelechy;
 +
| while the latter, setting out from a sign signifying a character of which it
 +
| 'has an idea', passes from this, as its 'form', to successive interpretants
 +
| realizing more and more precisely its 'matter', hoping ultimately to be able
 +
| to make a direct 'effort', producing the entelechy.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 240
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 +
|
 +
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
  
==JITL. Just In Time Logic==
+
===NEKS. Note 3===
  
 
<pre>
 
<pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
  
JITL.  Note 1
+
| But of these two movements, logic very properly
 +
| prefers to take that of Theory as the primary one.
 +
|
 +
| It speaks of an 'antecedent' as that which being known something else,
 +
| the 'consequent' may 'also' be known.  In our vernacular, the latter
 +
| is inaccurately called a 'consequence', a word that the precise
 +
| terminology of logic reserves for the proposition expressing
 +
| the relation of any consequent to its antecedent, or for
 +
| the fact which this proposition expresses.
 +
|
 +
| The conception of the relation of antecedent and consequent amounts,
 +
| therefore, to a confusion of thought between the reference of a sign
 +
| to its 'meaning', the character which it attributes to its object,
 +
| and its appeal to an interpretantBut it is the former of these
 +
| which is the more essential.
 +
|
 +
| The knowledge that the sun has always risen about once in each
 +
| 24 hours (sidereal time) is a sign whose object is the sun, and
 +
| (rightly understood) a part of its signification is the rising of
 +
| the sun tomorrow morning.
 +
|
 +
| The relation of an antecedent to its consequent, in its confusion of
 +
| the signification with the interpretent, is nothing but a special case
 +
| of what occurs in all action of one thing upon another, modified so as to
 +
| be merely an affair of being represented instead of really being.  It is the
 +
| representative action of the sign upon its object.  For whenever one thing acts
 +
| upon another it determines in that other a quality that would not otherwise have
 +
| been there.
 +
|
 +
| In the vernacular we often call an effect a "consequence",
 +
| because that which really is may correctly be represented;
 +
| but we should refuse to call a mere logical consequent
 +
| an "effect", because that which is merely represented,
 +
| however legitimately, cannot be said really to be.
 +
|
 +
| If we speak of an argumentation as "producing a great effect",
 +
| it is not the interpretant itself, by any means, to which we
 +
| refer, but only the particular replica of it which is made
 +
| in the minds of those addressed.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 240
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 +
|
 +
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Note 4===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| [On Time and Thought, MS 215, 08 Mar 1873]
+
| If a sign, 'B', only signifies characters that
 +
| are elements (or the whole) of the meaning of
 +
| another sign, 'A', then 'B' is said to be a
 +
| 'predicate' (or 'essential part') of 'A'.
 +
|
 +
| If a sign 'A', only denotes real objects that
 +
| are a part or the whole of the objects denoted
 +
| by another sign, 'B', then 'A' is said to be a
 +
| 'subject' (or 'substantial part') of 'B'.
 +
|
 +
| The totality of the predicates of a sign, and also the totality of the
 +
| characters it signifies, are indifferently each called its logical 'depth'.
 +
| This is the oldest and most convenient term.  Synonyms are the 'comprehension'
 +
| of the Port-Royalists, the 'content' ('Inhalt') of the Germans, the 'force'
 +
| of DeMorgan, the 'connotation' of J.S. Mill.  (The last is objectionable.)
 +
|
 +
| The totality of the subjects, and also, indifferently, the totality of the
 +
| real objects of a sign is called the logical 'breadth'.  This is the oldest
 +
| and most convenient term.  Synonyms are the 'extension' of the Port-Royalists
 +
| (ill-called 'extent' by some modern French logicians), the 'sphere' ('Umfang')
 +
| of translators from the German, the 'scope' of DeMorgan, the 'denotation' of
 +
| J.S. Mill.
 +
|
 +
| Besides the logical depth and breadth, I have proposed (in 1867) the terms
 +
| 'information' and 'area' to denote the total of fact (true or false) that
 +
| in a given state of knowledge a sign embodies.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 241
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| Every mind which passes from doubt to belief must have ideas which follow
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| after one another in time.  Every mind which reasons must have ideas which
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| not only follow after others but are caused by them. Every mind which is
+
 
| capable of logical criticism of its inferences, must be aware of this
+
</pre>
| determination of its ideas by previous ideas. But is it pre-supposed
+
 
| in the conception of a logical mind, that the temporal succession in
+
===NEKS. Note 5===
| its ideas is continuous, and not by discrete steps?  A continuum such
+
 
| as we suppose time and space to be, is defined as something any part
+
<pre>
| of which itself has parts of the same kind. So that the point of time
+
 
| or the point of space is nothing but the ideal limit towards which we
+
In our reading of the parts of the "Kaina Stoicheia" that take up --
| approach, but which we can never reach in dividing time or space;  and
+
or take off from -- the subject of "Theory and Practice", we have
| consequently nothing is true of a pointmical which is not true of a space or
+
covered this much:
| a time.  A discrete quantum, on the other hand, has ultimate parts which
+
 
| differ from any other part of the quantum in their absolute separation from
+
KS 1http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003063.html -- NEM 4, 238-240
| one another.  If the succession of images in the mind is by discrete steps,
+
KS 2http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003065.html -- NEM 4, 240
| time for that mind will be made up of indivisible instants. Any one idea
+
KS 3http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003075.html  -- NEM 4, 240
| will be absolutely distinguished from every other idea by its being present
+
KS 4http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003090.html  -- NEM 4, 241
| only in the passing moment.  And the same idea can not exist in two different
+
 
| moments, however similar the ideas felt in the two different moments may, for
+
We continue with that reading here:
| the sake of argument, be allowed to be. Now an idea exists only so far as the
+
 
| mind thinks it;  and only when it is present to the mind.  An idea therefore
+
| Other distinctions depend upon those that we have drawn.
| has no characters or qualities but what the mind thinks of it at the time
+
|
| when it is present to the mind.  It follows from this that if the succession
+
| I have spoken of real relations as reactionsIt may be asked how far I
| of time were by separate steps, no idea could resemble another;  for these
+
| mean to say that all real relations are reactionsIt is seldom that one
| ideas if they are distinct, are present to the mind at different times.
+
| falls upon so fascinating a subject for a train of thought [as] the analysis
| Therefore at no time when one is present to the mind, is the other present.
+
| of that problem in all its ramifications, mathematical, physical, biological,
| Consequently the mind never compares them nor thinks them to be alike;  and
+
| sociological, psychological, logical, and so round to the mathematical again.
| consequently they are not alike;  since they are only what they are thought
 
| to be at the time when they are present.  It may be objected that though the
 
| mind does not directly think them to be alike;  yet it may think together
 
| reproductions of them, and thus think them to be alike.  This would be a
 
| valid objection were it not necessary, in the first place, in order that
 
| one idea should be the representative of another, that it should resemble
 
| that idea, which it could only do by means of some representation of it
 
| again, and so on to infinity;  the link which is to bind the first two
 
| together which are to be pronounced alike, never being foundIn short
 
| the resemblance of ideas implies that some two ideas are to be thought
 
| together which are present to the mind at different times. And this
 
| never can be, if instants are separated from one another by absolute
 
| stepsThis conception is therefore to be abandoned, and it must be
 
| acknowledged to be already presupposed in the conception of a logical
 
| mind that the flow of time should be continuousLet us consider then
 
| how we are to conceive what is present to the mind. We are accustomed
 
| to say that nothing is present but a fleeting instant, a point of time.
 
| But this is a wrong view of the matter because a point differs in no
 
| respect from a space of time, except that it is the ideal limit which,
 
| in the division of time, we never reachIt can not therefore be that
 
| it differs from an interval of time in this respect that what is present
 
| is only in a fleeting instant, and does not occupy a whole interval of
 
| time, unless what is present be an ideal something which can never be
 
| reached, and not something real.  The true conception is, that ideas
 
| which succeed one another during an interval of time, become present
 
| to the mind through the successive presence of the ideas which occupy
 
| the parts of that time. So that the ideas which are present in each
 
| of these parts are more immediately present, or rather less mediately
 
| present than those of the whole timeAnd this division may be carried
 
| to any extentBut you never reach an idea which is quite immediately
 
| present to the mind, and is not made present by the ideas which occupy
 
| the parts of the time that it occupies.  Accordingly, it takes time
 
| for ideas to be present to the mind.  They are present during a time.
 
| And they are present by means of the presence of the ideas which are
 
| in the parts of that time.  Nothing is therefore present to the mind
 
| in an instant, but only during a time.  The events of a day are less
 
| mediately present to the mind than the events of a year;  the events
 
| of a second less mediately present than the events of a day.
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 68-70.
+
| The answer cannot be satisfactorily given in a few words;  but it lies hidden
 +
| beneath the obvious truth that any exact necessity is expressible by a general
 +
| equation;  and nothing can be added to one side of a general equation without
 +
| an equal addition to the other. Logical necessity is the necessity that a sign
 +
| should be true to a 'real' object;  and therefore there is 'logical' reaction in
 +
| every real dyadic relation. If 'A' is in a real relation to 'B', 'B' stands in
 +
| a logically contrary relation to 'A', that is, in a relation at once converse to
 +
| and inconsistent with the direct relation. For here we speak [not] of a vague
 +
| sign of the relation but of the relation between two individuals, 'A' and 'B'.
 
|
 
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 215, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 68-71 in:
+
| This very relation is one in which 'A' alone stands to any individual,
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| and it to 'B' only.  There are, however, 'degenerate' dyadic relations, --
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
+
| 'degenerate' in the sense in which two coplanar lines form a 'degenerate'
 +
| conic, -- where this is not true.  Namely, they are individual relations
 +
| of identity, such as the relation of 'A' to 'A'.  All mere resemblances
 +
| and relations of reason are of this sort.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 241
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 +
|
 +
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
JITL. Note 2
+
===NEKS. Note 6===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| [On Time and Thought, MS 215, 08 Mar 1873] (cont.)
+
| Of signs there are two different degenerate forms.
 +
| But though I give them this disparaging name, they
 +
| are of the greatest utility, and serve purposes that
 +
| genuine signs could not.
 +
|
 +
| The more degenerate of the two forms (as I look upon it)
 +
| is the 'icon'.  This is defined as a sign of which the
 +
| character that fits it to become a sign of the sort
 +
| that it is, is simply inherent in it as a quality
 +
| of it.
 +
|
 +
| For example, a geometrical figure drawn on paper may
 +
| be an 'icon' of a triangle or other geometrical form.
 +
|
 +
| If one meets a man whose language one does not know
 +
| and resorts to imitative sounds and gestures, these
 +
| approach the character of an icon.  The reason they
 +
| are not pure icons is that the purpose of them is
 +
| emphasized.
 +
|
 +
| A pure icon is independent of any purpose.  It serves as a sign
 +
| solely and simply by exhibiting the quality it serves to signify.
 +
| The relation to its object is a degenerate relation.  It asserts
 +
| nothing.  If it conveys information, it is only in the sense in
 +
| which the object that it is used to represent may be said to
 +
| convey information.  An 'icon' can only be a fragment of
 +
| a completer sign.
 
|
 
|
| It remains to show that, adopting this conception, the possibility of the
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 241-242
| resemblance of two ideas becomes intelligible;  and that therefore it is not
 
| inconceivable that one idea should follow after another, according to a general
 
| rule.  In the first place, then, it is to be observed that under this conception,
 
| two ideas may be both present to the mind during a longer interval, while they are
 
| separately present in shorter intervals which make up the longer interval.  During
 
| this longer interval they are present to the mind as different.  They are thought
 
| as different.  And this longer interval embraces still shorter intervals than
 
| those hitherto considered, during which there are ideas which agree in the
 
| respects which are defined by each of the two ideas, which are seen to be
 
| different.  During the longer interval therefore, the ideas of these shortest
 
| intervals are thought as partly alike and partly different.  There is therefore
 
| no difficulty in the conception of the resemblance of ideas.  Let us now see what
 
| is necessary in order that ideas should determine one another, and that the mind
 
| should be aware that they determine one another.  In order that there should be
 
| any likeness among ideas, it is necessary that during an interval of time there
 
| should be some constant element in thought or feeling.  If I imagine something
 
| red, it requires a certain time for me to do so.  And if the other elements
 
| of the image vary during that time, in one part it must be invariable, it
 
| must be constantly red.  And therefore it is proper to say that the idea
 
| of red is present to the mind at every instant.  For we are not now saying
 
| that an idea is present to the mind in an instant in the objectionable sense
 
| which has been referred to above, according to which an instant would differ
 
| from an interval of time;  but we are only saying that the idea is present at
 
| an instant, in the sense that it is present in every part of a certain interval
 
| of time;  however short that part may be.  The first thing that is requisite
 
| therefore to a logical mind, is that there should be elements of thought which
 
| are present at instants in this sense.  The second thing that is requisite is,
 
| that what is present one instant should have an effect upon what is present
 
| during the lapse of time which follows that instant.  This effect can only be
 
| a reproduction of a part of what was present at the instant;  because what is
 
| present at the instant, is present during an interval of time during the whole
 
| of which the effect will be present.  And therefore since all that is present
 
| during this interval is present at each instant, it follows that the effect
 
| of what is present at each instant is present at that instant. So that this
 
| effect is a part of the idea which produces it. In other words, it is merely
 
| a reproduction of a part of that idea.  This effect is memory, in its most
 
| elementary form.  But something more than this is required in order that the
 
| conclusion shall be produced from a premiss;  namely, an effect produced by
 
| the succession of one idea upon another.
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 70-71.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 215, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 68-71 in:
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Note 7===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
| The other form of degenerate sign is to be termed an 'index'.
 +
| It is defined as a sign which is fit to serve as such by
 +
| virtue of being in a real reaction with its object.
 +
|
 +
| For example, a weather-cock is such a sign.  It is fit to
 +
| be taken as an index of the wind for the reason that it is
 +
| physically connected with the wind.  A weather-cock conveys
 +
| information;  but this it does because in facing the very
 +
| quarter from which the wind blows, it resembles the wind
 +
| in this respect, and thus has an icon connected with it.
 +
| In this respect it is not a pure index.
 +
|
 +
| A pure index simply forces attention to the object
 +
| with which it reacts and puts the interpreter into
 +
| mediate reaction with that object, but conveys no
 +
| information.
 +
|
 +
| As an example, take an exclamation "Oh!"
 +
|
 +
| The letters attached to a geometrical figure are another case.
 +
|
 +
| Absolutely unexceptionable examples of degenerate forms must not be expected.
 +
| All that is possible is to give examples which tend sufficiently in towards
 +
| those forms to make the mean suggest what is meant.
 +
|
 +
| It is remarkable that while neither a pure icon nor a pure index
 +
| can assert anything, an index which forces something to be an 'icon',
 +
| as a weather-cock does, or which forces us to regard it as an 'icon',
 +
| as the legend under a portrait does, does make an assertion, and forms
 +
| a 'proposition'.  This suggests the true definition of a proposition,
 +
| which is a question in much dispute at this moment.  A proposition
 +
| is a sign which separately, or independently, indicates its object.
 +
|
 +
| No 'index', however, can be an 'argumentation'.  It may be what many
 +
| writers call an 'argument;  that is, a basis of argumentation;  but an
 +
| argument in the sense of a sign which separately shows what interpretant
 +
| it is intended to determine it cannot be.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 242
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 +
|
 +
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Note 8===
  
JITL.  Note 3
+
<pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| It will be observed that the icon is very perfect in respect
 +
| to signification, bringing its interpreter face to face with
 +
| the very character signified.  For this reason, it is the
 +
| mathematical sign 'par excellence'.  But in denotation it
 +
| is wanting.  It gives no assurance that any such object
 +
| as it represents really exists.
 +
|
 +
| The index on the other hand does this most perfectly,
 +
| actually bringing to the interpreter the experience
 +
| of the very object denoted.  But it is quite wanting
 +
| in signification unless it involves an iconic part.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 242-243
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 +
|
 +
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Note 9===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
  
| [On Time and Thought, MS 216, 08 Mar 1873]
+
| We now come to the genuine sign for which I propose the
 +
| technical designation 'symbol', following a use of that
 +
| word not infrequent among logicians including Aristotle.
 +
|
 +
| A symbol is defined as a sign which is fit to serve
 +
| as such simply because it will be so interpreted.
 +
|
 +
| To recapitulate:
 
|
 
|
| Any mind which has the power of investigation, and which therefore passes from
+
|               )                                          ( it possesses
| doubt to belief, must have its ideas follow after one another in time.  And if
+
|   An icon    }                                          ( the quality
| there is to be any distinction of a right and a wrong method of investigation,
+
|               )                                          ( signified.
| it must have some control over the process.  So that there must be such a thing
+
|               )                                          (
| as the production of one idea from another which was previously in the mind.
+
|               )                                          ( it is in real
| This is what takes place in reasoning, where the conclusion is brought into the
+
|               )                                          ( reaction
| mind by the premisses. We may imagine a mind which should reason and never know
+
|   An index  > is a sign fit to be used as such because < with the
| that it reasoned;  never being aware that its conclusion was a conclusion, or was
+
|               )                                          ( object
| derived from anything which went before.  For such a mind there might be a right
+
|               )                                          ( denoted.
| and a wrong method of thinking;  but it could not be aware that there was such
+
|               )                                          (
| a distinction, nor criticize in any degree its own operations.  To be capable of
+
|               )                                          ( it determines
| logical criticism, the mind must be aware that one idea is determined by another.
+
|   A symbol  )                                          ( the interpretant
| Now when this happens after the first idea comes the second.  There is a process
+
|               )                                          ( sign.
| which can only take place in a space of time;  but an idea is not present to the
+
|
| mind during a space of time -- at least not during a space of time in which this
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 243
| idea is replaced by another;  for when the moment of its being present is passed,
 
| it is no longer in the mind at all.  Therefore, the fact that one idea succeeds
 
| another is not a thing which in itself can be present to the mind, any more than
 
| the experiences of a whole day or of a year can be said to be present to the mind.
 
| It is something which can be lived through;  but not be present in any one instant;
 
| and therefore, which can not be present to the mind at all;  for nothing is present
 
| but the passing moment, and what it contains.  The only way therefore in which we can
 
| be aware of a process of inference, or of any other process, is by its producing some
 
| idea in us.  Not only therefore is it necessary that one idea should produce another;
 
| but it is also requisite that a mental process should produce an idea.  These three
 
| things must be found in every logical mind:  First, ideas;  second, determinations
 
| of ideas by previous ideas;  third, determinations of ideas by previous processes.
 
| And nothing will be found which does not come under one of these three heads.
 
| The determination of one thing by another, implies that the former not only
 
| follows after the latter, but follows after it according to a general rule,
 
| in consequence of which, every such idea would be followed by such a second one.
 
| There can therefore be no determination of one idea by another except so far as
 
| ideas can be distributed into classes, or have some resemblances.  But how can
 
| one idea resemble another?  An idea can contain nothing but what is present to
 
| the mind in that idea.  Two ideas exist at different times;  consequently what is
 
| present to the mind in one is present only at that time, and is absent at the time
 
| when the other idea is present.  Literally, therefore, one idea contains nothing
 
| of another idea;  and in themselves they can have no resemblance. They certainly
 
| do not resemble one another except so far as the mind can detect a resemblance;
 
| for they exist only in the mind, and are nothing but what they are thought to
 
| be.  Now when each is present to the mind the other is not in the mind at all.
 
| No reference to it is in the mind, and no idea of it is in the mind.  Neither
 
| idea therefore when it is in the mind, is thought to resemble the other which
 
| is not present in the mind. And an idea can not be thought, except when it is
 
| present in the mind.  And, therefore, one idea can not be thought to resemble
 
| another, strictly speaking. In order to escape from this paradox, let us see
 
| how we have been led into it. Causation supposes a general rule, and therefore
 
| similarity.  Now so long as we suppose that what is present to the mind at one
 
| time is absolutely distinct from what is present to the mind at another time,
 
| our ideas are absolutely individual, and without any similarity.  It is necessary,
 
| therefore, that we should conceive a process as present to the mind.  And this
 
| process consists of parts existing at different times and absolutely distinct.
 
| And during the time that one part is in the mind, the other is not in the mind.
 
| To unite them, we have to suppose that there is a consciousness running through
 
| the time.  So that of the succession of ideas which occur in a second of time,
 
| there is but one consciousness, and of the succession of ideas which occurs in
 
| a minute of time there is another consciousness, and so on, perhaps indefinitely.
 
| So that there may be a consciousness of the events that happened in a whole day or
 
| a whole life time.  According to this, two parts of a process separated in time --
 
| though they are absolutely separate, in so far as there is a consciousness of the
 
| one, from which the other is entirely excluded -- are yet so far not separate,
 
| that there is a more general consciousness of the two together.  This conception
 
| of consciousness is something which takes up time.  It seems forced upon us to
 
| escape the contradictions which we have just encountered.  And if consciousness
 
| has a duration, then there is no such thing as an instantaneous consciousness;
 
| but all consciousness relates to a process.  And no thought, however simple, is
 
| at any instant present to the mind in its entirety, but it is something which we
 
| live through or experience as we do the events of a day.  And as the experiences
 
| of a day are made up of the experiences of shorter spaces of time so any thought
 
| whatever is made up of more special thoughts which in their turn are themselves
 
| made up by others and so on indefinitely.  It may indeed very likely be that there
 
| is some minimum space of time within which in some sense only an indivisible thought
 
| can exist and as we know nothing of such a fact at present we may content ourselves
 
| with the simpler conception of an indefinite continuity in consciousness.  ...
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 72-74.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 216, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 72-75 in:
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
JITL. Note 4
+
===NEKS. Note 10===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| [On Time and Thought, MS 216, 08 Mar 1873] (cont.)
+
| Language and all abstracted thinking, such as belongs
 +
| to minds who think in words, is of the symbolic nature.
 +
|
 +
| Many words, though strictly symbols, are so far iconic that they are apt
 +
| to determine iconic interpretants, or as we say, to call up lively images.
 +
| Such, for example, are those that have a fancied resemblance to sounds
 +
| associated with their objects;  that are 'onomatopoetic', as they say.
 +
|
 +
| There are words, which although symbols, act very much like indices.
 +
| Such are personal, demonstrative, and relative pronouns, for which
 +
| 'A', 'B', 'C', etc. are often substituted.
 
|
 
|
| It will easily be seen that when this conception is once grasped the
+
| A 'Proper Name', also, which denotes a single individual well known
| process of the determination of one idea by another becomes explicable.
+
| to exist by the utterer and interpreter, differs from an index only
| What is present to the mind during the whole of an interval of time is
+
| in that it is a conventional sign.
| something generally consisting of what there was in common in what was
+
|
| present to the mind during the parts of that intervalAnd this may be
+
| Other words refer indirectly to indicesSuch is "yard"
| the same with what is present to the mind during any interval of time;
+
| which refers to a certain bar in Westminster, and has no
| or if not the same, at least similar -- that is, the two may be such
+
| meaning unless the interpreter is, directly or indirectly,
| that they have much in commonThese two thoughts which are similar
+
| in physical reaction with that bar.
| may be followed by others that are similar and according to a general
+
|
| law by which every thought similar to either of these is followed by
+
| Symbols are particularly remote from the Truth itselfThey are abstracted.
| another similar to those by which they are followedIf a succession
+
| They neither exhibit the very characters signified as icons do, nor assure us
| of thoughts have any thing in common this may belong to every part of
+
| of the reality of their objects, as indices do.  Many proverbial sayings express
| these thoughts however minute, and therefore it may be said to be present
+
| a sense of this weakness;  as "Words prove nothing", and the likeNevertheless,
| at every instantThis element of consciousness which belongs to a whole
+
| they have a great power of which the degenerate signs are quite destitute.  They
| only so far as it belongs to its parts is termed the matter of thought.
+
| alone express laws.  Nor are they limited to this theoretical useThey serve
| There is besides this a causation running through our consciousness by
+
| to bring about reasonableness and law. The words 'justice' and 'truth', amid
| which the thought of any one moment determines the thought of the next
+
| a world that habitually neglects these things and utterly derides the words,
| moment no matter how minute these moments may beAnd this causation
+
| are nevertheless among the very greatest powers the world contains.  They
| is necessarily of the nature of a reproduction;  because if a thought
+
| create defenders and animate them with their strengthThis is not rhetoric
| of a certain kind continues for a certain length of time as it must
+
| or metaphor:  it is a great and solid fact of which it behooves a logician to
| do to come into consciousness the immediate effect produced by this
+
| take account.
| causality must also be present during the whole time, so that it is a
+
|
| part of that thought.  Therefore when this thought ceases, that which
+
| A symbol is the only kind of sign which can be an argumentation.*
| continues after it by virtue of this action is a part of the thought
+
|
| itself. In addition to this there must be an effect produced by the
+
|* I commonly call this an argument;  for nothing is more false historically
| following of one idea after a different idea otherwise there would be
+
than to say that this word has not at all times been used in this sense.
| no process of inference except that of the reproduction of the premisses.
+
|  Still, the longer word is a little more definite.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 243-244
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 74-75.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 216, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 72-75 in:
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
JITL. Note 5
+
===NEKS. Note 11===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| [Lecture on Practical Logic, MS 191, Summer-Fall 1872]
+
| I have already defined an argument as a sign which separately monstrates
 +
| what its intended interpretant is, and a proposition as a sign which
 +
| separately indicates [what] its object is, and we have seen that
 +
| the icon alone cannot be a proposition while the symbol alone
 +
| can be an argument.
 +
|
 +
| That a sign cannot be an argument without being a proposition is shown
 +
| by attempting to form such an argument.  "Tully, c'est-a-dire a Roman",
 +
| evidently asserts that Tully is a Roman.  Why this is so is plain.  The
 +
| interpretant is a sign which denotes that which the sign of which it is
 +
| interpretant denotes.  But, being a symbol, or genuine sign, it has a
 +
| signification and therefore it represents the object of the principal
 +
| sign as possessing the characters that it, the interpretant, signifies.
 
|
 
|
| I suppose that the fundamental proposition from which all metaphysics
+
| It will be observed that an argument is a symbol which separately
| takes its rise is that opinions tend to an ultimate settlement & that
+
| monstrates (in any way) its 'purposed' interpretant.  Owing to
| a predestinate oneUpon most subjects at least sufficient experience,
+
| a symbol being essentially a sign only by virtue of its being
| discussion, and reasoning will bring men to an agreement; and another
+
| interpretable as such, the idea of a purpose is not entirely
| set of men by an independent investigation with sufficient experience,
+
| separable from itThe symbol, by the very definition of it,
| discussion, and reasoning will be brought to the same agreement as the
+
| has an interpretant in view. Its very meaning is intended.
| first set.
+
| Indeed, a purpose is precisely the interpretant of a symbol.
 
|
 
|
| Hence we infer that there is something which determines
+
| But the conclusion of an argument is a specially
| opinions and which does not depend upon them.  To this
+
| monstrated interpretant, singled out from among
| we give the name of the 'real'Now this 'real' may
+
| the possible interpretantsIt is, therefore,
| be regarded from two opposite points of view.
+
| of its nature single, although not necessarily
 +
| simple.
 
|
 
|
| In the first place, to say that thought tends to come to a determinate conclusion,
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 244
| is to say that it tends to an end or is influenced by a 'final cause'. This final
 
| cause, the ultimate opinion, is independent of how you, I, or any number of men
 
| think.  Let whole generations think as perversely as they will;  they can only
 
| put off the ultimate opinion but cannot change its character.  So the ultimate
 
| conclusion is that which determines opinions and does not depend upon them and
 
| so is the real object of cognition.  This is idealism since it supposes the
 
| real to be of the nature of thought.
 
 
|
 
|
| But, in the second place, a cause precedes its effect. And moreover the ultimate
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| conclusion though independent of this or that mind is not independent of mind in
+
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| generalThe real, therefore, which determines thought but does not depend upon it,
+
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| is not the last conclusion but the first premiss or what produces the first premiss,--
+
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
| a something out of the mind and incommensurable with thought.
+
|
 +
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Note 12===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
| If we erase from an argument every monstration of its special purpose,
 +
| it becomes a proposition;  usually a copulate proposition, composed of
 +
| several members whose mode of conjunction is of the kind expressed by
 +
| "and", which the grammarians call a "copulative conjunction".
 +
|
 +
| If from a propositional symbol we erase one or more of the parts which
 +
| separately denote its objects, the remainder is what is called a 'rhema';
 +
| but I shall take the liberty of calling it a 'term'.
 +
|
 +
| Thus, from the proposition "Every man is mortal", we erase "Every man",
 +
| which is shown to be denotative of an object by the circumstance that if
 +
| it be replaced by an indexical symbol, such as "That" or "Socrates", the
 +
| symbol is reconverted into a proposition, we get the 'rhema' or 'term':
 +
|
 +
|    " ___ is mortal".
 +
|
 +
| Most logicians will say that this is not a term.  The term,
 +
| they will say, is "mortal", while I have left the copula "is"
 +
| standing with it.  Now while it is true that one of Aristotle's
 +
| memoirs dissects a proposition into subject, predicate, and verb,
 +
| yet as long as Greek was the language which logicians had in view,
 +
| no importance was attached to the substantive verb, "is", because
 +
| the Greek permits it to be omittedIt was not until the time of
 +
| Abelard, when Greek was forgotten, and logicians had Latin in mind,
 +
| that the copula was recognized as a constituent part of the logical
 +
| proposition.
 +
|
 +
| I do not, for my part, regard the usages of language
 +
| as forming a satisfactory basis for logical doctrine.
 +
| Logic, for me, is the study of the essential conditions
 +
| to which signs must conform in order to function as such.
 +
| How the constitution of the human mind may compel men to
 +
| think is not the question;  and the appeal to language
 +
| appears to me to be no better than an unsatisfactory
 +
| method of ascertaining psychological facts that are
 +
| of no relevancy to logic.
 +
|
 +
| But if such appeal is to be made (and logicians generally
 +
| do make it;  in particular their doctrine of the copula
 +
| appears to rest solely upon this), it would seem that
 +
| they ought to survey human languages generally and
 +
| not confine themselves to the small and extremely
 +
| peculiar group of Aryan speech.
 +
|
 +
| Without pretending, myself, to an extensive acquaintance with languages,
 +
| I am confident that the majority of non-Aryan languages do not ordinarily
 +
| employ any substantive verb equivalent to "is".  Some place a demonstrative
 +
| or relative pronoun;  as if one should say:
 +
|
 +
|    " ___ is a man 'that' is translated"
 +
|
 +
| for "A man is translated".  Others have a word, syllable, or letter, to show
 +
| that an assertion is intended.  I have been led to believe that in very few
 +
| languages outside the Aryan group is the common noun a well-developed and
 +
| independent part of speech.  Even in the Shemitic languages, which are
 +
| remarkably similar to the Aryan, common nouns are treated as verbal
 +
| forms and are quite separated from proper names.
 +
|
 +
| The ordinary view of a term, however, supposes it to be a common noun in
 +
| the fullest sense of the term.  It is rather odd that of all the languages
 +
| which I have examined in a search for some support of this ordinary view, so
 +
| outlandish a speech as the Basque is the only one I have found that seems to
 +
| be constructed thoroughly in the manner in which the logicians teach us that
 +
| every rational being must think.*
 
|
 
|
| Since experience proceeds from the less general to the more general, the
+
|* While I am on the subject of languages I may take occasion to remark
| last conclusion is general, and so the first view is realistic, while the
+
|  with reference to my treatment of the direct and indirect "objects"
| second from a like reason is individualistic. In the first view, the real
+
| of a verb as so many subjects of the proposition, that about nine out
| is in one sense never realized since though opinion may in fact have reached
+
of every ten languages regularly emphasize one of the subjects, and
| a settlment in reference to any question, there always remains a possibility
+
| make it the principal one, by putting it in a special nominative case,
| that more experience, discussion, and reasoning would change any given opinion.
+
| or by some equivalent device.  The ordinary logicians seem to think
| In the second view also the real is a species of fiction for that which is
+
| that this, too, is a necessity of thought, although one of the living
| logically singular,-- or is determined with reference to every quality,--
+
| Aryan languages of Europe habitually puts that subject in the genetive
| can from the continual change which is constantly taking place not remain
+
which the Latin puts in the nominative.  This practice was very likely
| for any time however short, (Daniel Webster, for example, is a class embracing
+
| borrowed from a language similar to the Basque spoken by some progenitors
| Daniel Webster under 50 years of age & Daniel Webster over 50 years of age) and
+
| of the Gaels.  Some languages employ what is, in effect, an ablative for
| consequently does not exist as absolutely determinate at all.
+
|  this purpose.  It no doubt is a rhetorical enrichment of a language to
 +
| have a form "B is loved by A" in addition to "A loves B".  The language
 +
|  will be still richer if it has a third form in which A and B are treated
 +
| as equally the subjects of what is said.  But logically, the three are
 +
|  identical.
 
|
 
|
| Upon either view therefore the real is something ideal and never actually exists.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 244-246
| But it is true on the one hand that thought tends to a determinate conclusion and
 
| on the other that if anything is true, true determinations without number are true
 
| of it.  We ought therefore to discard the conception of the real as something actual
 
| and to say simply that only thought actually exists and it has a law which no more
 
| determines it than it by the mode in which it acts makes the law.  Only this law
 
| is such that in a sufficient time it will determine thought to any extent.
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 8-9.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 191, 1872, ["Lecture on Practical Logic"], pp. 8-9 in:
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
JITL. Note 6
+
===NEKS. Note 13===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| [Logic, Truth, and the Settlement of Opinion, MS 179, Winter-Spring 1872]
+
| What is the difference between " ___ is a man" and "man"?
 +
| The logicians hold that the essence of the latter lies in
 +
| a definition describing its characters;  which doctrine
 +
| virtually makes "man" equivalent to "what is a man".
 +
| It thus differs from " ___ is a man" by the addition*
 +
| of the badly named "indefinite pronoun", 'what'.
 +
| The rhema " ___ is a man" is a fragmentary sign.
 +
| But "man" is never used alone, and would have no
 +
| meaning by itself.  It is sometimes written upon
 +
| an object to show the nature of that object;  but
 +
| in such case, the appearance of the object is an
 +
| index of that object;  and the two taken together
 +
| form a proposition.  In respect to being fragmentary,
 +
| therefore, the two signs are alike.  It may be said
 +
| that "Socrates wise" does not make a sentence in the
 +
| language at present used in logic, although in Greek
 +
| it would.  But it is important not to forget that no
 +
| more do "Socrates" and "is wise" make a proposition
 +
| unless there is something to indicate that they are
 +
| to be taken as signs of the same object.  On the
 +
| whole, it appears to me that the only difference
 +
| between my rhema and the "term" of other logicians
 +
| is that the latter contains no explicit recognition
 +
| of its own fragmentary nature.  But this is as much
 +
| as to say that logically their meaning is the same;
 +
| and it is for that reason that I venture to use the
 +
| old, familiar word "term" to denote the rhema.
 +
|
 +
|* [Missing lines in NEM supplied from EP 2 at this point. -- JA]
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 246
 
|
 
|
| Logic is the doctrine of truth, its nature and
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| the manner in which it is to be discovered.
+
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| The first condition of learning is to know that we are ignorant.
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| A man begins to inquire and to reason with himself as soon as he
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| really questions anything and when he is convinced he reasons no more.
+
 
| Elementary geometry produces formal proofs of propositions which nobody
+
</pre>
| doubts, but that cannot properly be caled reasoning which does not carry us
+
 
| from the known to the unknown, and the only value in the first demonstrations
+
===NEKS. Note 14===
| of geometry is that they exhibit the dependence of certain theorems on certain
+
 
| axioms, a thing which is not clear without the demonstrations. When two men
+
<pre>
| discuss a question, each first endeavors to raise a doubt in the mind of the
+
 
| other, and that is often half the battleWhen the doubt ceases there is no
+
| It may be asked what is the nature of the sign which joins "Socrates"
| use in further discussionThus real inquiry begins when genuine doubt begins
+
| to " ___ is wise", so as to make the proposition "Socrates is wise".
| and ends when this doubt ends. And the premisses of the reasoning are facts
+
| I reply that it is an index.  But, it may be objected, an index
| not doubted.  It is therefore idle to tell a man to begin by doubting familiar
+
| has for its object a thing 'hic et nunc', while a sign is not
| beliefs, unless you say something which shall cause him really to doubt them.
+
| such a thing.  This is true, if under "thing" we include
| Again, it is false to say that reasoning must rest either on first principles
+
| singular events, which are the only things that are
| or on ultimate factsFor we cannot go behind what we are unable to doubt,
+
| strictly 'hic et nunc'.
| but it would be unphilosophical to suppose that any particular fact will
+
|
| never be brought into doubt.
+
| But it is not the two signs "Socrates" and "wise" that are
 +
| connected, but the 'replicas' of them used in the sentence.
 +
| We do not say that " ___ is wise", as a general sign, is
 +
| connected specially with Socrates, but only that it is so
 +
| as here used.  The two replicas of the words "Socrates"
 +
| and "wise" are 'hic et nunc', and their junction is a
 +
| part of their occurrence 'hic et nunc'. They form a
 +
| pair of reacting things which the index of connection
 +
| denotes in their present reaction, and not in a general
 +
| way;  although it is possible to generalize the mode of
 +
| this reaction like any other.
 +
|
 +
| There will be no objection to a generalization which shall call the mark
 +
| of junction a 'copula', provided it be recognized that, in itself, it is
 +
| not general, but is an 'index'.  No other kind of sign would answer the
 +
| purpose;  no general verb "is" can express it.  For something would have
 +
| to bring the general sense of that general verb down to the case in hand.
 +
| An index alone can do this.
 +
|
 +
| But how is this index to signify* the connection?
 +
| In the only way in which any index can ever
 +
| signify* anything;  by involving an 'icon'.
 +
| The sign itself is a connection.
 +
|
 +
| I shall be asked how this applies to Latin, where the parts of the sentence are
 +
| arranged solely with a view to rhetorical effect.  I reply that, nevertheless,
 +
| it is obvious that in Latin, as in every language, it is the juxtaposition
 +
| which connects wordsOtherwise they might be left in their places in the
 +
| dictionaryInflexion does a little;  but the main work of construction,
 +
| the whole work of connexion, is performed by putting the words together.
 +
|
 +
| In Latin much is left to the good sense of the interpreter.
 +
|
 +
| That is to say, the common stock of knowledge of utterer and interpreter,
 +
| called to mind by the words, is a part of the sign.  That is more or less
 +
| the case in all conversation, oral and scriptal. It is, thus, clear that
 +
| the vital spark of every proposition, the peculiar propositional element
 +
| of the proposition, is an indexical proposition;  an index involving an
 +
| iconThe rhema, say " ___ loves ___ ", has blanks which suggest filling;
 +
| and a concrete actual connection of a subject with each blank monstrates
 +
| the connection of ideas.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 246-247
 
|
 
|
| It is easy to see what truth would be for a mind which could not doubt. That mind
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| could not regard anything as possible except what it believed in. By all existing
+
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| things it would mean only what it thought existed, and everything else would be what
+
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| it would mean by 'non-existent'. It would, therefore, be omniscient in its universe.
+
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
| To say that an omniscient being is necessarily destitute of the faculty of reason,
 
| sounds paradoxical;  yet if the act of reasoning must be directed to an end, when
 
| that end is attained the act naturally becomes impossible.
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 14-15.
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
 +
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
 +
 
 +
* [NB by JA. Recall that "signify" has a "connotative" connotation here:]
 +
 
 +
| In addition however to 'denoting' objects every
 +
| sign sufficiently complete 'signifies characters',
 +
| or qualities.
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, MS 179, 1872, ["Logic, Truth, Settlement of Opinion"], pp. 14-16 in:
+
| NEM 4, 239.
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| Cf: KS 1. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003063.html
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
+
| In: KS.   http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3063
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
JITL. Note 7
+
===NEKS. Note 15===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| [Logic, Truth, and the Settlement of Opinion, MS 179, Winter-Spring 1872] (cont.)
+
| It is the Proposition which forms the main subject
 +
| of this whole scholium;  for the distinctions of
 +
| 'vague' and 'distinct', 'general' and 'individual'
 +
| are propositional distinctions.
 +
|
 +
| I have endeavored to restrain myself from long discussions of terminology.
 +
| But here we reach a point where a very common terminology overlaps an
 +
| erroneous conception.  Namely those logicians who follow the lead of
 +
| Germans, instead of treating of propositions, speak of "judgments"
 +
| ('Urtheile').  They regard a proposition as merely an expression in
 +
| speech or writing of a judgment.  More than one error is involved in
 +
| this practice.  In the first place, a judgment, as they very correctly
 +
| teach, is a subject of psychology.  Since psychologists, now-a-days,
 +
| not only renounce all pretension to knowledge of the 'soul', but also
 +
| take pains to avoid talking of the 'mind', the latter is at present not
 +
| a scientific term, at all;  and therefore I am not prepared to say that
 +
| logic does not, as such, treat of the mind.  I should like to take mind
 +
| in such a sense that this could be affirmed;  but in any sense in which
 +
| psychology, -- the scientific psychology now recognized, -- treats of
 +
| mind, logic, I maintain, has no concern with it.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 247-248
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| The only justification for reasoning is that it settles doubts,
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| and when doubt finally ceases, no matter how, the end of reasoning
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| is attained. Let a man resolve never to change his existing opinions,
+
 
| let him obstinately shut his eyes to all evidence against them, and if
+
</pre>
| his will is strong enough so that he actually does not waver in his faith,
+
 
| he has no motive for reasoning at all, and it would be absurd for him to
+
===NEKS. Note 16===
| do it.  That is method number one for attaining the end of reasoning, and
+
 
| it is a method which has been much practised and highly approved, especially
+
<pre>
| by people whose experience has been that reasoning only leads from doubt to
+
 
| doubt.  There is no valid objection to this proceedure if it only succeeds.
+
| Without stopping here to discuss this large question,
| It is true it is utterly irrational;  that is to say it is foolish from the
+
| I will say that psychology is a science which makes
| point of view of those who do reason.  But to assume that point of view is
+
| special observations;  and its whole business is
| to beg the question. In fact, however, it does not succeed;  and the first
+
| to make the phenomena so observed (along with
| cause of failure is that different people have different opinions and the
+
| familiar facts allied to those things),
| man who sees this begins to feel uncertain. It is therefore desirable to
+
| definite and comprehensible.
| produce unanimity of opinion and this gives rise to method number two, which
+
|
| is to force people by fire and sword to adopt one belief, to massacre all who
+
| Logic is a science little removed from pure mathematics.
| dissent from it and burn their books. This way of bringing about a catholic
+
| It cannot be said to make any positive phenomena known,
| consent has proved highly successful for centuries in some cases, but it is
+
| although it takes account and rests upon phenomena of
| not practicable in our days. A modification of this is method number three,
+
| daily and hourly experience, which it so analyzes as
| to cultivate a public opinion by oratory and preaching and by fostering
+
| to bring out recondite truths about them.
| certain sentiments and passions in the minds of the young. This method
+
|
| is the most generally successful in our day.  The fourth and last method
+
| One might think that a pure mathematician might assume these
| is that of reasoningIt will never be adopted when any of the others will
+
| things as an initial hypothesis and deduce logic from these;
| succeed and it has itself been successful only in certain spheres of thought.
+
| but this turns out, upon trial, not to be the case.
| Nevertheless those who reason think that it must be successful in the end,
+
|
| & so it would if all men could reason.  There is this to be said in favor
+
| The logician has to be recurring to reexamination of the
| of it.  He who reasons will regard the opinions of the majority of mankind
+
| phenomena all along the course of his investigations.
| with contemptuous indifference;  they will not in the least disturb his
+
| But logic is all but as far remote from psychology
| opinions.  He will also neglect the beliefs of those who are not informed,
+
| as is pure mathematics.
| and among the small residue he may fairly expect some unanimity on many
+
|
| questions.
+
| Logic is the study of the essential nature of signs.
 +
|
 +
| A sign is something that exists in replicasWhether the sign "it is raining"
 +
| or "all pairs of particles of matter have component accelerations toward one
 +
| another inversely proportional to the square of the distance" happens to have
 +
| a replica in writing, in oral speech, or in silent thought, is a distinction
 +
| of the very minutest interest to logic, which is a study, not of replicas,
 +
| but of signs.
 
|
 
|
| I hope it will now be plain to the reader, that the only rational
+
| But this is not the only, nor the most serious error involved in making logic
| ground for preferring the method of reasoning to the other methods
+
| treat of "judgments" in place of propositionsIt involves confounding two
| is that it fixes belief more surely.  A man who proposes to adopt the
+
| things which must be distinguished if a real comprehension of logic is to
| first method may consistently do so simply because he chooses to do so.
+
| be attained.
| But if we are to decide in favor of reasoning, we ought to do so on
 
| rational groundsNow if belief is fixed, no matter how, doubt has
 
| as a matter of fact ceased, & there is no motive, rational or other,
 
| for reasoning any more.  Any settlement of opinion, therefore, if it
 
| is full and perfect, is entirely satisfactory and nothing could be
 
| better.  It is the peculiarity of the method of reasoning, that if
 
| a man thinks that it will not burn him to put his hand in the fire,
 
| reasoning will not confirm that belief but will change it.  This is
 
| a vast advantage to the mind of a rationalist.  But the advocate of
 
| any one of the first three methods, will be able to say (if either
 
| of those methods will yield a fixed belief) either that he 'knows'
 
| by his method that fire will burn, so that reasoning is inferior to
 
| his method in that it may permit a man for a moment to doubt this, or
 
| else that he 'knows' that fire will not burn, so that reasoning leads
 
| all astray.  In either case therefore he will conceive that that which
 
| to the rationalist seems the great advantage of reasoning, to be a great
 
| fault.  Thus the only ground of a fair decision between the methods must
 
| be that one actually succeeds while the others break up and dissolve.
 
| Bryant expresses the philosophy of the matter perfectly:
 
 
|
 
|
| | Truth struck to earth shall rise again
+
| A 'proposition', as I have just intimated, is not to be understood as the
| | The eternal years of God are hers
+
| lingual expression of a judgment.  It is, on the contrary, that sign of
| | While error ... writhes in pain
+
| which the judgment is one replica and the lingual expression another.
| | And dies amidst her worshippers.
+
| But a judgment is distinctly 'more' than the mere mental replica of
 +
| a proposition. It not merely 'expresses' the proposition, but it
 +
| goes further and 'accepts' it.
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 15-16.
+
| I grant that the normal use of a proposition is to affirm it;  and its
 +
| chief logical properties relate to what would result in reference to its
 +
| affirmation. It is, therefore, convenient in logic to express propositions
 +
| in most cases in the indicative mood. But the proposition in the sentence,
 +
| "Socrates est sapiens", strictly expressed, is "Socratem sapientum esse".
 +
| The defence of this position is that in this way we distinguish between
 +
| a proposition and the assertion of it;  and without such distinction it
 +
| is impossible to get a distinct notion of the nature of the proposition.
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, MS 179, 1872, ["Logic, Truth, Settlement of Opinion"], pp. 14-16 in:
+
| One and the same proposition may be affirmed, denied, judged,
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| doubted, inwardly inquired into, put as a question, wished,
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
+
| asked for, effectively commanded, taught, or merely expressed,
 
+
| and does not thereby become a different proposition. What is
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| the nature of these operations? The only one that need detain
 
+
| us is affirmation, including judgment, or affirmation to oneself.
JITLNote 8
+
|
 
+
| As an aid in dissecting the constitution of affirmation I shall employ
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| a certain logical magnifying-glass that I have often found efficient
 
+
| in such business.  Imagine, then, that I write a proposition on a
| Chapter 1 (Enlarged Abstract) [MS 182, Winter-Spring 1872]
+
| piece of paper, perhaps a number of times, simply as a calligraphic
 +
| exercise.  It is not likely to prove a dangerous amusement.  But
 +
| suppose I afterwards carry the paper before a notary public and
 +
| make affidavit to its contents. That may prove to be a horse
 +
| of another color.  The reason is that this affidavit may be
 +
| used to determine an assent to the proposition it contains
 +
| in the minds of judge and jury; -- an effect that the paper
 +
| would not have had if I had not sworn to itFor certain
 +
| penalties here and hereafter are attached to swearing to
 +
| a false proposition;  and consequently the fact that
 +
| I have sworn to it will be taken as a negative index
 +
| that it is not false.  This assent in judge and jury's
 +
| minds may effect in the minds of sheriff and posse a
 +
| determination to an act of force to the detriment of
 +
| some innocent man's liberty or property.  Now certain
 +
| ideas of justice and good order are so powerful that
 +
| the ultimate result may be very bad for me.
 
|
 
|
| The very first of distinctions which logic supposes is between doubt and belief,
+
| This is the way that affirmation looks under the microscope;  for the only
| a question and a proposition.  Doubt and belief are two states of mind which
+
| difference between swearing to a proposition and an ordinary affirmation of
| feel different, so that we can distinguish them by immediate sensation.
+
| it, such as logic contemplates, is that in the latter case the penalties
| We almost always know without any experiment when we are in doubt and
+
| are less and even less certain than those of the lawThe reason there
| when we are convincedThis is such a difference as there is between
+
| are any penalties is, as before, that the affirmation may determine a
| red and blue, or pleasure & pain.  Were this the whole distinction,
+
| judgment to the same effect in the mind of the interpreter to his cost.
| it would be almost without significance.  But in point of fact the
+
| It cannot be that the sole cause of his believing it is that there are
| mere sensible distinguishability is attended with an important
+
| such penalties, since two events cannot cause one another, unless they
| practical difference.  When we believe there is a proposition
+
| are simultaneous.  There must have been, and we well know that there is,
| which according to some rule determines our actions, so that
+
| a sort of hypnotic disposition to believe what one is told with an air [of]
| our belief being known, the way in which we shall behave
+
| command.  It is Grimes's credenciveness, which is the essence of hypnotism.
| may be surely deduced, but in the case of doubt we have
+
| This disposition produced belief;  belief produced the penalties;  and the
| such a proposition more or less distinctly in our minds
+
| knowledge of these strengthens the disposition to believe.
| but do not act from it.  There is something further
 
| removed from belief than doubt, that is to say not
 
| to conceive the proposition at all.  Nor is doubt
 
| wholly without effect upon our conduct.  It makes
 
| us waver.  Conviction determines us to act in a
 
| particular way while pure unconscious ignorance
 
| alone which is the true contrary of belief has
 
| no effect at all.
 
 
|
 
|
| Belief and doubt may be conceived to be distinguished only in degree.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 248-249
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 20-21.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, MS 182, 1872, "Chapter 1 (Enlarged Abstract)", pages 20-21 in:
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
JITL. Note 9
+
===NEKS. Note 17===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| Chapter 2Of Inquiry
+
| I have discussed the nature of belief
 +
| in the 'Popular Science Monthly' for
 +
| November 1877On the whole, we may
 +
| set down the following definitions:
 +
|
 +
| A 'belief' in a proposition is a controlled and contented habit of
 +
| acting in ways that will be productive of desired results only if
 +
| the proposition is true.
 +
|
 +
| An 'affirmation' is an act of an utterer of a proposition to an interpreter,
 +
| and consists, in the first place, in the deliberate exercise, in uttering
 +
| the proposition, of a force tending to determine a belief in it in the
 +
| mind of the interpreter.  Perhaps that is a sufficient definition of it;
 +
| but it involves also a voluntary self-subjection to penalties in the
 +
| event of the interpreter's mind (and still more the general mind of
 +
| society) subsequently becoming decidedly determined to the belief
 +
| at once in the falsity of the proposition and in the additional
 +
| proposition that the utterer believed the proposition to be
 +
| false at that time he uttered it.
 
|
 
|
| The irritation of doubt causes a struggle to attain a state of belief.
+
| A 'judgment' is a mental act deliberately exercising a force tending to
| This struggle I shall term 'inquiry', though it must be admitted that
+
| determine in the mind of the agent a belief in the proposition:  to which
| this is sometimes not a very apt designation.
+
| should perhaps be added that the agent must be aware of his being liable
 +
| to inconvenience in the event of the proposition's proving false in any
 +
| practical aspect.
 
|
 
|
| The irritation of doubt is the only immediate motive for the struggle
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 249-250
| to attain belief. It is certainly best for us that our beliefs should
 
| be such as may truly guide our actions so as to satisfy our desires;  and
 
| this reflection will make us reject any belief which does not seem to have
 
| been so formed as to insure this result. But it will only do so by creating
 
| a doubt in place of that belief.  With the doubt therefore the struggle begins
 
| and with the cessation of doubt it ends.  Hence, the sole object of inquiry is
 
| the settlement [...]
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, p. 23.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Chapter 2. Of Inquiry", MS 188, May-June 1872, pages 23-24 in:
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
JITL. Note 10
+
===NEKS. Note 18===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| Chapter 3Four Methods of Settling Opinion
+
| In order fully to understand the distinction between a proposition and an argument,
 +
| it will be found important to class these acts, affirmation, etc. and ascertain
 +
| their precise nature.  The question is a purely logical one;  but it happens
 +
| that a false metaphysics is generally current, especially among men who
 +
| are influenced by physics but yet are not physicists enough fully to
 +
| comprehend physics, which metaphysics would disincline those who
 +
| believe in it from readily accepting the purely logical statement
 +
| of the nature of affirmationI shall therefore be forced to
 +
| touch upon metaphysics.  Yet I refuse to enter here upon
 +
| a metaphysical discussion;  I shall merely hint at what
 +
| ground it is necessary to take in opposition to
 +
| a common doctrine of that kind.
 
|
 
|
| If the settlement of opinion is the sole object of inquiry, and if belief is
+
| Affirmation is of the nature of a symbol.
| of the nature of a habit, why should we not attain the desired end, by taking
+
| It will be thought that this cannot be
| any answer to a question which we may fancy, and constantly reiterating it to
+
| the case since an affirmation, as the
| ourselves, by dwelling on all which may conduce to that belief and learning to
+
| above analysis shows, produces real
| turn with contempt and hatred from anything which might disturb it? This simple
+
| effects, physical effects.  No sign,
| and direct method is really pursued by many men.  ...
+
| however, is a real thing.  It has no
 +
| real being, but only being represented.
 +
|
 +
| I might more easily persuade readers to think that affirmation was
 +
| an index, since an index is, perhaps, a real thing.  Its replica,
 +
| at any rate, is in real reaction with its object, and it forces
 +
| a reference to that object upon the mind.  But a symbol, a word,
 +
| certainly exists only in replica, contrary to the nature of
 +
| a real thing;  and indeed the symbol only becomes a sign
 +
| because because its interpreter happens to be prepared
 +
| to represent it as such. Hence, I must and do admit
 +
| that a symbol cannot exert any real forceStill,
 +
| I maintain that every sufficiently complete symbol
 +
| governs things, and that symbols alone do this.
 +
| I mean that though it is not a force, it is
 +
| a law.
 
|
 
|
| But this method of fixing belief, which may be called the
+
| Now those who regard the false metaphysics
| method of obstinacy, will be unable to hold its ground in
+
| of which I speak as the only clear opinion
| practiceThe social impulse is against it. ...
+
| on its subject are in the habit of calling
 +
| laws "uniformities", meaning that what we
 +
| call laws are, in fact, nothing but common
 +
| characters of classes of eventsIt is
 +
| true that they hold that they are symbols,
 +
| as I shall endeavor to show that they are;
 +
| but this is to their minds equivalent to
 +
| saying that they are common characters
 +
| of events; for they entertain a very
 +
| different conception of the nature of
 +
| a symbol from mine.
 
|
 
|
| Let the will of the state act then, instead of that of the individual.  ...
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 250
 
|
 
|
| In judging this method of fixing belief, which may be called
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| the method of despotism, we must in the first place allow its
+
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| immeasurable mental and moral superiority to the method of
+
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| obstinacy.  ...
+
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| But no institution can undertake to regulate opinions upon every subject.
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Only the most important ones can be attended to, and on the rest men's minds
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| must be left to the action of natural causes.  This imperfection [...] may
+
 
| affect every man.  And though these affections are necessarily as various
+
</pre>
| as are individual conditions yet the method must be such that the ultimate
+
 
| conclusion of every man shall be the same. This is called the scientific
+
===NEKS. Note 19===
| method.  Its fundamental hypothesis stated in more familiar language is this.
+
 
| There are real things, whose characters are entirely independent of our opinions
+
<pre>
| about them;  those realities affect our senses, according to regular laws, and
+
 
| though our sensations are as different as our relations to the objects, yet by
+
| I begin, then, by showing that a law is
| taking advantage of the laws which subsist we can ascertain by reasoning how
+
| not a mere common character of events.
| the things really are, and any man if he have sufficient experience and reason
 
| enough about it, will be led to the one true conclusion. The new conception here
 
| involved is that of reality.  It may be asked how I know there are any realities.
 
| If this hypothesis is the sole support of my method of inquiry, my method of
 
| inquiry must not be used to support my hypothesis.  The reply is this.  1st,
 
| If investigation cannot be regarded as proving that there are real things,
 
| it at least does not lead to a contrary conclusion;  but the method and the
 
| conception on which it is based remain ever in harmony. No doubts of the
 
| method, therefore, necessarily arise from its practice, as is the case
 
| with all the others.  2nd, the feeling which gives rise to any method
 
| of fixing belief, is a dissatisfaction at two repugnant propositions.
 
| But here already is a vague concession that there is some one thing to
 
| which a proposition should conform.  Nobody, therefore, can really doubt
 
| that there are realities, or if he did, doubt would not be a source of
 
| dissatisfaction.  The hypothesis therefore is one which every mind admits.
 
| So that the social impulse does not cause me to doubt it.  3rd, Everybody
 
| uses the scientific method about a great many things and only ceases to use
 
| it when he does not know how to apply it.  4th, Experience of the method has
 
| not led me to doubt it but on the contrary scientific investigation has had
 
| the most wonderful triumphs in the way of settling opinion.  These afford
 
| the explanation of my not doubting either the method or the hypothesis
 
| which it supposes, and not having any doubt nor believing that anybody
 
| else whom I could influence has, it would be the merest babble for me
 
| to say more about it.  If there be anybody with a living doubt upon
 
| the subject, let him consider it.
 
 
|
 
|
| To describe the method of scientific investigation is the object of this book.
+
| Suppose that a man throwing a pair of dice, which were
| In this chapter, I shall only notice some points of contrast between it and
+
| all that honest dice are supposed to be, were to throw
| other methods of inquiry.
+
| sixes a hundred times running.  Every mathematician will
 +
| admit that that would be no ground for expecting the next
 +
| throw to turn up sixes.  It is true that in any actual case
 +
| in which we should see sixes thrown a hundred times running we
 +
| should very rightly be confident that the next throw would turn up
 +
| sixes likewise.  But why should we do so?  Can anybody sincerely deny
 +
| that it would be because we should think the throwing of a hundred
 +
| successive sixes was an almost infallible indication of there
 +
| being some real connection between those throws, so that the
 +
| series not merely a uniformity in the common character of
 +
| turning up sixes, but something more, a result of a real
 +
| circumstance about the dice connecting the throws?
 
|
 
|
| This is the only one of the four methods which presents any distinction of a right
+
| This example illustrates the logical principle that mere community of
| and a wrong way.  If I adopt the method of obstinacy and shut myself out from all
+
| character between the members of a collection is no argument, however
| influences, no matter what I think necessary to doing this, is necessary according
+
| slender, tending to show that the same character belongs to another
| to that method.  So with the method of despotism, the state may try to put down
+
| object not a member of that collection and not (as far as we have
| heresy by means which from a scientific point of view seem very ill-calculated
+
| any reason to think) having any real connection with it, unless
| to accomplish its purpose, but the only test 'on that method' is what the state
+
| perchance it be in having the character in questionFor the
| thinks, so that it cannot pursue the method wronglySo with the 'a priori'
+
| usual supposition that we make about honest dice is that there
| methodIf I endeavor to lay my susceptibilities of belief perfectly open to
+
| will be no real connection (or none of the least significance)
| the influences which work upon them, I cannot on those principles go wrong.
+
| between their different throws.  I know that writer has copied
| But with the scientific method, the case is different.  I may start with
+
| writer in the feeble analysis of chance as consisting in our
| known and observed facts to proceed to the unknown; and yet the rules
+
| ignorance.  But the calculus of probabilities is pure nonsense
| which I follow in doing so may not be such as investigation would
+
| unless it affords assurance in the long run. Now what assurance
| approve.  The test of whether I am truly following the method
+
| could there be concerning a long run of throws of a pair of dice,
| is not an immediate appeal to my feelings and purposes,
+
| if, instead of knowing they were honest dice, we merely did not
| but on the contrary itself involves the application
+
| know whether they were or not, or if, instead of knowing that
| of the method. Hence it is that bad reasoning
+
| there would be no important connection between the throws,
| as well as good reasoning is possible;  and
+
| we merely did not know that there would be.
| this fact is the foundation of the
+
|
| practical side of logic.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 250-251
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 24-28.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Four Methods of Settling Opinion", MS 189, May-June 1872, pp. 24-28 in:
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
JITL. Note 11
+
===NEKS. Note 20===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| Chapter 4Of Reality
+
| That certain objects 'A', 'B', 'C', etc. are known to have
 +
| a certain character is not the slightest reason for supposing
 +
| that another object [Xi], quite unconnected with the others so
 +
| far as we know, has that character.  Nor has this self evident
 +
| proposition ever been denied.  A "law", however, is taken very
 +
| rightly by everybody to be a reason for predicting that an event
 +
| will have a certain character although the events known to have
 +
| that character have no other real connection with it than the law.
 +
|
 +
| This shows that the law is not a mere uniformity but involves a real connection.
 +
| It is true that those metaphysicians say that if 'A', 'B', 'C', etc. are known
 +
| to have two common characters and [Xi] is known to have one of these, this is
 +
| a reason for believing that it has the otherBut this is quite untenable.
 +
| Merely having a common character does not constitute a real connection;
 +
| and those very writers virtually acknowledge this, in reducing law to
 +
| uniformity, that is, to the possession of a common character, as a
 +
| way of denying that "law" implies any real connection.
 
|
 
|
| Investigation supposes a true and a false,
+
| What is a law, then?  It is a formula to which real events truly conform.
| truth and falsity being independent of all
+
| By "conform", I mean that, taking the formula as a general principle,
| opinion upon the matterThe name 'real'
+
| if experience shows that the formula applies to a given event, then
| is applied to that which is independent
+
| the result will be confirmed by experienceBut that such a general
| of how you or I or any number of minds
+
| formula is a symbol, and more particularly, an asserted symbolical
| think it to be.
+
| proposition, is evident.  Whether or not this symbol is a reality,
 +
| even if not recognized by you or me or any generations of men, and
 +
| whether, if so, it implies an Utterer, are metaphysical questions
 +
| into which I will not now enter.
 
|
 
|
| It is a truism to say that the character of what I think
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 251-252
| depends entirely on what I think it to be. The real is
 
| not, therefore, 'per se' an immediate object of thought,
 
| even though my thought may happen to coincide with it.
 
| Yet the real must influence thought or I could not by
 
| following any rules of reasoning arrive at any truth.
 
 
|
 
|
| Investigation consists necessarily of two parts, one by which a
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| belief is generated from other beliefs, which is called 'reasoning';
+
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| and another by which new elements of belief are brought into the mind,
+
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| which is called 'observation'.  Thus, the conclusions depend entirely
+
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
| upon the observations. But while the ultimate conclusion is one and
 
| the same in the minds of all who push investigation far enough, the
 
| observations on which it hangs are for every man private and peculiar.
 
| The observations which I made yesterday are not the same that I make today;
 
| nor are simultaneous observations from different situations or with other
 
| different circumstances the same. Two men cannot therefore make the same
 
| observation.  We may go further and say that no two observations are in
 
| themselves in any degree alike.  The judgment that they are alike is not
 
| contained in either observation (since they do not relate to one another)
 
| but is a belief generated by the two beliefs in which the two observations
 
| immediately result, so that it is an inference of reasoning, as that has just
 
| been defined.  Thus our reasonings begin with the most various premisses, which
 
| have not in themselves anything in common, but which so determine our beliefs as
 
| to lead us at last to one destined conclusion.
 
 
|
 
|
| Here is the whole statement of facts from which we must infer whatever we can know
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| of the mode of being of the real.  But there is no additional fact which we can
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| infer from these factsFor these embrace everything which takes place in
+
 
| thought, and as to anything out of thought we can know nothing.
+
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Note 21===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
| One distinguished writer seems to hold that, although events
 +
| conform to the formula, or rather, although it conforms to the
 +
| Truth of facts, yet it does not influence the facts.  This comes
 +
| perilously near to being pure verbiage;  for, seeing that nobody
 +
| pretends that the formula exerts a compulsive force on the events,
 +
| what definite meaning can attach to this emphatic denial of the
 +
| law's influencing the facts?  The law had such mode of being as
 +
| it ever has before all the facts had come into existence, for it
 +
| might already be experientially known;  and then the law existing,
 +
| when the facts happen there is agreement between them and the law.
 +
|
 +
| What is it, then, that this writer has in mind?  If it were not
 +
| for the extraordinary misconception of the word "cause" by Mill,
 +
| I should say that the idea of metaphysical sequence implied in that
 +
| word, in "influence", and in other similar words was perfectly clear.
 +
| Mill's singularity is that he speaks of the cause of a singular event.
 +
| Everybody else speaks of the cause of a "fact", which is an element of
 +
| the event.  But, with Mill, it is the event in its entirety which is
 +
| caused.  The consequence is that Mill is obliged to define the cause
 +
| as the totality of all the circumstances attending the event.  This is,
 +
| strictly speaking, the Universe of being in its totality.  But any event,
 +
| just as it exists, in its entirety, is nothing else but the same Universe
 +
| of being in its totality.  It strictly follows, therefore, from Mill's use
 +
| of the words, that the only 'causatum' is the entire Universe of being and
 +
| that its only cause is itself.  He thus deprives the word of all utility.
 +
|
 +
| As everybody else but Mill and his school more or less clearly
 +
| understands the word, it is a highly useful oneThat which
 +
| is caused, the 'causatum', is, not the entire event, but
 +
| such abstracted element of an event as is expressible
 +
| in a proposition, or what we call a "fact".  The cause
 +
| is another "fact".  Namely, it is, in the first place,
 +
| a fact which could, within the range of possibility,
 +
| have its being without the being of the 'causatum';
 +
| but, secondly, it could not be a real fact while
 +
| a certain third complementary fact, expressed
 +
| or understood, was realized, without the being
 +
| of the causatum;  and thirdly, although the
 +
| actually realized causatum might perhaps be
 +
| realized by other causes or by accident,
 +
| yet the existence of the entire possible
 +
| causatum could not be realized without
 +
| the cause in question.
 +
|
 +
| It may be added that a part of a cause, if a part in
 +
| that respect in which the cause is a cause, is also
 +
| called a 'cause'.  In other respects, too, the scope
 +
| of the word will be somewhat widened in the sequel.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 252
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 60-61.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, "Chapter 4. Of Reality", MS 205, Fall 1872, pp. 60-61 in:
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
JITL. Note 12
+
===NEKS. Note 22===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| Chapter ___. The List of Categories
+
| If the cause so defined is a part of the causatum, in the sense that
 +
| the causatum could not logically be without the cause, it is called
 +
| an 'internal cause';  otherwise, it is called an 'external cause'.
 
|
 
|
| In the doctrines which have thus far been developed, are implicitly
+
| If the cause is of the nature of an individual thing or fact,
| involved certain conceptions of such universal applicability and such
+
| and the other factor requisite to the necessitation of the
| importance in logic, that I propose to consider them especially in this
+
| 'causatum' is a general principle, I would call the cause
| chapter under the name of 'Categories'.
+
| a 'minor', or 'individuating', or perhaps a 'physical cause'.
 
|
 
|
| In the ideal final opinion which would perfectly represent the reality of things,
+
| If, on the other hand, it is the general principle which is
| all possible doubt would be resolved.  It follows that the reality is something
+
| regarded as the cause and the individual fact to which it is
| entirely definite.  'Ens est unum.'  An object may be conceived to have this
+
| applied is taken as the understood factor, I would call the
| character without being real, that is without being in accord with the
+
| cause a 'major', or 'defining', or perhaps a 'psychical cause'.
| opinion to which observations are fated to tend, and I shall call this
 
| the 'being' of things.  A griffin 'is' a fabulous animal.  That is,
 
| a griffin is supposed to be a definite object.  You may ask as many
 
| questions as you please about a griffin and supply answers according
 
| to some rule and if all the questions which could be invented were
 
| thus answered, the animal would possess as perfect a being as if
 
| it were real, and yet be a mere creature of the imagination.
 
 
|
 
|
| In every doubt there is one thing fixed and one thing vague;
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 252-253
| the thing which we doubt something about is fixed, what we
 
| doubt about it is vague. These two things must equally be
 
| distinguished in the belief in which the doubt is resolved.
 
| Consequently, every being has elements which are distinguished
 
| from it but which belong to it, in short it has 'qualities'.
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, p. 61.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| Charles S. Peirce, "The List of Categories", MS 207, Winter 1872-73, p. 61 in:
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
JITL. Note 13
+
===NEKS. Note 23===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| On Representations
+
| The individuating internal cause is called the 'material cause'.
 +
| Thus the integrant parts of a subject or fact form its 'matter',
 +
| or material cause.
 +
|
 +
| The individuating external cause is called the 'efficient',
 +
| or 'efficient cause';  and the causatum is called the 'effect'.
 +
|
 +
| The defining internal cause is called the 'formal' cause,
 +
| or 'form'.  All those facts which constitute the definition
 +
| of a subject or fact make up its form.
 +
|
 +
| The defining external cause is called the 'final cause',
 +
| or 'end'.
 +
|
 +
| It is hoped that these statements will be found to hit
 +
| a little more squarely than did those of Aristotle and
 +
| the scholastics the same bull's eye at which they aimed.
 +
| From scholasticism and the medieval universities, these
 +
| conceptions passed in vaguer form into the common mind
 +
| and vernacular of Western Europe, and especially so in
 +
| England.
 
|
 
|
| A representation is an object which stands for another so that
+
| Consequently by the aid of these definitions I think
| an experience of the former affords us a knowledge of the latter.
+
| I can make out what it is that the writer mentioned
| There are three essential conditions to which every representation
+
| has in mind in saying that it is not the law which
| must conform.  It must in the first place like any other object have
+
| influences, or is the final cause of, the facts,
| qualities independent of its meaning.  It is only through a knowledge
+
| but the facts that make up the cause of the law.
| of these that we acquire any information concerning the object it
+
|
| represents.  Thus, the word "man" as printed, has three letters;
+
| He means that the general fact which the law of gravitation
| these letters have certain shapes, and are black. I term such
+
| expresses is composed of the special facts that this stone at
| characters, the material qualities of the representation. In the
+
| such a time fell to the ground as soon as it was free to do so
| 2nd place a representation must have a real causal connection with
+
| and its upward velocity was exhausted, that each other stone did
| its objectIf a weathercock indicates the direction of the wind
+
| the same, that each planet at each moment was describing an ellipse
| it is because the wind really turns it roundIf the portrait of
+
| having the centre of mass of the solar system at a focus, etc. etc.;
| a man of a past generation tells me how he looked it is because
+
| so that the individual facts are the material cause of the general fact
| his appearance really determined the appearance of the picture
+
| expressed by the law; while the propositions expressing those facts are
| by a train of causation, acting through the mind of the painter.
+
| the efficient cause of the law itself.
| If a prediction is trustworthy it is because those antecedents of
+
|
| which the predicted event is the necessary consequence had a real
+
| This is a possible meaning in harmony with the writer's sect of thought;
| effect in producing the predictionIn the third place, every
+
| and I believe it is his intended meaning.  But this is easily seen not
| representation addresses itself to a mind.  It is only in so
+
| to be trueFor the formula relates to all possible events of a given
| far as it does this that it is a representation.  The idea of
+
| description;  which is the same as to say that it relates to all possible
| the representation itself excites in the mind another idea and
+
| eventsNow no collection of actual individual events or other objects of
| in order that it may do this it is necessary that some principle
+
| any general description can amount to all possible events or objects of that
| of association between the two ideas should already be established
+
| description;  for it is possible that an addition should be made to that
| in that mind.  These three conditions serve to define the nature of
+
| collection.  The individuals do not constitute the matter of a general;
| a representation.
+
| those who with Kant, or long before him, said that they do were wanting in
 +
| the keen edge of thought requisite for such discussions.  On the contrary,
 +
| the truth of the formula, its really being a sign of the indicated object,
 +
| is the defining cause of the agreement of the individual facts with it.
 +
|
 +
| Namely, this truth fulfills the first condition, which is that it might
 +
| logically be although there were no such agreementFor it might be true,
 +
| that is, contains no falsity, that whatever stone there might be on earth
 +
| would have a real downward component [of] acceleration even although no stone
 +
| actually existed on earth.  It fulfills the second condition, that as soon as the
 +
| other factor (in this case the actual existence of each stone on earth) was present,
 +
| the result of the formula, the real downward component of acceleration would exist.
 +
| Finally, it fulfills the third condition, that while all existing stones might
 +
| be accelerated downwards by other causes or by an accidental concurrence of
 +
| circumstances, yet the downward acceleration of every possible stone would
 +
| involve the truth of the formula.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 253-254
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, p. 62.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
 +
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
 +
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
 +
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| Charles S. Peirce, "On Representations", MS 212, Winter-Spring 1873, p. 62 in:
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
+
 
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===NEKS. Note 24===
  
JITL.  Note 14
+
<pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
...
  
| I begin with the soul of man. For we first learn that brutes have souls from
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 254
| the facts of the human soul. What brutes and other men do & suffer would be
 
| quite unintelligible to us, if we had not a standard within ourselves with
 
| which to measure others.
 
 
|
 
|
| At the first dawn of cognition we began to compare and consider the objects about us.
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Our thought first assigned to things their right places and reduced the wild chaos
+
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| of sensuous impressions to a luminous order. But after thought had classified
+
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| everything a residuum was left over, which had no place in the classification.
+
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
| This was thought itself. What is this which is left over?  After thought
 
| has considered everything, it is obliged next to think of itself.  Here
 
| it is at once means and end. The question is, 'what' is thought, --
 
| and the question can only be answered 'by means of' thought.
 
 
|
 
|
| This is a noticeable circumstance. How can thought think of itself, it is
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| asked;  that would be an insoluble contradiction. It is as though a tone
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| should be heard of itself, or a beam of light be seen by itself. But this
+
 
| objection reminds one of the efforts of the man who tried to look at his
+
</pre>
| own eye. After great difficulty he got so far as to see the end of his
+
 
| nose, forgetting that it would be much simpler to hold up a looking-glass
+
==NEKS. New Elements &bull; Kaina Stoicheia &bull; Commentary==
| to his face. Common sense, which usually hits the nail on the head, has
+
 
| long ago held that looking-glass up to thought. If I wish to represent to
+
===NEKS. Commentary Note 1===
| myself what my thought is, (says common sense) I have only to act as though
+
 
| my thought were an external object which I can consider as I should consider
+
<pre>
| something not a part of myself. Thought thus objectively considered common
+
 
| sense terms the soul.  So if we are to investigate in a scientific manner
+
Here's one for all you Neo-Plots out there.
| the nature of thought, we //need/can// do nothing else than consider the
+
Rummaging about the web I find that the phrase
| soul as if it were an object of experience.
+
"Utter Indetermination" appears in the Enneads:
 +
 
 +
| Everything the Soul engenders down to this point comes into being shapeless,
 +
| and takes form by orientation towards its author and supporter: therefore
 +
| the thing engendered on the further side can be no image of the Soul,
 +
| since it is not even alive;  it must be an utter Indetermination.
 
|
 
|
| Everyone grants that thought is a sort of experience; otherwise, we
+
| http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/plotenn/enn214.htm
| could not know that we thinkEveryone further sees that we have in
+
 
| thought a very varied experience, for it changes both with the object
+
Pretty scary ...
| thought of and with mental development which we have attainedThus,
+
 
| we bring together all the experiences which thought has in itself &
+
As I suspected, we'll probably end up hashing out the whole
| subject them to the consideration of our thoughtsThere are also
+
KS/NE paper before we can get a clue what it's talking about.
| other experiences, not properly thoughts, such as sensations and
+
Here's a sample of some previous encounters:
| feelings which we term phenomena of the soul, because we recognize
+
 
| them as immediate products of an activity within us, which according
+
QUAGS.  Questions About Genuine Signs
| to our observation cannot be separated from the activity of thought.
+
 
|
+
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/thread.html#268
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 10-11.
+
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/thread.html#2926
|
+
 
| Charles S. Peirce, "Third Lecture", MS 192, Summer-Fall 1872, pages 10-11 in:
+
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002658.html
|'Writings of Charles S. PeirceA Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
+
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002659.html
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
+
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002662.html
 +
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002926.html
 +
 
 +
QUAGS.  Questions About Genuine Signs -- Commentary
 +
 
 +
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/thread.html#2923
 +
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002923.html
 +
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002929.html
 +
03. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002930.html
 +
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002931.html
 +
05http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002932.html
 +
 
 +
QUAGSQuestions About Genuine Signs -- Discussion
 +
 
 +
00http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/thread.html#2663
 +
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002663.html
 +
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002664.html
 +
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002665.html
 +
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002666.html
 +
05.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002668.html
 +
06. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002669.html
 +
07.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002670.html
 +
 
 +
QUIPS. Questions Involving Pure Symbols -- Discussion
 +
 
 +
00. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/thread.html#2602
 +
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-June/thread.html#2766
 +
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-July/thread.html#2866
 +
00. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/thread.html#2927
 +
24. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002690.html
 +
74.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002927.html
 +
 
 +
It looks like this'll be one of those "eternal return" type questions.
 +
I just hope it won't be one of those "eternal repetition" type issues.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Commentary Note 2===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Let me try to bring some measure of concreteness to this discussion
 +
of "various orders of determination or information" (VOODOI) and its
 +
possible relation to "higher order propositional expressions" (HOPE's).
 +
To keep things simple let's consider a discrete order of determinations
 +
and put off worrying about a continuous order of determinations until we
 +
have understood the discrete case well enough to deal with anything more.
  
JITL. Note 15
+
Again for the sake of simplicity, let's start with a universe of discourse
 +
that is constructed on the basis of just two predicates, let's say p and q.
 +
Anything in this universe is determined with respect to these predicates by
 +
saying whether p is true or false of it and whether q is true or false of it.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Thus we have the following four propositions of maximal determination:
  
| Chapter 11On Logical Breadth and Depth
+
  0(p)(q), meaning "not p and not q"
|
+
 
| As Logic is the study of the laws of signs so far as these denote things --
+
  1(p) q , meaning "not p and q"
| those laws of signs which determine what things they denote and what
 
| they do not -- it is necessary in Logic to pay especial attention to
 
| those terms which denote signs.  Such terms are genus species &c.
 
| No thing is a genus but as there are terms such as man and tree
 
| which denote some one thing leaving it more or less indeterminate
 
| what one so we may speak of whatever may be denoted by such a general
 
| term as a genus or class.  Such terms are called 'terms of second intention'.
 
| The first intention is the mental act by which an object is conceived.  The
 
| second intention is the mental act by which the first conception is made an
 
| object of conception in reference to its relation to its object.  A term of
 
| second intention does not so much signify the sign itself as it signifies
 
| whatever is denoted by a sign of a certain description.  As signs differ
 
| in their logical characters we may define an object by means of the
 
| logical characters of the sign which denotes it and in that case
 
| it is pointed out with a peculiar kind of generality which
 
| requires special attention.  Two of the most important
 
| characters of general terms are their logical breadth
 
| and depth.  The breadth of a term in general is that of
 
| which the term can be predicated.  The depth of a term is
 
| that which can be predicated of it.  The breadth therefore
 
| may be considered as a collection of objects -- real things --
 
| though it can also be considered as consisting of the terms
 
| which may be made subject of a true proposition of which
 
| the given term is the predicate.  The depth of a term
 
| cannot be considered as a collection of things but
 
| can only be considered as a complex of terms or of
 
| attributes.  The term attribute, character, mark, or
 
| quality is a term of second intention.  Two things are
 
| alike in a certain respect that is to say the same predicate
 
| can be applied to either of them.  Then the capacity of having that
 
| predicate applied to it with truth is called an attribute that is a thing
 
| to which it can be applied.  The attribute is therefore an abstract term.
 
| Terms are divisible into concrete and abstract.  The concrete are such
 
| as white virtuous &c. the abstract such as whiteness virtue, etc.
 
| Abstract terms do not denote any real thing but they denote
 
| fictitious things.  An object's being white is conceived
 
| as being due to its being in some relation with a certain
 
| fictitious thing whiteness.  In point of fact that the object
 
| is white may in a certain sense be said to be due to its connection
 
| with the sign or predicate white that is to say it must be in such a
 
| relation to the name white that this name may be applied to it with
 
| truth or else it cannot be white.  There is no falsity in this
 
| statement although it is more natural to state the matter
 
| in the inverse way and to say that its having that
 
| connection with that name is due to the fact
 
| that it is white.  One statement is as true
 
| as the other.  In the latter more natural mode
 
| of statement the existence of the thing is looked
 
| upon as the ultimate fact but we have seen in the chapter
 
| upon reality that the final information is the ultimate fact,
 
| that final information consisting in applying a certain sign
 
| to certain objects in the predication and therefore it is
 
| perfectly correct to say that the thing's being white
 
| is due to and consists of the applicability of
 
| a certain predicate to a certain thing.
 
| A attribute or quality is not precisely
 
| the same as a predicate inasmuch as when we
 
| use the word predicate we have in mind the fact
 
| that the predicate is something extraneous to the thing
 
| which does not belong to it as it exists but belongs to it as it is
 
| thought whereas an attribute is considered as belonging to a thing whatever
 
| is thoughtBut upon our view of the nature of reality this is a distinction
 
| of very slight moment because existence is thus not independent of all thought
 
| and what is affirmed in the final judgment is the same as what really exists.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 98-99
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873, pp. 98-102 in:
 
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
  2.  p (q), meaning "p and not q"
  
JITLNote 16
+
  3.   p q , meaning "p and q"
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
It's customary to refer to these 4 propositions as the "cells" of
 +
the universe of discourse that is built on the predicates p and q.
  
Cf: JITL 15http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000732.html
+
If we don't know enough to determine a thing to the full extent that's
In: JITL.     http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#712
+
permitted by the predicates in this universe of discourse, then other
 +
propositions, of less than maximal determination, may serve to say
 +
how much we know about the thing in question.
 +
 
 +
For example, if we know that a thing is either p or q, but don't know
 +
any more than that, then the proposition "p or q" pins it down to the
 +
best of our knowledgeUsing only negation and conjunction, we have:
 +
 
 +
  ((p)(q))
 +
 
 +
As we know, there are 16 distinct propositions that we can make
 +
about any given thing, relative to the given frame of reference.
 +
These 16 propositions exhaust the variety of things that can be
 +
said in the language that we will call the "zeroth order logic"
 +
based on p and q.
 +
 
 +
Thus we can express an order of determination, or a lack thereof,
 +
that hesitates or vacillates among any number of the four "cells"
 +
of the universe of discourse in view. That is all well and good,
 +
but what if the order of our indetermination is not exactly that,
 +
not to be measured by our vacillation among a subset of the above
 +
four cells, but more like a state of indecision among some subset
 +
of the 16 propositions, as if a hesitation among actual universes?
 +
 
 +
Next time we'll explore a way to express
 +
the next higher order of indetermination,
 +
or the next lower order of determination.
  
| Chapter 11.  On Logical Breadth and Depth (cont.)
+
</pre>
|
 
| Thus in considering the breadth and depth of terms
 
| it is desirable to make a number of distinctions.
 
|
 
| By the "informed breadth" of a term I shall mean all the
 
| real objects of which it is predicable with logical truth
 
| in the supposed state of information as our knowledge is
 
| never absolute but consists only of probabilities that
 
| all the information at hand must be taken into account
 
| and those things of which there is not on the whole
 
| reason to believe that the term is truly predicable
 
| are not to be reckoned as part of its breadth.
 
|
 
| If T be a term which is predicable only of S_1, S_2, and S_3
 
| then the S_1's, S_2's, and S_3's will constitute the informed
 
| breadth of T.
 
|
 
| If there be a second term T' which is predicable only of S_1 and S_2
 
| and if it is not known that S_3 is entirely included under S_1 and S_2
 
| then T is considered to have a greater informed breadth than T'.
 
|
 
| If it is known that the S_3's are not all among the S_1's and S_2's the
 
| excess of breadth is certain but if it is not known whether or not this
 
| is the case it is "doubtful".
 
|
 
| If certain S_3's are known to exist which are not known to be either
 
| S_1's or S_2's, T is said to have a greater actual breadth than T'
 
| but if all the S_3's which are known to exist are also known to
 
| be S_1's and S_2's though there are other S_3's which are not
 
| S_1 or S_2 then T is said to have greater potential breadth
 
| than T'.
 
|
 
| If T and T' are conceptions in different minds
 
| or in different states of the same mind then T
 
| may have a doubtful excess of breadth in one
 
| mind and no excess at all in the other mind.
 
| In that case the conception is said to be
 
| more extensively distinct to the latter
 
| mind.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 99-100
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873,
 
| Chapter 11 from ["Toward a Logic Book, 1872-1873"], pp. 14-108 in:
 
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Vol. 3, 1872-1878',
 
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
NB.  I have substituted S_1, S_2, S_3 for Peirce's S', S'', S''', respectively.
+
===NEKS. Commentary Note 3===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
JITLNote 17
+
Re: KS 1http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003063.html
 +
In: KS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3063
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
In the matter of Theory and Practice, Peirce begins by explaining the
 +
difference between theoretical propositions and practical propositions,
 +
which he couches in the terms of a semiotic or sign relational framework.
 +
We come almost immediately to several problems of interpretation, coming
 +
to a head in the following passage:
  
| Chapter 11On Logical Breadth and Depth (cont.)
+
| In the first place, a sign is not a real thing.
 +
| It is of such a nature as to exist in 'replicas'.
 +
| Look down a printed page, and every 'the' you see
 +
| is the same word, every 'e' the same letter.  A real
 +
| thing does not so exist in replica.  The being of a
 +
| sign is merely 'being represented'Now 'really being'
 +
| and 'being represented' are very different.  Giving to
 +
| the word 'sign' the full scope that reasonably belongs
 +
| to it for logical purposes, a whole book is a sign;  and
 +
| a translation of it is a replica of the same sign.  A whole
 +
| literature is a sign.  The sentence "Roxana was the queen of
 +
| Alexander" is a sign of Roxana and of Alexander, and though
 +
| there is a grammatical emphasis on the former, logically the
 +
| name "Alexander" is as much 'a subject' as is the name "Roxana";
 +
| and the real persons Roxana and Alexander are 'real objects' of
 +
| the sign.
 
|
 
|
| By the "informed depth" of a term I mean all the real characters in
+
| Every sign that is sufficiently complete refers refers to sundry
| contradistinction to mere synonimous names which can be predicated of
+
| real objects.  All these objects, even if we are talking of Hamlet's
| it with logical truth in the supposed state of information no character
+
| madness, are parts of one and the same Universe of being, the "Truth".
| being counted twice over knowingly. The depth like the breadth will be
+
| But so far as the "Truth" is merely the 'object' of a sign, it is merely
| certainly doubtful and there is a comprehensive distinctness corresponding
+
| the Aristotelian 'Matter' of it that is so.
| to extensive distinctness.
 
 
|
 
|
| The informed breadth and depth suppose a state of information which lies
+
| C.S. Peirce, "Kaina Stoicheia", NEM 4, 238-239
| somewhere between two imaginary extremes.  There are first the state of
+
| Also appears in "New Elements", EP 2, 303-304
| knowledge in which no fact should be known but only the meanings of terms
+
 
| and, second, the state of information in which every fact should be known.
+
At first it seems obvious enough that the Peirce who says
| This suggests two other sorts of breadth and depth corresponding to the two
+
"a sign is not a real thing" is not the Peirce who speaks
| essential states of information which I shall term accordingly the essential
+
as a Platonic or Scholastic realist, but one is using the
| and the substantial breadth and depth.
+
phrases "real thing" and "real object" in accord with the
|
+
more streetwise values that they bear in mundane parlance,
| The essential depth of a term which is sometimes called
+
however pre-reflective and pre-critical those uses may be.
| its essence consists of the really conceivable qualities
+
We may have some difficulty extending this street meaning
| predicated of it in its definitionThis is one of the
+
to the case of Hamlet's madness, but the problem does not
| most important features of logic.
+
seem insurmountable in itself, as all the groundlings wot.
|
+
 
| Suppose the definition of the term T be this"In T is at once
+
Read this way, Peirce is simply pointing out the familiar dual use of
| P_1, P_2, and P_3"This sums up the whole meaning of TIt may
+
the word "sign" to refer to a very concrete thing and also to a very
| not be known that there is no such thing as P_1 and therefore the
+
abstract thing, the relationship between the two being more or less
| meaning of T does not imply its existence. On the other hand we
+
well treated in terms of the token/type relation.  Here the tokens
| must know that P_1, P_2, and P_3 are neither of them coextensive
+
or replicas are awarded the titular honor of a cave-internal sort
| with the whole conception of being for we know the qualities of
+
of reality, whereas in other lights, more cave-external, it'd be
| things only by comparison with their opposites hence we must
+
the types or the equivalence classes of tokens that are said to
| know that there is something which is not P_1 and that this
+
be the real realitiesI think most folks know the variations
| is not T, that there is something which is not P_2 and that
+
on this theme, all independently of the particular words that
| this is not T, and that there is something which is not P_3
+
are used to play it out, so I think it's safe to proceed on
| and that this is not T.
+
the grounds of that prior understanding.
|
+
 
| Accordingly if we define the essential breadth of a term as "those real things
+
</pre>
| of which according to its every meaning a term is predicable" then "not T" has
+
 
| an essential breadth that is to say its very meaning implies that there are
+
===NEKS. Commentary Note 4===
| things of which it is predicable.  Thus T is a term which has essential depth
+
 
| but no essential breadth -- "not T" is a term which has essential breadth
+
<pre>
| but not essential depth and all terms may be divided into two classes,
+
 
| the "essential positive" and "essential negative", the former having
+
Re: KS-COM 2.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003067.html
| essential depth but not essential breadth, the latter having essential
+
In: KS-COM.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3066
| breadth but not essential depth.  There are some terms which are
+
 
| affirmative in form but which according to this definition are
+
To save a few words in the remainder of this discussion, let's notate
| essentially negative and vice versa. As examples of this we
+
the "universe of discourse based on the predicates p and q" as [p, q].
| may allude particularly to the terms "being" and "nothing"
+
The universe [p, q] is layed down in two layers:
| both of which are terms of second intention.
+
 
|
+
  1. There is the set of 4 cells, that may be enumerated in terms of the
| As every term has breadth and the breadth of one term is greater
+
      basic propositions that describe them as {(p)(q), (p) q, p (q), p q},
| than that of another we may conceive of a term the breadth of
+
      a set that it will be convenient to notate as <<p, q>>Considered
| which includes that of every other other term so that it is
+
      in regard to its abstract type, <<p, q>> has the type of B^2 = B x B.
| predicable of anything whateverThis is the definition
+
 
| of the term "being"Its definition therefore gives it
+
  2There is the set of 16 propositions on <<p, q>>, notated as <<p, q>>^.
| breadth but not depth and accordingly it is essentially
+
      Each of these propositions is a function of the form f : <<p, q>> -> B.
| negative.
+
      Thus the space of propositions <<p, q>>^ has the abstract type B^2 -> B.
|
+
 
| We may also conceive of a term whose depth includes the depth of all
+
In the notation just introduced we can say that [p, q] = {<<p, q>>, <<p, q>>^}.
| other terms so that anything whatever may be predicated of it without
+
 
| any falsity and this is the definition of the term "nothing".  For you
+
It is important to note that each of the 4 cells in <<p, q>> corresponds so
| may say what you please of nothing and if it is clearly understood that
+
uniquely to a proposition in <<p, q>>^ = <<p, q>> -> B that we shall seldom
| what you speak of has no existence there is no falsity in what you assert
+
bother to distinguish between them.
| because you have not made any assertion whatever"Nothing" therefore is
+
 
| a term which has essential depth without any breadth and is according to
+
The most that we can pin down a thing in the universe [p, q] is by
| our definition essentially affirmative.
+
giving one of the basic propositions, cells, or points in <<p, q>>.
|
+
When we find ourselves less certain than that, we can describe our
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 100-101
+
state of information about a thing by stating any one of the other
|
+
propositions in <<p, q>>^.
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873,
+
 
| Chapter 11 from ["Toward a Logic Book, 1872-1873"], pp. 14-108 in:
+
The thing to notice here is that the step to a lower order of determination
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A Chronological Edition, Vol. 3, 1872-1878',
+
is associated with a passage from a space of points X, in this case <<p, q>>,
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
+
to a space of functions X -> B, in the present case <<p, q>>^ = <<p, q>> -> B.
 +
 
 +
This is the sort of step that we will iterate in order to reach
 +
ever lower orders of determination, or to put it the other way,
 +
ever higher orders of vacillation.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Commentary Note 5===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
The venn diagram shown below presents a familiar way of picturing
 +
the universe of discourse [p, q].  The propositional expressions
 +
inscribed in the cells represent the four elements of <<p, q>>.
 +
The 16 propositions of the form <<p, q>> -> B can be pictured
 +
as all the ways of shading the cells of the diagram, given
 +
the two colors that correspond to the boolean values in B.
 +
One observes that 4 cells shaded in 2 colors produces
 +
2^4 = 16 different patterns altogether.
 +
 
 +
o-------------------------------------------------o
 +
| ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` ` `o-----------o` `o-----------o` ` ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` ` / ` ` ` ` ` ` \ / ` ` ` ` ` ` \ ` ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` `/` ` ` ` ` ` ` `o` ` ` ` ` ` ` `\` ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` / ` ` ` ` ` ` ` / \ ` ` ` ` ` ` ` \ ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` `/` ` ` ` ` ` ` `/` `\` ` ` ` ` ` ` `\` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` o ` ` ` ` ` ` ` o ` ` o ` ` ` ` ` ` ` o ` ` |
 +
| ` ` | ` ` ` ` ` ` ` | ` ` | ` ` ` ` ` ` ` | ` ` |
 +
| ` ` | ` ` p (q) ` ` | p q | ` ` (p) q ` ` | ` ` |
 +
| ` ` | ` ` ` ` ` ` ` | ` ` | ` ` ` ` ` ` ` | ` ` |
 +
| ` ` o ` ` ` ` ` ` ` o ` ` o ` ` ` ` ` ` ` o ` ` |
 +
| ` ` `\` ` ` ` ` ` ` `\` `/` ` ` ` ` ` ` `/` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` \ ` ` ` ` ` ` ` \ / ` ` ` ` ` ` ` / ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` `\` ` ` ` ` ` ` `o` ` ` ` ` ` ` `/` ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` ` \ ` ` ` ` ` ` / \ ` ` ` ` ` ` / ` ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` ` `o-----------o` `o-----------o` ` ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` (p) (q) ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` |
 +
| ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` |
 +
o-------------------------------------------------o
 +
 
 +
Each way of coloring the universe of discourse [p, q]
 +
may be thought of as an actual state of that universe
 +
or a contingent realization of its inherent potential.
 +
This is just another way of interpreting the abstract
 +
elements of <<p, q>> -> B, which can now be conceived
 +
as "possible universes" of type [p, q].
 +
 
 +
Suppose we walk into the gallery of possible universes of type [p, q]
 +
and find ourselves in a condition of indeterminate choice that ranges
 +
over a particular subset of the 16 possible pictures.  There are just
 +
2^16 subsets of 16 things, in this case corresponding to the space of
 +
propositions of type (<<p, q>> -> B) -> B, which are naturally enough
 +
referred to as "higher order propositions" since they can be regarded
 +
as propositions about propositions.
 +
 
 +
This brings us to the verge of the next higher order of indetermination.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Commentary Note 6===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
When Peirce starts talking about Aristotle's concept of entelechy
 +
it brings to mind some of the issues that I was wrestling with in
 +
my work on "Inquiry Driven Systems" or the "Inquiry Into Inquiry",
 +
some of which is recorded at the Arisbe website, and some further
 +
explorations of which are serialized at my Inquiry Archive.  Here
 +
is a pertinent selection:
 +
 
 +
Cf: IDS 114.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2004-May/001553.html
 +
Cf: IDS 115.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2004-May/001554.html
 +
Cf: IDS 116.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2004-May/001555.html
 +
In: IDS.      http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2004-May/thread.html#1434
 +
 
 +
I'll copy this much of it below, as it may do some of us
 +
some good to consider these issues again in this setting.
 +
 
 +
1.3.9.3.  The Formative Tension
 +
 
 +
The incidental arena or the informal context is presently described in
 +
casual, derivative, and negative terms, simply as the "not yet formal",
 +
and so this admittedly unruly region is currently depicted in ways that
 +
suggest a purely unformed and a wholly formless chaos, which it is not.
 +
But increasing experience with the formalization process can help one
 +
to develop a better appreciation of the informal context, and in time
 +
one can argue for a more positive characterization of this realm as
 +
a truly "formative context"The formal domain is where risks are
 +
contemplated, but the formative context is where risks are taken.
 +
 
 +
In this view, the informal context is more clearly seen as the off-stage
 +
staging ground where everything that appears on the formal scene is first
 +
assembled for a formal presentationIn taking this view, one steps back
 +
a bit in one's imagination from the scene that presses on one's attention,
 +
gets a sense of its frame and its stage, and becomes accustomed to see what
 +
appears in ever dimmer lights, in effect, one is learning to reflect on the
 +
more obvious actions, to read their pretexts, and to detect the motives that
 +
end in them.
 +
 
 +
It is fair to assume that an agent of inquiry possesses a faculty of inquiry
 +
that is available for exercise in the informal context, that is, without the
 +
agent being required to formalize its properties prior to their initial use.
 +
If this faculty of inquiry is a unity, then it appears as a whole on both
 +
sides of the "glass", that is, on both sides of the imaginary line that
 +
one pretends to draw between a formal arena and its informal context.
 +
 
 +
1.3.9.3The Formative Tension (cont.)
 +
 
 +
Recognizing the positive value of an informal context as
 +
an open forum or a formative space, it is possible to form
 +
the alignments of capacities that are indicated in Table 5.
 +
 
 +
Table 5Alignments of Capacities
 +
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
 +
|     Formal      |          Formative          |
 +
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
 +
|     Objective    |        Instrumental        |
 +
|     Passive      |          Active            |
 +
o-------------------o--------------o--------------o
 +
|     Afforded      |  Possessed  |  Exercised  |
 +
o-------------------o--------------o--------------o
 +
 
 +
This arrangement of capacities, based on the distinction between
 +
possession and exercise that arises so naturally in this context,
 +
stems from a root that is old indeed. In this connection, it is
 +
instructive to compare these alignments with those that we find
 +
in Aristotle's treatise 'On the Soul', a germinal textbook of
 +
psychology that ventures to analyze the concept of the mind,
 +
psyche, or soul to the point of arriving at a definition.
 +
The alignments of capacites, analogous correspondences,
 +
and illustrative materials outlined by Aristotle are
 +
summarized in Table 6.
 +
 
 +
Table 6.  Alignments of Capacities in Aristotle
 +
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
 +
|      Matter      |            Form            |
 +
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
 +
|  Potentiality    |          Actuality          |
 +
|    Receptivity    |  Possession  |  Exercise  |
 +
|      Life        |    Sleep    |    Waking    |
 +
|        Wax        |        Impression          |
 +
|        Axe        |    Edge      |  Cutting    |
 +
|        Eye        |  Vision    |    Seeing    |
 +
|       Body        |            Soul            |
 +
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
 +
|       Ship?      |          Sailor?          |
 +
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
 +
 
 +
An attempt to synthesize the materials and the schemes that are given
 +
in Tables 5 and 6 leads to the alignments of capacities that are shown
 +
in Table 7I do not pretend that the resulting alignments are perfect,
 +
since there is clearly some sort of twist taking place between the top
 +
and the bottom of this synthetic arrangement. Perhaps this is due to
 +
the modifications of case, tense, and grammatical category that occur
 +
throughout the paradigm, or perhaps it has to do with the fact that
 +
the relations through the middle of the Table are more analogical
 +
than categorical.  For the moment I am content to leave all of
 +
these paradoxes intact, taking the pattern of tensions and
 +
torsions as a puzzle for future study.
  
NBI have substituted P_1, P_2, P_3 for Peirce's P', P'', P''', respectively.
+
Table 7Synthesis of Alignments
 +
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
 +
|      Formal      |          Formative          |
 +
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
 +
|    Objective    |        Instrumental        |
 +
|      Passive      |          Active            |
 +
|    Afforded      |  Possessed  |  Exercised  |
 +
|      To Hold      |  To Have    |    To Use    |
 +
|    Receptivity    |  Possession  |  Exercise  |
 +
|  Potentiality    |          Actuality          |
 +
|      Matter      |            Form            |
 +
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
1.3.9.3.  The Formative Tension (concl.)
  
JITL. Note 18
+
Due to the importance of Aristotle's account for every discussion that
 +
follows it, not to mention for those that follow it without knowing it,
 +
and because the issues that it raises arise repeatedly throughout this
 +
project, I am going to cite an extended extract from the relevant text
 +
(Aristotle, 'Peri Psyche', 2.1), breaking up the argument into a number
 +
of individual premisses, stages, and examples.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Aristotle wrote (W.S. Hett translation):
  
| Chapter 11On Logical Breadth and Depth (concl.)
+
| aThe theories of the soul (psyche)
 +
|    handed down by our predecessors have
 +
|    been sufficiently discussed;  now let
 +
|    us start afresh, as it were, and try to
 +
|    determine (diorisai) what the soul is,
 +
|    and what definition (logos) of it will
 +
|    be most comprehensive (koinotatos).
 +
|
 +
| b.  We describe one class of existing things as
 +
|    substance (ousia), and this we subdivide into
 +
|    three:  (1) matter (hyle), which in itself is
 +
|    not an individual thing, (2) shape (morphe) or
 +
|    form (eidos), in virtue of which individuality
 +
|    is directly attributed, and (3) the compound
 +
|    of the two.
 +
|
 +
| c.  Matter is potentiality (dynamis), while form is
 +
|    realization or actuality (entelecheia), and the
 +
|    word actuality is used in two senses, illustrated
 +
|    by the possession of knowledge (episteme) and the
 +
|    exercise of it (theorein).
 
|
 
|
| If two terms have the same essential breadth or the same essential depth
+
| d.  Bodies (somata) seem to be pre-eminently
| logic recognizes no distinction between themThey are synonimousThey
+
|    substances, and most particularly those
| may differ rhetoricallyOne of these words may be associated in our minds
+
|    which are of natural origin (physica),
| with certain feelings with which the other is not associated but logic has
+
|    for these are the sources (archai)
| nothing to do with such distinctions.  But two terms may be indistinctly
+
|    from which the rest are derived.
| conceived so that it is not known whether they have the same essential
+
|
| breadth and depth or not and in this case the distinction must be
+
| eBut of natural bodies some have life (zoe)
| admitted even in logic.
+
|    and some have not;  by life we mean the
 +
|    capacity for self-sustenance, growth,
 +
|    and decay.
 +
|
 +
| fEvery natural body (soma physikon), then,
 +
|    which possesses life must be substance, and
 +
|    substance of the compound type (synthete).
 +
|
 +
| gBut since it is a body of a definite kind, viz.,
 +
|    having life, the body (soma) cannot be soul (psyche),
 +
|     for the body is not something predicated of a subject,
 +
|    but rather is itself to be regarded as a subject,
 +
|    i.e., as matter.
 +
|
 +
| h.  So the soul must be substance in the sense of being
 +
|    the form of a natural body, which potentially has life.
 +
|     And substance in this sense is actuality.
 +
|
 +
| i.  The soul, then, is the actuality of the kind of body we
 +
|    have described.  But actuality has two senses, analogous
 +
|    to the possession of knowledge and the exercise of it.
 +
|
 +
| j.  Clearly (phaneron), actuality in our present sense
 +
|    is analogous to the possession of knowledge;  for both
 +
|    sleep (hypnos) and waking (egregorsis) depend upon the
 +
|    presence of the soul, and waking is analogous to the
 +
|    exercise of knowledge, sleep to its possession (echein)
 +
|    but not its exercise (energein).
 +
|
 +
| k.  Now in one and the same person the
 +
|    possession of knowledge comes first.
 +
|
 +
| l.  The soul may therefore be defined as the first actuality
 +
|    of a natural body potentially possessing life;  and such
 +
|    will be any body which possesses organs (organikon).
 +
|
 +
| m.  The parts of plants are organs too, though very
 +
|    simple ones:  e.g., the leaf protects the pericarp,
 +
|    and the pericarp protects the seed;  the roots are
 +
|    analogous to the mouth, for both these absorb food.
 +
|
 +
| n.  If then one is to find a definition which will apply
 +
|    to every soul, it will be "the first actuality of
 +
|    a natural body possessed of organs".
 +
|
 +
| o.  So one need no more ask (zetein) whether body and
 +
|    soul are one than whether the wax (keros) and the
 +
|    impression (schema) it receives are one, or in
 +
|    general whether the matter of each thing is
 +
|    the same as that of which it is the matter;
 +
|    for admitting that the terms unity and being
 +
|    are used in many senses, the paramount (kyrios)
 +
|    sense is that of actuality.
 +
|
 +
| p.  We have, then, given a general definition
 +
|    of what the soul is:  it is substance in
 +
|    the sense of formula (logos), i.e., the
 +
|    essence of such-and-such a body.
 +
|
 +
| q.  Suppose that an implement (organon), e.g. an axe,
 +
|    were a natural body;  the substance of the axe
 +
|    would be that which makes it an axe, and this
 +
|     would be its soul;  suppose this removed, and
 +
|    it would no longer be an axe, except equivocally.
 +
|    As it is, it remains an axe, because it is not of
 +
|    this kind of body that the soul is the essence or
 +
|    formula, but only of a certain kind of natural body
 +
|    which has in itself a principle of movement and rest.
 +
|
 +
| r.  We must, however, investigate our definition
 +
|    in relation to the parts of the body.
 +
|
 +
| s.  If the eye were a living creature, its soul would be
 +
|    its vision;  for this is the substance in the sense
 +
|    of formula of the eye.  But the eye is the matter
 +
|    of vision, and if vision fails there is no eye,
 +
|    except in an equivocal sense, as for instance
 +
|    a stone or painted eye.
 +
|
 +
| t.  Now we must apply what we have found true of the part
 +
|    to the whole living body.  For the same relation must
 +
|     hold good of the whole of sensation to the whole sentient
 +
|    body qua sentient as obtains between their respective parts.
 +
|
 +
| u.  That which has the capacity to live is not the body
 +
|    which has lost its soul, but that which possesses
 +
|    its soul;  so seed and fruit are potentially bodies
 +
|    of this kind.
 +
|
 +
| v.  The waking state is actuality in the same sense
 +
|    as the cutting of the axe or the seeing of the eye,
 +
|    while the soul is actuality in the same sense as the
 +
|    faculty of the eye for seeing, or of the implement for
 +
|    doing its work.
 +
|
 +
| w.  The body is that which exists potentially;  but just as
 +
|    the pupil and the faculty of seeing make an eye, so in
 +
|    the other case the soul and body make a living creature.
 
|
 
|
| We now come to the "substantial breadth and depth".
+
| x. It is quite clear, then, that neither the soul nor
| The substantial breadth is the aggregate of real
+
|     certain parts of it, if it has parts, can be separated
| substance of which alone a term is predicable
+
|     from the body; for in some cases the actuality belongs
| with absolute truth. Substantial depth is
+
|     to the parts themselves.  Not but what there is nothing
| the real character as it exists in the
+
|     to prevent some parts being separated, because they are
| object, which belongs to every thing
+
|     not actualities of any body.
| of which a term is predicable with
 
| absolute truth.
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 101-102
+
| y. It is also uncertain (adelon) whether the soul as an
 +
|    actuality bears the same relation to the body as the
 +
|    sailor (ploter) to the ship (ploion).
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873,
+
| z. This must suffice as an attempt to determine
| Chapter 11 from ["Toward a Logic Book, 1872-1873"], pp. 14-108 in:
+
|     in rough outline the nature of the soul.
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Vol. 3, 1872-1878',
 
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
  
==QLOD. Quine &ldquo;On The Limits Of Decision&rdquo;==
+
===NEKS. Commentary Note 7===
  
 
<pre>
 
<pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
  
OLODNote 1
+
Re: KS 3.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003075.html
 +
In: KS-Octhttp://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/thread.html#3075
 +
Cf: KS-Sep.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3063
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
In part:
  
| On the Limits of Decision
+
| But of these two movements, logic very properly
 +
| prefers to take that of Theory as the primary one.
 
|
 
|
| Because these congresses occur at intervals of five years, they make
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 240
| for retrospection.  I find myself thinking back over a century of logic.
+
 
| A hundred years ago George Boole's algebra of classes was at hand.  Like
+
I confess to being a little puzzled by this emphasis.
| so many inventions, it had been needlessly clumsy when it first appeared;
+
Does Peirce forget that logic is a normative science?
| but meanwhile, in 1864, W.S. Jevons had taken the kinks out of it. It was
+
Does a normative science not work to know what ought
| only in that same year, 1864, that DeMorgan published his crude algebra of
+
to be done in actual practice to achieve our objects?
| relationsThen, around a century ago, C.S. Peirce published three papers
+
Well, I'll leave my puzzlement in suspension for now,
| refining and extending these two algebras -- Boole's of classes and DeMorgan's
+
and continue with the reading in hopes of resolution.
| of relationsThese papers of Peirce's appeared in 1867 and 1870.  Even our
+
 
| conception of truth-function logic in terms of truth tables, which is so clear
+
</pre>
| and obvious as to seem inevitable today, was not yet explicit in the writings
+
 
| of that time.  As for the logic of quantification, it remained unknown until
+
===NEKS. Commentary Note 8===
| 1879, when Frege published his 'Begriffsschrift'; and it was around three
+
 
| years later still that Peirce began to become aware of this idea, through
+
<pre>
| independent efforts. And even down to litle more than a half century ago
+
 
| we were weak on decision proceduresIt was only in 1915 that Löwenheim
+
Re: KS-COM 5http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003073.html
| published a decision procedure for the Boolean algebra of classes, or,
+
In: KS-COM.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/thread.html#3070
| what is equivalent, monadic quantification theoryIt was a clumsy
+
 
| procedure, and obscure in the presentation -- the way, again, with
+
Cf: QUIPS-DIS 24http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002690.html
| new inventionsAnd it was less than a third of a century ago that
+
Cf: QUAGS 4.      http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002926.html
| we were at last forced, by results of Gödel, Turing, and Church, to
+
 
| despair of a decision procedure for the rest of quantification theory.
+
The use of "higher order propositional expressions" (HOPE's) is one way
 +
to bring some order of concrete modeling -- concreteness being relative,
 +
of course -- to bear on the following species of statements from Peirce:
 +
 
 +
| If we are to explain the universe, we must assume that there was in the
 +
| beginning a state of things in which there was nothing, no reaction and no
 +
| quality, no matter, no consciousness, no space and no time, but just nothing
 +
| at allNot determinately nothing.  For that which is determinately not 'A'
 +
| supposes the being of 'A' in some mode.  Utter indetermination. But a symbol
 +
| alone is indeterminate.  Therefore Nothing, the indeterminate of the absolute
 +
| beginning is a symbol.
 +
|
 +
| That is the way in which the beginning of things can alone be understood.
 +
|
 +
| What logically follows?
 +
|
 +
| We are not to content ourselves with our instinctive sense of logicality.
 +
| That is logical which comes from the essential nature of a symbolNow it
 +
| is of the essential nature of a symbol that it determines an interpretant,
 +
| which is itself a symbol.  A symbol, therefore, produces an endless series
 +
| of interpretants.
 +
|
 +
| Does anybody suspect all this of being sheer nonsense'Distinguo.'
 +
| There can, it is true, be no positive information about what antedated
 +
| the entire Universe of being;  because, to begin with, there was nothing
 +
| to have information aboutBut the universe is intelligible;  and therefore
 +
| it is possible to give a general account of it and its origin.  This general
 +
| account is a symbol;  and from the nature of a symbol, it must begin with the
 +
| formal assertion that there was an indeterminate nothing of the nature of a
 +
| symbol.  This would be false if it conveyed any information.  But it is
 +
| the correct and logical manner of beginning an account of the universe.
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", pp. 156-157.
+
| As a symbol it produced its infinite series of interpretants, which in the
 +
| beginning were absolutely vague like itself.  But the direct interpretant
 +
| of any symbol must in the first stage of it be merely the 'tabula rasa'
 +
| for an interpretant.  Hence the immediate interpretant of this vague
 +
| Nothing was not even determinately vague, but only vaguely hovering
 +
| between determinacy and vagueness;  and 'its' immediate interpretant
 +
| was vaguely hovering between vaguely hovering between vagueness and
 +
| determinacy and determinate vagueness or determinacy, and so on,
 +
| 'ad infinitum'. But every endless series must logically have a
 +
| limit.
 
|
 
|
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
+
| C.S. Peirce, "Kaina Stoicheia", NEM 4, 260-261
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
+
| Also appears in "New Elements", EP 2, 322-323
| MA, 1981. A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
+
 
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
+
Very roughly speaking, we can model the condition of "vaguely hovering"
| vol. 3, 1969.
+
over a set F = {f_1, ..., f_m} of "states of (in)determination" f_j by
 +
modeling each f_j as a proposition in a suitable universe of discourse,
 +
and then by modeling the set F as a proposition one level higher than
 +
the highest of the f_j in F. It will be best if we start with a few
 +
simple examples, going back to our base camp in the universe [p, q],
 +
just to see if everything works out in a moderately reasonable way.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Commentary Note 9===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
It appears that many misunderstandings of what's being said
 +
at the end of Peirce's "Kaina Stoicheia"/"New Elements" essay
 +
arise from a failure to keep in mind what was being said at the
 +
beginning, especially with regard to the original model on which
 +
Peirce's innovation is designed, to wit, the "Old Elements" of the
 +
eponymous Euclid that motivated Peirce's own attempts at emulation.
  
OLOD. Note 2
+
Thus, as I have always suspected, it will be necessary to return to
 +
the beginning in order to place the end, that is to say, the object,
 +
in its proper perspective.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
What the editors of the version in 'The Essential Peirce' say by
 +
way of orientation is apt enough to bear repeating at this point:
  
| On the Limits of Decision (cont.)
+
| New Elements [Kaina Stoicheia]
 
|
 
|
| It is hard now to imagine not seeing truth-function logic
+
| MS 517[First published in NEM 4:235-63. This document was most
| as a trivial matter of truth tables, and it is becoming hard
+
| probably written in early 1904, as a preface to an intended book on
| even to imagine the decidability of monadic quantification theory
+
| the foundations of mathematics.] Peirce begins with a discussion of
| as other than obviousFor monadic quantification theory in a modern
+
| "the Euclidean style" he planned to follow in his bookEuclid's
| perspective is essentially just an elaboration of truth-function logic.
+
| 'Elements' presuppose an understanding of the logical structure
| I want now to spend a few minutes developing this connection.
+
| of mathematics (geometry) that Peirce, in his "New Elements",
|
+
| wants to explicate.
| What makes truth-function logic decidable by truth tables
 
| is that the truth value of a truth function can be computed
 
| from the truth values of the argumentsBut is a formula of
 
| quantification theory not a truth-function of quantifications?
 
| Its truth vaue can be computed from whatever truth values may be
 
| assigned to its component quantificationsWhy does this not make
 
| quantification theory decidable by truth tables?  Why not test a
 
| formula of quantification theory for validity by assigning all
 
| combinations of truth values to its component quantifications
 
| and seeing whether the whole comes out true every time?
 
|
 
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", p. 157.
 
 
|
 
|
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
+
| Headnote to Selection 22, "New Elements", p. 300 in:
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), 'The Essential Peirce,
| MA, 1981.  A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
+
| Selected Philosophical Writings, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
+
| Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| vol. 3, 1969.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Da capo, al fine ...
  
OLOD.  Note 3
+
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===NEKS. Commentary Note 10===
  
| On the Limits of Decision (cont.)
+
<pre>
|
+
 
| The answer obviously is that this criterion is too
+
We can now complete the following syllogism:
| severe, because the component quantifications are
+
 
| not always independent of one another.  A formula
+
  Peirce's "Kaina Stoicheia" is a Preface.               (NEM 4, 235 & EP 2, Headnote)
| of quantification theory might be valid in spite
+
This very same Preface is a Scholium.                  (NEM 4, 238 & EP 2, 303)
| of failing this truth-table test. It might fail
+
  The main Subject of this Scholium is the Proposition(NEM 4, 247 & EP 2, 311)
| the test by turning out false for some assignment
+
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| of truth values to its component quantifications,
+
The main Subject of Peirce's "Kaina Stoicheia" is the Proposition. QED.
| but that assignment might be undeserving of notice
+
 
| because incompatible with certain interdependences
+
The pure symbol remains pure until proven otherwise.
| of the component quantifications.
+
 
|
+
The defense rests.
| If, on the other hand, we can put a formula of quantification
+
 
| theory into the form of a truth function of quantifications
+
</pre>
| which are independent of one another, then the truth table
 
| will indeed serve as a validity test. And this is just
 
| what we can do for monadic formulas of quantification
 
| theoryHerbrand showed this in 1930.
 
|
 
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", p. 157.
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
 
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
 
| MA, 1981. A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
 
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
 
| vol. 3, 1969.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===NEKS. Commentary Note 11===
  
OLOD.  Note 4
+
<pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Re: KS 16.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003265.html
 +
In: KS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/thread.html#3183
  
| On the Limits of Decision (cont.)
+
It is only that untoward bent of reading, that reads Peirce
|
+
just barely in impatient anticipation of Frege, that could
|
+
manage to warp Peirce's avowedly "non-psychological" view
 +
of logic into a supposed doctrine of "anti-psychologism".
  
 +
Still, it's important to notice that Peirce employs his "logical microscope" --
 +
the magnifying-glasses of the consulting detective, sheriff, posse comitatus,
 +
judge, jury, the many long arms of conscientious, divine, and social sanction --
 +
primarily in the service to distinguish the logical matter of the proposition
 +
from a motley array of psycho-litigious-socio-politico-eschatological matters:
 +
acceptance, acknowledgment, affidavit, affirmation, assent, assertion, avowal,
 +
belief, certainty, certification, cognition, conation, consensus, credence,
 +
denial, didaction, disposition, doubt, execution, expression, indication,
 +
injunction, inquisition, judgment, knowledge, recognizance, salvation,
 +
and so on and so forth, if not necessarily in that order, of course.
  
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", pp. 157-158.
+
This has consequences that we must needs explore.
|
 
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
 
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
 
| MA, 1981.  A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
 
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
 
| vol. 3, 1969.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
  
==POLA. Philosophy Of Logical Atomism==
+
===NEKS. Commentary Note 12===
  
 
<pre>
 
<pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
  
POLANote 1
+
Re: KS 17http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003274.html
 +
In: KS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3274
 +
 
 +
For context:
 +
 
 +
KS-Sep.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3063
 +
KS-Oct.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/thread.html#3075
 +
KS-Nov.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/thread.html#3183
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
I call attention to the fact that Peirce here defines "belief", "affirmation",
 +
and "judgment" -- as a habit of acting, an act of uttering, and a mental act,
 +
respectively, and thus as what can only be called pragmatic-psychological
 +
concepts -- partly with reference to the logical concepts of proposition,
 +
proof, and truth, partly in terms of the partly formal partly material
 +
concept of determination, and partly in terms of the broadly pragmatic,
 +
psychological, sociological, semiotic, and linguistic concepts, not
 +
all of them yet defined, of action, affect (contentedness), agency,
 +
awareness, conation (desire), control, (in-)convenience, decision,
 +
deliberation, disposition (tendency), event, exercise, force,
 +
habit, interpretation, mind, pain (penalty), probability
 +
(liability), product, result, simultaneity, society,
 +
time, utterance, and volition.
  
I am going to collect here a number of excerpts from the papers
+
I think that it requires further examination to sort out the relation
that Bertrand Russell wrote in the years 1910-1920, my interest
+
of logic, that is, formal (normative or quasi-necessary) semiotics,
being focused on the logical characters of belief and knowledge.
+
to this more broadly conceived wildwood of descriptive semiotics.
I will take the liberty of breaking up some of Russell's longer
 
paragraphs in whatever fashion serves to facilitate their study.
 
  
| The Philosophy of Logical Atomism (1918)
+
| I have discussed the nature of belief
 +
| in the 'Popular Science Monthly' for
 +
| November 1877.  On the whole, we may
 +
| set down the following definitions:
 
|
 
|
| The following [is the text] of a course of eight lectures delivered in
+
| A 'belief' in a proposition is a controlled and contented habit of
| [Gordon Square] London, in the first months of 1918, [which] are very
+
| acting in ways that will be productive of desired results only if
| largely concerned with explaining certain ideas which I learnt from
+
| the proposition is true.
| my friend and former pupil Ludwig Wittgenstein.  I have had no
 
| opportunity of knowing his views since August 1914, and I do
 
| not even know whether he is alive or dead.  He has therefore
 
| no responsibility for what is said in these lectures beyond
 
| that of having originally supplied many of the theories
 
| contained in them.
 
 
|
 
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 35.
+
| An 'affirmation' is an act of an utterer of a proposition to an interpreter,
 +
| and consists, in the first place, in the deliberate exercise, in uttering
 +
| the proposition, of a force tending to determine a belief in it in the
 +
| mind of the interpreter. Perhaps that is a sufficient definition of it;
 +
| but it involves also a voluntary self-subjection to penalties in the
 +
| event of the interpreter's mind (and still more the general mind of
 +
| society) subsequently becoming decidedly determined to the belief
 +
| at once in the falsity of the proposition and in the additional
 +
| proposition that the utterer believed the proposition to be
 +
| false at that time he uttered it.
 
|
 
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
| A 'judgment' is a mental act deliberately exercising a force tending to
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
| determine in the mind of the agent a belief in the proposition:  to which
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
+
| should perhaps be added that the agent must be aware of his being liable
 +
| to inconvenience in the event of the proposition's proving false in any
 +
| practical aspect.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 249-250
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
POLA. Note 2
+
===NEKS. Commentary Note 13===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 +
 
 +
Rummaging about our Polis with Perseus, I find these glosses:
  
| 1. Facts and Propositions
+
| arithmos, as etym. of Stoichadeus, Sch.D.T.p.192 H.
 +
| Stoicha^deus , eôs, ho, title of Zeus at Sicyon, Sch.D.T. p.192 H.
 +
| Stoicheia , hê, epith. of Athena at Epidaurus, IG42(1).487.
 
|
 
|
| This course of lectures which I am now beginning I have called
+
| Perseus at Tufts: http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0057:entry=%2396930
| the Philosophy of Logical AtomismPerhaps I had better begin
+
 
| by saying a word or two as to what I understand by that title.
+
</pre>
| The kind of philosophy that I wish to advocate, which I call
+
 
| Logical Atomism, is one which has forced itself upon me in the
+
===NEKS. Commentary Note 14===
| course of thinking about the philosophy of mathematics, although
+
 
| I should find it hard to say exactly how far there is a definite
+
<pre>
| logical connection between the two.  The things I am going to say
+
 
| in these lectures are mainly my own personal opinions and I do not
+
| Incidental Muse ~~~ Loreena McKennitt, ''Elemental'' ~~~
| claim that they are more than that.
+
| http://www.quinlanroad.com/explorethemusic/elemental.asp
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
==NEKS. Commentary Work Area==
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Commentary Work Area 1===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
Some folks have yet to discover the basic
 +
fact of life that conception is an action.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Commentary Work Area 2===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
Re: KS 15http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003264.html
 +
In: KS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/thread.html#3183
 +
 
 +
In light of ever-renewed evidence that icons of argument and indices of reason,
 +
the xylem and phloem of those hyloid lumberings that we log as syllogism, make
 +
for a roughage that's vegetatively insufficient in its own rick to animate the
 +
aimed for sign of interpretant entelechy, I'll pile more wood on the bael-fire.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
==NEKS. New Elements &bull; Kaina Stoicheia &bull; Discussion==
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Discussion Note 1===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
SL = Søren Lund
 +
 
 +
Re: KS-COM 11.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003269.html
 +
In: KS-COM.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/thread.html#3263
 +
 
 +
Recall that we are working in the context of Peirce's theory of sign relations,
 +
where a proposition is a type of symbol, a symbol is a type of sign, a sign is
 +
defined by its participation in a specified role of a particular sign relation,
 +
and a sign relation in general is defined as a 3-adic relation that satisfies
 +
a particular definition, for instance, this one:
 +
 
 +
| A sign is something, A, which brings something, B,
 +
| its interpretant sign determined or created by it,
 +
| into the same sort of correspondence with something,
 +
| C, its object, as that in which itself stands to C.
 
|
 
|
| As I have attempted to prove in 'The Principles of Mathematics', when
+
| C.S. Peirce, NEM 4, pp. 20-21, cf. p. 54 (1902).
| we analyse mathematics we bring it all back to logic. It all comes back
 
| to logic in the strictest and most formal sense. In the present lectures,
 
| I shall try to set forth in a sort of outline, rather briefly and rather
 
| unsatisfactorily, a kind of logical doctrine which seems to me to result
 
| from the philosophy of mathematics -- not exactly logically, but as what
 
| emerges as one reflects:  a certain kind of logical doctrine, and on the
 
| basis of this a certain kind of metaphysic.
 
 
|
 
|
| The logic which I shall advocate is atomistic, as opposed to
+
| C.S. Peirce, [Application to the Carnegie Institution], L 75, pp. 13-73 in:
| the monistic logic of the people who more or less follow Hegel.
+
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by Charles S. Peirce,
| When I say that my logic is atomistic, I mean that I share the
+
| Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy', Mouton, The Hague, 1976. Available here:
| common-sense belief that there are many separate things;  I do
+
| Arisbe Website, http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/l75/l75.htm
| not regard the apparent multiplicity of the world as consisting
+
 
| merely in phases and unreal divisions of a single indivisible
+
You give us an able summary of a host of classical and modern aporias
| RealityIt results from that, that a considerable part of
+
that affect various attempts to say what a proposition is, but all of
| what one would have to do to justify the sort of philosophy
+
those stagmas, so far as I can tell, appear to arise from the attempt
| I wish to advocate would consist in justifying the process
+
to form a particular order of "wholly useless abstractions" (WUA'a).
| of analysis.
+
Given the obvious utility of many abstractions, that leaves us the
|
+
task of saying what exactly pushes an abstraction over the edge
| One is often told that the process of analysis is falsification, that
+
of useThis can be difficult to diagnose, but it's easier to
| when you analyse any given concrete whole you falsify it and that the
+
diagnose than it is to identify the underlying causes thereof.
| results of analysis are not true. I do not think that is a right view.
+
 
| I do not mean to say, of course, and nobody would maintain, that when you
+
One factor that strikes me at present is the fact that some
| have analysed you keep everything that you had before you analysedIf you
+
abstractions are "absolutized" or "decontextualized" past
| did, you would never attain anything in analysingI do not propose to meet
+
the point of usefulness, and the inclination to do that
| the views that I disagree with by controversy, by arguing against those views,
+
appears to arise from a habit of "essentializing" that
| but rather by positively setting forth what I believe to be the truth about the
+
may indeed be innate to our evolutionary inheritance,
| matter, and endeavouring all the way through to make the views that I advocate
+
or at least built into our most familiar languages.
| result inevitably from absolutely undeniable data.
+
 
|
+
Essentialism is the tendency of thought that tends to seek an explanation
| When I talk of "undeniable data" that is not to be regarded as synonymous
+
of everything in "categories of unstructured things" (COUT's).  In effect,
| with "true data", because "undeniable" is a psychological term and "true"
+
it tends to think that the end of explanation has been reached once we've
| is notWhen I say that something is "undeniable", I mean that it is not
+
nominated the monadic predicate that classifies the thing to be explained.
| the sort of thing that anybody is going to deny; it does not follow from
+
 
| that that it is true, though it does follow that we shall all think it true --
+
This is such a persistent tendency of the human mind that it can be observed
| and that is as near to truth as we seem able to get.
+
to influence the thinking even of those who more reflectively might know better --
|
+
who might know better from reading Peirce, who might know better from being Peirce --
| When you are considering any sort of theory of knowledge, you are more or less
+
but it is not overall the thrust of Peirce's efforts in logic and semiotics, which
| tied to a certain unavoidable subjectivity, because you are not concerned simply
+
are indeed partly intended as a remedy for the condition of overweaned essentialism.
| with the question what is true of the world, but "What can I know of the world?"
+
 
| You always have to start any kind of argument from something which appears to
+
SL: Speaking of the proposition and Peirce's conception of it.
| you to be true; if it appears to you to be true, there is no more to be done.
+
    I think there is good reasons for attacking this curious
| You cannot go outside yourself and consider abstractly whether the things that
+
    logical unit and even better to abandon it.
| appear to you to be true are true; you may do this in a particular case, where
+
| one of your beliefs is changed in consequence of others among your beliefs.
+
SL: If "proposition" is not a fancy term for "sentence", what is it?  One suggestion
|
+
    is that the proposition is the meaning of the sentence, or at least of the type
| Russell, POLA, pp. 35-37.
+
    of sentence that grammarians call "declarative"But this will hardly do, for
|
+
    the reasons already pointed out by the author of the 'Dissoi Logoi'(The
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
    author of the ancient text known as the 'Dissoi Logoi' points out that the
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
    words "I am an initiate" may be uttered both by an initiate and by one who
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
+
    is not (W. Kneale and M. Kneale, 'The Development of Logic', rev. ed.,
 +
    Oxford Clarendon, 1984, p. 16).  If this is accepted, it seems that
 +
    we have to conclude either that one and the same form of words may
 +
    be both true and false, or else that what is true or false is not
 +
    the form of words itself. If the former is the case, it frustrates
 +
    any enterprise of formulating the principles of valid inference on
 +
    the basis of relations between sentences.  If the latter is the case,
 +
    then the metalinguistic terms "true" and "false" cannot properly apply
 +
    to sentences at all, but must be deemed to apply to something else.
 +
    Western logic chose the latter option, and thereby conjured into
 +
    existence what was later called the "proposition".) That is to say,
 +
    if the grounds for rejecting the sentence are valid (i.e. that the
 +
    same sentence can be uttered on one occasion to express a truth, but
 +
    on another occasion to express a falsehood), then the objection must
 +
    carry over to the meaning of the sentence, unless we are prepared to
 +
    divorce the meaning from the sentence.  But if we do that, we have in
 +
    effect ushered in two even more mysterious metalinguistic entities, i.e.
 +
    sentences without (permanent) meanings, and sentence-meaning that float
 +
    free of their sentences.  It is difficult to see where the explanatory
 +
    gain lies, let alone how the two cohere.
 +
   
 +
SL: Another suggestion is that the proposition is the use
 +
    made of the (declarative) sentence.  Thus if A and B both
 +
    utter the sentence I am an initiate, they may be said to be
 +
    putting it to different uses; viz in one case to claim that A
 +
    is an initiate, and in the other to claim that B is an initiate.
 +
    But this does not get us much further either. For all that has
 +
    been achieved here is the proposal of an arbitrarily restricted
 +
    employment of the term use.  When we investigate the nature of
 +
    the restriction, the "use" of the sentence turns out to be
 +
    whatever it is that results in something true or false --
 +
    e.g. A's claim or B's claim.  Here one metalinguistic
 +
    term (use) simply hides behind another (claim).
 +
 +
SL: Is the "proposition", then, more plausibly regarded as what it is
 +
    that is claimed when a claim is made, asserted when an assertion is
 +
    made, stated when a statement is made, etc.?  But here we start another
 +
    metalinguistic wild goose chase.  For claim, assertion and statement are
 +
    all metalinguistic terms with no better credentials than proposition itself.
 +
    To define the proposition as the "object" or "content" of claims, assertions,
 +
    statements, etc. is simply to substitute one obscurity for another.
 +
 +
SL: Why do these and similar attempts to rescue the proposition all come to grief
 +
    in this way? Because what is being attempted is a metalinguistic impossibility.
 +
    The source of the trouble can be traced back to the original culprit, i.e. the
 +
    sentence, deemed to be unsuitable as the basis for logic. The trouble is that
 +
    the sentences belong to particular languages (English, Greek, Latin, etc.).
 +
    What the logician seeks to substitute for the sentence is an entity which will
 +
    afford the same scope for identification, reidentification, generalization and
 +
    classification, but independently of the particular languages or words used.
 +
    The trouble is that this cannot be done -- or at least, not within the
 +
    Western metalinguistic framework.  For that framework only allows us
 +
    to identify propositions, statements, assertions, etc. by citing
 +
    some sentence or part of a sentence. 
 +
 +
SL: The moment this strategy fails, any formalization of logic collapses.
 +
    In other words, the logician cannot, under pain of undermining the
 +
    whole professional enterprise, claim that there are propositions
 +
    that cannot be unambiguously expressed in words.
 +
   
 +
SL: Herculean efforts to move this obstacle merely show how immovable it is.
 +
    For instance, some theorists have conjured up an entity which is supposed
 +
    to be what there is in common between an English declarative sentence and
 +
    its correct translation into any (or all) other language(s). This proposal
 +
    is either vacuous or circular.  For then either there are no propositions at
 +
    all or else we are off after another metalinguistic will-o'-the wisp, namely
 +
    the criteria for "correct translation".
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Discussion Note 2===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
BM = Bernard Morand
  
POLA. Note 3
+
BM: I think I have been unable to understand clearly
 +
    what is really at stake in the dispute between
 +
    Jon and Joe on the matter of pure symbols,
 +
    despite the large exchange of messages
 +
    on the topic.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Aside from the focal issue, which I will reserve until I can get focussed on it again,
 +
I believe that there are most likely constitutionally different attitudes as to what
 +
constitutes a definition, a theory, and a science.  If logic is a normative science,
 +
or, as Peirce says, "formal semiotics", and if there is to be a part of semiotics
 +
that is a science, then it's very likely to undergo the sort of development that
 +
other sciences have enjoyed.  In other sciences, there is a division of labor
 +
where mathematical models are developed in a speculative fashion, taking off
 +
from and being brought home again to practical application.  In that world,
 +
definitions are equivalent explications of a concept, that is, necessary
 +
and sufficient conditions for falling under a concept.  Definitions of
 +
this sort, once a good portion of the research community accepts them,
 +
have a character of "standing on their own feet".  This means that
 +
they serve as a platform for generating all sorts of never-before
 +
suspected consequences, that can be explored by deductive means,
 +
and also evaluated for empirical adequacy, uberty, and truth.
  
| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
+
Measured against that scientific standard, which is well understood in
|
+
all of the developed sciences, only a few of the so-called "definitions"
| The reason that I call my doctrine 'logical' atomism is because
+
of signs are real definitions, the sorts of formulations that are clear
| the atoms that I wish to arrive at as the sort of last residue
+
and explicit enough to draw any necessary conclusions fromMost of the
| in analysis are logical atoms and not physical atomsSome of
+
rest are more properly called "descriptions", and they fall into the dual
| them will be what I call "particulars" -- such things as little
+
classes of (1) sufficient descriptions, that say things which are true of
| patches of colour or sounds, momentary things -- and some of them
+
special classes of signs, and (2) necessary descriptions, that say things
| will be predicates or relations and so on.  The point is that the
+
which are true of all signs, but which are also true of many things that
| atom I wish to arrive at is the atom of logical analysis, not the
+
are not signs.  But only those descriptions which are both necessary and
| atom of physical analysis.
+
sufficient count as real definitions. Of course, a good definition must
|
+
also have many other virtues in order to support a consistent, effective,
| Russell, POLA, p. 37.
+
and empirically adequate scientific theory.
|
+
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
This definition of definition will tend to be dismissed in undeveloped sciences,
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
and by many brands of philosophies -- and of course there are many domains where
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
+
we are still mainly arguing 'toward' definitions rather than mainly 'from' them --
 +
so it's a matter of opinion where we are in semiotics today.  For my part I am
 +
content with a few of Peirce's more genuine definitions of signs, and I have
 +
been busy reasoning on their basis ever since I first came to notice them.
 +
 
 +
On that basis, my main reason for thinking that there are sign relations
 +
that do not involve icons or indices is simply that I can see no way to
 +
deduce the involvement of icons or indices by necessary reasoning from
 +
Peirce's most genuine and most general definitions of sign relations,
 +
and so far nobody has even suggested a plausible way of doing this.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
POLA. Note 4
+
===NEKS. Discussion Note 3===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
+
JP = Jim Piat
|
 
| It is a rather curious fact in philosophy that the data which are
 
| undeniable to start with are always rather vague and ambiguous.
 
| You can, for instance, say:  "There are a number of people in
 
| this room at this moment".  That is obviously in some sense
 
| undeniable.  But when you come to try and define what this
 
| room is, and what it is for a person to be in a room, and
 
| how you are going to distinguish one person from another,
 
| and so forth, you find that what you have said is most
 
| fearfully vague and that you really do not know what
 
| you meant.  That is a rather singular fact, that
 
| everything you are really sure of, right off is
 
| something that you do not know the meaning of,
 
| and the moment you get a precise statement
 
| you will not be sure whether it is true
 
| or false, at least right off.
 
|
 
| The process of sound philosophizing, to my mind, consists mainly
 
| in passing from those obvious, vague, ambiguous things, that we
 
| feel quite sure of, to something precise, clear, definite, which
 
| by reflection and analysis we find is involved in the vague thing
 
| that we start from, and is, so to speak, the real truth of which
 
| that vague thing is a sort of shadow.
 
|
 
| I should like, if time were longer and if I knew more than I do,
 
| to spend a whole lecture on the conception of vagueness.  I think
 
| vagueness is very much more important in the theory of knowledge
 
| than you would judge it to be from the writings of most people.
 
| Everything is vague to a degree you do not realize till you
 
| have tried to make it precise, and everything precise is
 
| so remote from everything that we normally think, that
 
| you cannot for a moment suppose that is what we really
 
| mean when we say what we think.
 
|
 
| Russell, POLA, pp. 37-38.
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Re: KS-DIS 2.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003282.html
 +
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272
  
POLA. Note 5
+
Replies interspersed.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JP: Would you give me an example of one of Peirce's genuine, necessary and sufficient,
 +
    descriptions of a sign, and perhaps for the purpose of contrast one of his
 +
    non-genuine definitions that fails to meet these criteria.  Also would
 +
    you give me the necessary and sufficient conditions for discerning
 +
    which is which.
  
| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
+
Yes, if you Google(TM) -- or Transcendental Meditate (TM) if you prefer --
|
+
on +Awbrey "Sign Relation" and its pluralization (Google has taken lately
| The first truism to which I wish to draw your attention -- and I hope
+
to using fuzzy conjunctions, so you now have to put in the "+" to force the
| you will agree with me that these things that I call truisms are so
+
old-fangled logical conjunction), you'll get my e-tire e-lected e-corpus of
| obvious that it is almost laughable to mention them -- is that the
+
writings on the subject, but to make a long story clear I can do no better
| world contains 'facts', which are what they are whatever we may
+
than recommend the standards of clarity demanded by my co-author in this
| choose to think about them, and that there are also 'beliefs',
+
'Hermeneutics and Human Science' conference paper from 1992, revised for
| which have reference to facts, and by reference to facts are
+
the journal 'Inquiry:  Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines' in 1995:
| either true or false.
+
 
|
+
| Jon Awbrey & Susan Awbrey, "Interpretation as Action:  The Risk of Inquiry"
| I will try first of all to give you a preliminary explanation of what
+
| http://www.chss.montclair.edu/inquiry/fall95/awbrey.html
| I mean by a "fact". When I speak of a fact -- I do not propose to
+
| NB.  The reference to "Habermas" should be "Gadamer".
| attempt an exact definition, but an explanation, so that you will
+
 
| know what I am talking about -- I mean the kind of thing that
+
In most of those places I will probably allude to the dynamic duo of variants of
| makes a proposition true or false.
+
the definition in NEM 4 as being my pets for adequacy, clarity, and completeness.
|
+
One of the reasons that I remember those so fondly is that it wasn't until rather
| If I say "It is raining", what I say is true in a certain condition of
+
late, when I chanced on a copy of the NEM volumes in a used book store in the mid
| weather and is false in other conditions of weather.  The condition of
+
80's and was actually fortunate enough to have the spare cash on hand to buy them.
| weather that makes my statement true (or false as the case may be), is
+
I have to tell you that up until that time I had always wondered why Peirce never
| what I should call a "fact".
+
bothered to define this most important concept of a sign -- I know, but only now,
|
+
that this will sound shocking to many people, but they would need to understand
| If I say, "Socrates is dead", my statement will be true owing to a
+
that the only definition of definition that had been engrained into my engrams
| certain physiological occurrence which happened in Athens long ago.
+
was the one that I knew from logic and math courses, and since it's so common
|
+
in loose speech and writing for all of us to say "definition" when we really
| If I say, "Gravitation varies inversely as the square of the distance",
+
mean "something that's more or less true of a special case of the thing",
| my statement is rendered true by astronomical fact.
+
I had probably developed the automatic habit of reading the looser uses
|
+
as "descriptions", not true "definitions".  That was my consciousness.
| If I say, "Two and two are four", it is arithmetical fact that makes
+
 
| my statement true.
+
I made the mistake of going to bed early last night,
|
+
which only led to my waking up at 3 AM, and so I'll
| On the other hand, if I say, "Socrates is alive",
+
need to break fast for coffee before I can continue.
| or "Gravitation varies directly as the distance",
+
 
| or "Two and two are five", the very same facts
+
</pre>
| which made my previous statements true show
+
 
| that these new statements are false.
+
===NEKS. Discussion Note 4===
|
+
 
| Russell, POLA, pp. 40-41.
+
<pre>
|
+
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
JP = Jim Piat
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
+
Re: KS-DIS 3. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003296.html
 +
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Replies interspersed.
  
POLANote 6
+
JP: Would you give me an example of one of Peirce's genuine, necessary and sufficient,
 +
    descriptions of a sign, and perhaps for the purpose of contrast one of his
 +
    non-genuine definitions that fails to meet these criteriaAlso would
 +
    you give me the necessary and sufficient conditions for discerning
 +
    which is which.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
So let me haul out the "Carnegie" definitions of a sign relation one more time
 +
and try to tell you why I think they ought to win friends and influence people.
  
| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
+
Here's the first link that came up on Google:
|
 
| I want you to realize that when I speak of a fact I do not mean a
 
| particular existing thing, such as Socrates or the rain or the sun.
 
| Socrates himself does not render any statement true of false.  You
 
| might be inclined to suppose that all by himself he would give truth
 
| to the statement "Socrates existed", but as a matter of fact that is a
 
| mistake.  It is due to a confusion which I shall try to explain in the
 
| sixth lecture of this course, when I come to deal with the notion of
 
| existence.  Socrates himself, or any particular thing just by itself,
 
| does not make any proposition true or false.  "Socrates is dead" and
 
| "Socrates is alive" are both of them statements about Socrates.  One is
 
| true and the other false.  What I call a fact is the sort of thing that
 
| is expressed by a whole sentence, not by a single name like "Socrates".
 
| When a single word does come to express a fact, like "fire" or "wolf",
 
| it is always due to an unexpressed context, and the full expression of
 
| a fact will always involve a sentence.  We express a fact, for example,
 
| when we say that a certain thing has a certain property, or that it
 
| has a certain relation to another thing;  but the thing which has
 
| the property or the relation is not what I call a "fact".
 
|
 
| Russell, POLA, p. 41.
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
SR.  Sign Relations
 +
SR.  http://forum.wolframscience.com/showthread.php?threadid=647
  
POLA. Note 7
+
| A sign is something, 'A',
 +
| which brings something, 'B',
 +
| its 'interpretant' sign
 +
| determined or created by it,
 +
| into the same sort of correspondence
 +
| with something, 'C', its 'object',
 +
| as that in which itself stands to 'C'.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, NEM 4, pp. 20-21, cf. p. 54, also available here:
 +
| http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/l75/l75.htm
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
More details on how the definition of a sign relation bears on
 +
the definition of logic are given in the contexts of this text:
  
| 1. Facts and Propositions (cont.)
+
| On the Definition of Logic [Version 1]
 +
|
 +
| Logic will here be defined as 'formal semiotic'.
 +
| A definition of a sign will be given which no more
 +
| refers to human thought than does the definition
 +
| of a line as the place which a particle occupies,
 +
| part by part, during a lapse of time. Namely,
 +
| a sign is something, 'A', which brings something,
 +
| 'B', its 'interpretant' sign determined or created
 +
| by it, into the same sort of correspondence with
 +
| something, 'C', its 'object', as that in which it
 +
| itself stands to 'C'. It is from this definition,
 +
| together with a definition of "formal", that I
 +
| deduce mathematically the principles of logic.
 +
| I also make a historical review of all the
 +
| definitions and conceptions of logic, and show,
 +
| not merely that my definition is no novelty, but
 +
| that my non-psychological conception of logic has
 +
| 'virtually' been quite generally held, though not
 +
| generally recognized. (CSP, NEM 4, 20-21).
 
|
 
|
| It is important to observe that facts belong to the objective world.
+
| On the Definition of Logic [Version 2]
| They are not created by our thought or beliefs except in special cases.
 
| That is one of the sort of things which I should set up as an obvious truism,
 
| but, of course, one is aware, the moment one has read any philosophy at all,
 
| how very much there is to be said before such a statement as that can become
 
| the kind of position that you want.  The first thing I want to emphasize is
 
| that the outer world -- the world, so to speak, which knowledge is aiming
 
| at knowing -- is not completely described by a lot of "particulars", but
 
| that you must also take account of these things that I call facts, which
 
| are the sort of things that you express by a sentence, and that these,
 
| just as much as particular chairs and tables, are part of the real world.
 
 
|
 
|
| Except in psychology, most of our statements are not intended merely to
+
| Logic is 'formal semiotic'. A sign is something,
| express our condition of mind, though that is often all that they succeed
+
| 'A', which brings something, 'B', its 'interpretant'
| in doingThey are intended to express facts, which (except when they are
+
| sign, determined or created by it, into the same
| psychological facts) will be about the outer world.  There are such facts
+
| sort of correspondence (or a lower implied sort)
| involved, equally when we speak truly and when we speak falsely.  When we
+
| with something, 'C', its 'object', as that in
| speak falsely it is an objective fact that makes what we say false, and
+
| which itself stands to 'C'This definition no
| it is an objective fact which makes what we say true when we speak truly.
+
| more involves any reference to human thought than
 +
| does the definition of a line as the place within
 +
| which a particle lies during a lapse of time.
 +
| It is from this definition that I deduce the
 +
| principles of logic by mathematical reasoning,
 +
| and by mathematical reasoning that, I aver, will
 +
| support criticism of Weierstrassian severity, and
 +
| that is perfectly evident. The word "formal" in
 +
| the definition is also defined. (CSP, NEM 4, 54).
 
|
 
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 41-42.
+
| Charles Sanders Peirce,
|
+
|'The New Elements of Mathematics', Volume 4,
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
| Edited by Carolyn Eisele, Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985First published 1918.
+
Partly I like these statements because they place the
 +
matter of defining "sign" within its due contexts of
 +
defining "formal" and defining "logic", which helps
 +
to "comprehend", in both senses of that term, some
 +
of the purposes and utilities of the definition.
 +
 
 +
With respect to the question of contrast, Peirce in this instance
 +
explictly contrasts this definition with the most popular host of
 +
sufficient but not necessary descriptions, namely, those that use
 +
some of our common but typically unexamined introspections and/or
 +
intuitions about our own psychological processes in order to fill
 +
in a motley assortment of intuitive blind spots and logical holes
 +
in the description. This affords a significant correction to the
 +
psychologically-biased descriptions, for instance, those deriving
 +
from the "New List" account.
 +
 
 +
But probably the most important feature of this definition is that
 +
it does not invoke too large a variety of undefined terms as a part
 +
of its try at definition, and the few significant terms that it does
 +
pass the buck to, like "correspondence" and "determination", are ones
 +
for which we find fairly fast definitions elsewhere in Peirce's works.
 +
 
 +
The reason why these criteria are important is that they give us what we need
 +
in order to carry out any measure of deductive or necessary reasoning on the
 +
basis of the definition alone -- the "standing on its own feet" character
 +
of a genuine definition.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Discussion Note 5===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
JP = Jim Piat
 +
 
 +
Re: KS-DIS 4.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003297.html
 +
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272
 +
 
 +
Replies interspersed.
 +
 
 +
JP: Would you give me an example of one of Peirce's genuine, necessary and sufficient,
 +
    descriptions of a sign, and perhaps for the purpose of contrast one of his
 +
    non-genuine definitions that fails to meet these criteria. Also would
 +
    you give me the necessary and sufficient conditions for discerning
 +
    which is which.
 +
 
 +
I've given what I think is one of Peirce's better definitions of a sign relation.
 +
It is by no means perfect, but it does provide enough of a basis to start up the
 +
business of drawing necessary conclusions.  The nice thing about a good-enough
 +
definition, if you catch my object-relational drift, is that it affords us
 +
the ontological security to begin thinking for ourselves, as we may hope
 +
to do in scientific inquiry, instead of constantly needing to run back
 +
to our primal source for the assurance of some scriptural quotation
 +
that we have not strayed from the path of right-group-thinking and
 +
remain in conformity with the established doctrine, in that most
 +
likely exaggerated caricature of the medieval seminary scholar,
 +
but just as likely a graphic icon with a hint of truth to it.
 +
 
 +
As I've indicated, some of the descriptions that fall short of this standard
 +
are those that rely on undefined psychological or sociological notions, for
 +
all the possibility of their still being useful in application to specific
 +
subjects, when taken with the due grain of saltOther descriptions that
 +
tend to lead us astray are those that are afflicted with the residual
 +
biases of essentialism, in spite of all the work that Peirce did to
 +
make clear that the minimal unit of description is a sign relation,
 +
not the isolated sign in itself, which is a meaningless concept.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
With respect to the last part of your question, yes, we can give
 +
a logically necessary and sufficient definition of "definition".
 +
For instance, the following from Peirce will do as well as any:
  
POLA. Note 8
+
| A 'definition' is the logical analysis of a predicate in general terms.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
He immediately elaborates this definition of definition as follows:
  
| 1Facts and Propositions (cont.)
+
| It has two branches, the one asserting that the definitum is
 +
| applicable to whatever there may be to which the definition is
 +
| applicable;  the other (which ordinarily has several clauses),
 +
| that the definition is applicable to whatever there may be to
 +
| which the definitum is applicable'A definition does not
 +
| assert that anything exists.'
 
|
 
|
| There are a great many different kinds of facts, and we shall be
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 237
| concerned in later lectures with a certain amount of classification
 
| of facts.  I will just point out a few kinds of facts to begin with,
 
| so that you may not imagine that facts are all very much alike.
 
 
|
 
|
| There are 'particular facts', such as "This is white";  then there
+
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| are 'general facts', such as "All men are mortal". Of course, the
+
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| distinction between particular and general facts is one of the most
+
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| important.
+
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
 
|
 
|
| There again it would be a very great mistake to suppose that
+
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| you could describe the world completely by means of particular
+
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
| facts alone. Suppose that you had succeeded in chronicling every
+
 
| single particular fact throughout the universe, and that there did
+
What we cannot provide so easily is a definition of a 'good' definition,
| not exist a single particular fact of any sort anywhere that you had
+
because that is more properly an applied, empirical, pragmatic matter,
| not chronicled, you still would not have got a complete description of
+
not just a logical or a mathematical question. Here we are "reduced"
| the universe unless you also added: "These that I have chronicled are
+
to "holism", whereby only models as a whole of theories as a whole
| all the particular facts there are". So you cannot hope to describe the
+
can be judged by their empirical fertility and logical integrity.
| world completely without having general facts as well as particular facts.
+
 
|
+
</pre>
| Another distinction, which is perhaps a little more difficult to make, is
+
 
| between positive facts and negative facts, such as "Socrates was alive" --
+
===NEKS. Discussion Note 6===
| a positive fact -- and "Socrates is not alive" -- you might say a negative
+
 
| fact.  But the distinction is difficult to make precise.
+
<pre>
|
+
 
| Then there are facts concerning particular things or particular qualities
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
| or relations, and, apart from them, the completely general facts of the sort
+
JP = Jim Piat
| that you have in logic, where there is no mention of any constituent whatever
+
 
| of the actual world, no mention of any particular thing or particular quality
+
Re: KS-DIS 5.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003298.html
| or particular relation, indeed strictly you may say no mention of anything.
+
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272
|
+
 
| That is one of the characteristics
+
Supplying a missing article:
| of logical propositions, that they
+
 
| mention nothing.
+
JA: What we cannot provide so easily is a definition of a 'good' definition,
|
+
    because that is more properly an applied, empirical, pragmatic matter,
| Such a proposition is"If one class is
+
    not just a logical or a mathematical question. Here we are "reduced"
| part of another, a term which is a member
+
    to "holism", whereby only models as a whole of theories as a whole
| of the one is also a member of the other".
+
    can be judged by their empirical fertility and logical integrity.
|
+
 
| All those words that come in the statement of a pure logical proposition
+
Replies interspersed.
| are words really belonging to syntaxThey are words merely expressing
+
 
| form or connection, not mentioning any particular constituent of the
+
JP: I don't mean to sound so confrontational or abrupt. Fact is I seem to recall
| proposition in which they occurThis is, of course, a thing that
+
    you have already posted (maybe a number of times) some of what you felt were
| wants to be proved;  I am not laying it down as self-evident.
+
    Peirce's most useful sign definitions. So what I'm really trying to ask is
|
+
    how can we separate our sign selection criteria from our preconceptions of
| Then there are facts about the properties of single things;  and facts
+
    what a sign isMy concern is that our definitions may beg the questions
| about the relations between two things, three things, and so on;  and
+
    we hope they will help us answerJust as every question presupposes an
| any number of different classifications of some of the facts in the
+
    assertion that is being doubted, it seems to me that every definition
| world, which are important for different purposes.
+
    presupposes a question that is being answered.
|
+
 
| Russell, POLA, pp. 42-43.
+
I just now notice that I had posted one at the top of this discussion thread,
|
+
and had already forgotten it, partly because I did not get my copy back from
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
the Peirce List -- I sure hope this isn't what made Soren so irate that time --
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
anyway here's a link to an archive copy:
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
KS-DIS 1.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003272.html
  
POLANote 9
+
I'm not quite sure what you're asking, where the emphasis is meant to be
 +
when you say:  "how can we separate our sign selection criteria from our
 +
preconceptions of what a sign is".  If by "begging the question" you are
 +
saying that a definition evades the question by assuming what's supposed
 +
to be proved, I don't see how that is, as definitions aren't supposed to
 +
prove anything, only supply a potential clarification of one thing meant
 +
by a termBut if you are emphasizing the difference between unexamined
 +
preconception and clarifying "logical analysis of a predicate in general
 +
terms", in Peirce's phrase, then that again is just what a definition is
 +
supposed to be doing.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JP: Sitting here writing this, Jon, I've come up with what is perhaps a more helpful
 +
    question for me -- would you explain a bit more (in so far as possible in layman's
 +
    terms for me) why you are trying to translate Peirce's definitions into some sort
 +
    of graphic formalization.  I don't really understand your goal.  I guess in part
 +
    what I don't understand is what is meant by a formal definition if in fact that
 +
    is part of your goal.  I realize you are putting a lot of care into what you
 +
    are doing and are trying to move in careful well considered small steps.
 +
    That much I think I understand and appreciate.  But I don't understand
 +
    your methodological goal.  My sense is you are attempting some sort
 +
    of formalization but I don't really know what constitutes a formal
 +
    definition -- what it achieves and what it avoids.  I'm not trying
 +
    to trap you into some premature formulations -- I just want to get
 +
    a better understanding in very informal terms for starters of what
 +
    your general methodological goal is so that maybe I can better
 +
    understand the steps you are taking.  Even off line if you
 +
    don't want to be held accountable for some very quick and
 +
    dirty, off hand, rough translation of your methodological
 +
    goals designed solely for a friend who is largely clueless.
  
| 1. Facts and Propositions (cont.)
+
For this one I will have to hunt up that old thinking cap and get back to you ...
|
+
 
| It is obvious that there is not a dualism of true and false facts;
+
P.SI don't know why the Internet has been so funky the
| there are only just facts. It would be a mistake, of course, to
+
last couple of weeks -- Sue said there was some kind of
| say that all facts are trueThat would be a mistake because
+
major D.O.S. attack that had their servers bogged down
| true and false are correlatives, and you would only say of
+
for a while, or maybe it's just the traffic from the
| a thing that it was true if it was the sort of thing that
+
<insert your denominational festivity>'s holiday
| 'might' be false. A fact cannot be either true or false.
+
online shopping frenzy -- but if I don't answer
|
+
you or anybody for a day or so I won't mind if
| That brings us on to the question of statements or propositions or
+
you send me a copy by my own email address.
| judgments, all those things that do have the quality of truth and
+
 
| falsehood.  For the purposes of logic, though not, I think, for the
+
</pre>
| purposes of theory of knowledge, it is natural to concentrate upon
+
 
| the proposition as the thing which is going to be our typical vehicle
+
===NEKS. Discussion Note 7===
| on the duality of truth and falsehood.
+
 
|
+
<pre>
| A proposition, one may say, is a sentence in the indicative,
 
| a sentence asserting something, not questioning or commanding
 
| or wishing.  It may also be a sentence of that sort preceded
 
| by the word "that". For example, "That Socrates is alive",
 
| "That two and two are four", "That two and two are five",
 
| anything of that sort will be a proposition.
 
|
 
| Russell, POLA, pp. 43-44.
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
 +
JP = Jim Piat
  
POLANote 10
+
Re: KS-DIS 4http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003297.html
 +
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
In substance:
  
| 1. Facts and Propositions (cont.)
+
| A sign is something, A, which brings something, B,
 +
| its interpretant sign determined or created by it,
 +
| into the same sort of correspondence with something,
 +
| C, its object, as that in which itself stands to C.
 
|
 
|
| A proposition is just a symbol. It is a complex symbol in the
+
| C.S. Peirce, NEM 4, pp. 20-21, cf. p. 54 (1902).
| sense that it has parts which are also symbols:  a symbol may
 
| be defined as complex when it has parts that are symbols.
 
 
|
 
|
| In a sentence containing several words, the several words are each symbols,
+
| C.S. Peirce, [Application to the Carnegie Institution], L 75, pp. 13-73 in:
| and the sentence comprising them is therefore a complex symbol in that sense.
+
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by Charles S. Peirce,
 +
| Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy', Mouton, The Hague, 1976.  Available here:
 +
| Arisbe Website, http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/l75/l75.htm
 +
 
 +
JA: More details on how the definition of a sign relation bears on
 +
    the definition of logic are given in the contexts of this text:
 +
 
 +
| On the Definition of Logic [Version 1]
 
|
 
|
| There is a good deal of importance to philosophy in the theory of symbolism,
+
| Logic will here be defined as 'formal semiotic'.
| a good deal more than one time I thoughtI think the importance is almost
+
| A definition of a sign will be given which no more
| entirely negative, i.e., the importance lies in the fact that unless you
+
| refers to human thought than does the definition
| are fairly self-conscious about symbols, unless you are fairly aware of
+
| of a line as the place which a particle occupies,
| the relation of the symbol to what it symbolizes, you will find yourself
+
| part by part, during a lapse of time.  Namely,
| attributing to the thing properties which only belong to the symbol.
+
| a sign is something, 'A', which brings something,
|
+
| 'B', its 'interpretant' sign determined or created
| That, of course, is especially likely in very abstract studies such as
+
| by it, into the same sort of correspondence with
| philosophical logic, because the subject-matter that you are supposed
+
| something, 'C', its 'object', as that in which it
| to be thinking of is so exceedingly difficult and elusive that any
+
| itself stands to 'C'.  It is from this definition,
| person who has ever tried to think about it knows you do not think
+
| together with a definition of "formal", that I
| about it except perhaps once in six months for half a minute.
+
| deduce mathematically the principles of logic.
| The rest of the time you think about the symbols, because
+
| I also make a historical review of all the
| they are tangible, but the thing you are supposed to be
+
| definitions and conceptions of logic, and show,
| thinking about is fearfully difficult and one does not
+
| not merely that my definition is no novelty, but
| often manage to think about it.
+
| that my non-psychological conception of logic has
 +
| 'virtually' been quite generally held, though not
 +
| generally recognized.  (CSP, NEM 4, 20-21).
 
|
 
|
| The really good philosopher is the one who does
+
| On the Definition of Logic [Version 2]
| once in six months think about it for a minute.
 
| Bad philosophers never do.  That is why the
 
| theory of symbolism has a certain importance,
 
| because otherwise you are so certain to
 
| mistake the properties of the symbolism
 
| for the properties of the thing.
 
 
|
 
|
| It has other interesting sides to it too.
+
| Logic is 'formal semiotic'.  A sign is something,
| There are different kinds of symbols,
+
| 'A', which brings something, 'B', its 'interpretant'
| different kinds of relation between
+
| sign, determined or created by it, into the same
| symbol and what is symbolized, and
+
| sort of correspondence (or a lower implied sort)
| very important fallacies arise
+
| with something, 'C', its 'object', as that in
| from not realizing this.
+
| which itself stands to 'C'. This definition no
 +
| more involves any reference to human thought than
 +
| does the definition of a line as the place within
 +
| which a particle lies during a lapse of time.
 +
| It is from this definition that I deduce the
 +
| principles of logic by mathematical reasoning,
 +
| and by mathematical reasoning that, I aver, will
 +
| support criticism of Weierstrassian severity, and
 +
| that is perfectly evident.  The word "formal" in
 +
| the definition is also defined. (CSP, NEM 4, 54).
 
|
 
|
| The sort of contradictions about which
+
| Charles Sanders Peirce,
| I shall be speaking in connection with
+
|'The New Elements of Mathematics', Volume 4,
| types in a later lecture all arise from
+
| Edited by Carolyn Eisele, Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
| mistakes in symbolism, from putting one
+
 
| sort of symbol in the place where another
+
JP: I don't want to lose the moment so I'm risking accuracy/depth etc. for haste --
| sort of symbol ought to be.
+
 
|
+
JP: In immediately above definition I notice particularly two comments.
| Some of the notions that have been thought absolutely fundamental in philosophy
+
    One is the remark about correspondence "(or a lower implied sort)"
| have arisen, I believe, entirely through mistakes as to symbolism -- e.g. the
+
    and the other is the reference to a definition of "formal".  I'm
| notion of existence, or, if you like, reality.  Those two words stand for a
+
    thinking that correspondence is either iconic or indexical and
| great deal that has been discussed in philosophy.  There has been the theory
+
    that a lower implied sort of correspondence has at least the
| about every proposition being really a description of reality as a whole and
+
    same function.  And I'm also wondering if you might have
| so on, and altogther these notions of reality and existence have played a
+
    off hand a reference to Peirce's definition of formal
| very prominent part in philosophy. Now my own belief is that as they have
+
    ref in his comment.
| occurred in philosophy, they have been entirely the outcome of a muddle
+
 
| about symbolism, and that when you have cleared up that muddle, you find
+
Here is the relevant part of the second variant:
| that practically everything that has been said about existence is sheer
+
 
| and simple mistake, and that is all you can say about it.  I shall go
+
| Logic is 'formal semiotic'.  A sign is something, 'A',
| into that in a later lecture, but it is an example of the way in which
+
| which brings something, 'B', its 'interpretant' sign,
| symbolism is important.
+
| determined or created by it, into the same sort of
|
+
| correspondence (or a lower implied sort) with
| Russell, POLA, pp. 44-45.
+
| something, 'C', its 'object', as that in
|
+
| which itself stands to 'C'.
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
I took the "lower implied sort" as modifying the "same"
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
+
in "the same sort of correspondence", and I further took
 +
the word "implied" as intended to generalize the definition
 +
by weakening the condition in question, much in the way that
 +
we would weaken the "sameness" of the equivalence "<=>" into
 +
the lower implied sort of the implication "=>".  I will think
 +
about the reading of "lower" as "degenerate" as in the castes
 +
of icons and indices, but the "implied" seems to rule that out,
 +
just off hand, as being as sign does not imply being either one.
 +
 
 +
The "correspondence" I take in the sense of the phrase "triple correspondence"
 +
that he uses elsewhere for a 3-adic relation, but definitely not anything like
 +
a one-to-one correspondence, which is a 2-adic relation, and thus not intended
 +
to suggest any hint of a "correspondence theory" of meaning or truth. In this
 +
way of reading it, the "correspondence" is just a rhetorical alternate for the
 +
sign relation itself.  This interpretation also comports with that "recursive"
 +
definition of the sign relation that Peirce often gives.
 +
 
 +
A little bit under the weather today --
 +
we've been in the deep freeze for
 +
a couple of weeks hereabouts --
 +
so I'll need to take a rest.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Discussion Note 8===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
JA = Jon Awbrey
 +
JP = Jim Piat
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Re: KS-DIS 7.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003300.html
 +
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272
  
POLA. Note 11
+
JA: Partly I like these statements because they place the
 +
    matter of defining "sign" within its due contexts of
 +
    defining "formal" and defining "logic", which helps
 +
    to "comprehend", in both senses of that term, some
 +
    of the purposes and utilities of the definition.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JA: With respect to the question of contrast, Peirce in this instance
 +
    explictly contrasts this definition with the most popular host of
 +
    sufficient but not necessary descriptions, namely, those that use
 +
    some of our common but typically unexamined introspections and/or
 +
    intuitions about our own psychological processes in order to fill
 +
    in a motley assortment of intuitive blind spots and logical holes
 +
    in the description.  This affords a significant correction to the
 +
    psychologically-biased descriptions, for instance, those deriving
 +
    from the "New List" account.
  
| 1. Facts and Propositions (cont.)
+
JP: Ha! Yes, I've always thought that the New List relied a bit on unexamined
|
+
    psychological notions such as "attention" but then again I wonder if any
| Perhaps I ought to say a word or two about what I am
+
    human endeavor (inquiry, defintion, thought or whatever) can completely
| understanding by symbolism, because I think some people
+
    escape this sort of relianceBeing a psychologist (whatever that is)
| think you only mean mathematical symbols when you talk
+
    this has never bothered meIn fact it just now occurs to me that that
| about symbolism.  I am using it in a sense to include
+
    for me is a good account of what I mean when I say I am a psychologist --
| all language of every sort and kind, so that every
+
    that for me what is left undefined or the starting point if you will --
| word is a symbol, and every sentence, and so forth.
+
    is what in common parlance people mostly call psychological.
|
 
| When I speak of a symbol I simply mean something that "means" something else,
 
| and as to what I mean by "meaning" I am not prepared to tell youI will in
 
| the course of time enumerate a strictly infinite number of different things
 
| that "meaning" may mean but I shall not consider that I have exhausted the
 
| discussion by doing thatI think that the notion of meaning is always
 
| more or less psychological, and that it is not possible to get a pure
 
| logical theory of meaning, nor therefore of symbolism.  I think that
 
| it is of the very essence of the explanation of what you mean by a
 
| symbol to take account of such things as knowing, of cognitive
 
| relations, and probably also of association.  At any rate
 
| I am pretty clear that the theory of symbolism and the
 
| use of symbolism is not a thing that can be explained
 
| in pure logic without taking account of the various
 
| cognitive relations that you may have to things.
 
|
 
| Russell, POLA, p. 45.
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
I have no brief against psychology -- it is a fascinating study, one of those
 +
that I passed through several times in the "cycle of majors" that I had as an
 +
undergrad and even spent a parallel life during the 80's taking a Master's in.
 +
And I do not confound "psychological" or even "introspective" with "unexamind" --
 +
it's merely that many of our most intuitive concepts remain as yet "primitive" --
 +
in both the "logical undefind" and the "savage mind" senses of the word.  And
 +
it's entirely appropriate to use the concepts that we have until we arrive at
 +
clearer and distincter ideas, as the saying goes -- like you say, there is no
 +
escaping that, not at the outset anyways.
  
POLANote 12
+
JP: It's always struct me that Peirce's eschewing of psychologogism
 +
    was no big deal -- mostly just a reaction to the excesses of the
 +
    psychologizing in vogue at the time he was writingSomething
 +
    psychologists of the time eventually reacted against (to the
 +
    point of excesses in the other direction) themselves.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
"Struct" -- a sly alusion to Aristotle's 'pathemeta'
 +
and the classical theory of being tutored by nature,
 +
the mode of instruction via hard knocks impressions.
 +
I like it, ergo, I think I'll steal it.
  
| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
+
JA: But probably the most important feature of this definition is that
|
+
    it does not invoke too large a variety of undefined terms as a part
| As to what one means by "meaning", I will give a few illustrations.
+
    of its try at definition, and the few significant terms that it does
| For instance, the word "Socrates", you will say, means a certain man;
+
    pass the buck to, like "correspondence" and "determination", are ones
| the word "mortal" means a certain quality;  and the sentence "Socrates
+
    for which we find fairly fast definitions elsewhere in Peirce's works.
| is mortal" means a certain fact. But these three sorts of meaning are
+
 
| entirely distinct, and you will get into the most hopeless contradictions
+
JA: The reason why these criteria are important is that they give us what we need
| if you think the word "meaning" has the same meaning in each of these three
+
    in order to carry out any measure of deductive or necessary reasoning on the
| cases.  It is very important not to suppose that there is just one thing which
+
    basis of the definition alone -- the "standing on its own feet" character
| is meant by "meaning", and that therefore there is just one sort of relation of
+
    of a genuine definition.
| the symbol to what is symbolized.  A name would be a proper symbol to use for
+
 
| a person;  a sentence (or a proposition) is the proper symbol for a fact.
+
JA: To be continued ...
|
+
 
| A belief or a statement has duality of truth and falsehood, which the
+
JP: Looking forward to that!
| fact does not have.  A belief or a statement always involves a proposition.
+
 
| You say that a man believes that so and so is the case. A man believes that
+
WOWYWF, somebody may be keeping a list ...
| Socrates is dead. What he believes is a proposition on the face of it, and
+
 
| for formal purposes it is convenient to take the proposition as the essential
+
</pre>
| thing having the duality of truth and falsehood.
+
 
|
+
===NEKS. Discussion Note 9===
| It is very important to realize such things, for instance,
+
 
| as that 'propositions are not names for facts'.  It is quite
+
<pre>
| obvious as soon as it is pointed out to you, but as a matter
+
 
| of fact I never had realized it until it was pointed out to
+
JP = Jim Piat
| me by a former pupil of mine, Wittgenstein. It is perfectly
+
 
| evident as soon as you think of it, that a proposition is not
+
Re: KS-DIS 4http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003297.html
| a name for a fact, from the mere circumstance that there are
+
In: KS-DIS.   http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272
| 'two' propositions corresponding to each fact.  Suppose it
+
 
| is a fact that Socrates is dead. You have two propositions:
+
I see that the following query fell to
| "Socrates is dead" and "Socrates is not dead".  And those two
+
the cutting room floor of my "attention"
| propositions corresponding to the same fact;  there is one fact
+
somewhere in the process of cut and haste.
| in the world which makes one true and one false.  That is not
 
| accidental, and illustrates how the relation of proposition
 
| to fact is a totally different one from the relation of name
 
| to the thing namedFor each fact there are two propositions,
 
| one true and one false, and there is nothing in the nature of
 
| the symbol to show us which is the true one and which is the
 
| false one. If there were, you could ascertain the truth
 
| about the world by examining propositions without looking
 
| around you.
 
|
 
| Russell, POLA, pp. 46-47.
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JP: And I'm also wondering if you might have
 +
    off hand a reference to Peirce's definition
 +
    of formal ref[erred to?] in his comment.
  
POLA.  Note 13
+
The one that comes to mind, the way that I'm forced to recall most
 +
things these days, by Googling on +Awbrey +Peirce "Quasi-Necessary"
 +
is this one:
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Cf: SR 3.  http://forum.wolframscience.com/showthread.php?postid=2395#post2395
 +
In: SR.    http://forum.wolframscience.com/showthread.php?threadid=647
  
| 1Facts and Propositions (concl.)
+
| Logic, in its general sense, is, as I believe I have shown, only another
 +
| name for 'semiotic' [Greek: 'semeiotike'], the quasi-necessary, or formal,
 +
| doctrine of signsBy describing the doctrine as "quasi-necessary", or
 +
| formal, I mean that we observe the characters of such signs as we know,
 +
| and from such an observation, by a process which I will not object to
 +
| naming Abstraction, we are led to statements, eminently fallible, and
 +
| therefore in one sense by no means necessary, as to what 'must be' the
 +
| characters of all signs used by a "scientific" intelligence, that is to say,
 +
| by an intelligence capable of learning by experience.  As to that process of
 +
| abstraction, it is itself a sort of observation.  The faculty which I call
 +
| abstractive observation is one which ordinary people perfectly recognize,
 +
| but for which the theories of philosophers sometimes hardly leave room.
 +
| It is a familiar experience to every human being to wish for something
 +
| quite beyond his present means, and to follow that wish by the question,
 +
| "Should I wish for that thing just the same, if I had ample means to gratify it?"
 +
| To answer that question, he searches his heart, and in doing so makes what I term
 +
| an abstractive observation.  He makes in his imagination a sort of skeleton diagram,
 +
| or outline sketch, of himself, considers what modifications the hypothetical state
 +
| of things would require to be made in that picture, and then examines it, that is,
 +
| 'observes' what he has imagined, to see whether the same ardent desire is there to
 +
| be discerned.  By such a process, which is at bottom very much like mathematical
 +
| reasoning, we can reach conclusions as to what 'would be' true of signs in all
 +
| cases, so long as the intelligence using them was scientific.  (CP 2.227).
 
|
 
|
| There are two different relations, as you see, that a proposition
+
| Charles Sanders Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.227,
| may have to a factthe one the relation that you may call being
+
| Editor Data:  From An Unidentified Fragment, c. 1897.
| true to the fact, and the other being false to the factBoth are
+
 
| equally essentially logical relations which may subsist between the
+
P.S.  I just now got your message from 7:59
| two, whereas in the case of a name, there is only one relation that
+
this morning, but will save it for tomorrow.
| it can have to what it names. A name can just name a particular,
+
 
| or, if it does not, it is not a name at all, it is a noise. It
+
</pre>
| cannot be a name without having just that one particular relation
+
 
| of naming a certain thing, whereas a proposition does not cease
+
===NEKS. Discussion Note 10===
| to be a proposition if it is false.  It has two ways, of being
+
 
| true and being false, which together correspond to the property
+
<pre>
| of being a nameJust as a word may be a name or be not a name
+
 
| but just a meaningless noise, so a phrase which is apparently a
+
JP = Jim Piat
| proposition may be either true or false, or may be meaningless,
+
 
| but the true and false belong together as against the meaningless.
+
Re: KS-DIS 3. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003296.html
| That shows, of course, that the formal logical characterictics of
+
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272
| propositions are quite different from those of names, and that the
+
 
| relations they have to facts are quite different, and therefore
+
JP: An early response to an early response.  Ah yes, of course, I've read your paper
| propositions are not names for facts. You must not run away with
+
    on interpretation as action before -- but apparently now I'm ready to read it
| the idea that you can name facts in any other way; you cannot.
+
    with more understanding and profitStrange how some things that I just
| You cannot name them at all. You cannot properly name a fact.
+
    glossed over before (thinking them unnecessary filler) now jump out at
| The only thing you can do is to assert it, or deny it, or
+
    me as key concepts!  Reminds me of Joe's recent comments about how
| desire it, or will it, or wish it, or question it, but all
+
    successive iterations of philosophical inquiry (in this case my
| those are things involving the whole proposition. You can
+
    own) legitimately must keep revisiting old "settled" issues in
| never put the sort of thing that makes a proposition to be
+
    the light of new understandings.  So I'm going to give your
| true or false in the position of a logical subjectYou can
+
    paper a fresh slow read -- and thanks for the re-minder!
| only have it there as something to be asserted or denied or
+
    I look forward to any further comments you may wish
| something of that sort, but not something to be named.
+
    to add.
|
+
 
| Russell, POLA, p. 47.
+
A random response to a random distribution.
|
+
Thanks for the once or thrice over.  And I
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
will not reguard it a hermeneutic violence
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
if you look beneath the subtitles and risk
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
+
the wine-dark see-change of look-out-world
 +
that every old grit of your hermenaut wits.
 +
 
 +
But serially, folks, things take care of themselves as far as raising new doubts.
 +
It's what we do to after that that makes all the difference in styles of inquiry.
 +
Does our peerage into the skies open eyes, or refuse to peer through the 'scopes?
 +
Does our revistation of old friends and familiars bring about a truly new vision,
 +
or merely the sort of apologetic revisal that led Henry Ford to say that History
 +
is post hoc revisionary casuistry of a specious quo, or something to that effect?
 +
Think of a real example, say Galileo, Bellarmine, DescartesIn what sense were
 +
they peers, in what sense not?  More to the point, how would it have been viewed
 +
at the time, how sundry and variously, by who?  Now let's imagine in our darkest
 +
imaginings that the "Continuous Young Creation" (CYC) theory of the universe can
 +
win out in the next "Tribunal Of The Inquisition" (TOTI), and prevail over minds
 +
for the remains of the Third Millennium. Will not-now people not then look back
 +
on a wholly different "Topology Of Peers" (TOP) than what now transits sic, what
 +
the Scientism of the future will chastise as our benighted age of seculahilarity?
 +
These dim reflections make it clear that the notion of peerage is no explanation,
 +
but concocted after the fact to rationalize whatever fashion or fascism preveils.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===NEKS. Discussion Note 11===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
JP = Jim Piat
 +
 
 +
Re: KS-DIS 3. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003296.html
 +
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272
 +
 
 +
I see that some idiom from another language -- Algol or Forth I think --
 +
has muffed my text for the English ear, so speaking of revision, like
 +
speaking of the devil, I guess, here is the revised, extended edition:
 +
 
 +
But serially, folks, things take care of themselves as far as raising new doubts.
 +
It's what we do to after that that makes all the difference in styles of inquiry.
 +
Does our peerage into the skies open eyes, or refuse to peer through the 'scopes?
 +
Does our revistation of old friends and familiars bring about a truly new vision,
 +
or merely the sort of apologetic revisal that led Henry Ford to say that History
 +
is post hoc revisionary casuistry of a specious quo, or something to that effect?
 +
Think of a real example, say Galileo, Bellarmine, Descartes.  In what sense were
 +
they peers, in what sense not?  More to the point, how would it have been viewed
 +
at the time, how sundry and variously, by who? Now let's imagine in our darkest
 +
imaginings that the "Continuous Young Creation" (CYC) theory of the universe can
 +
win out in the next "Tribunal Of The Inquisition" (TOTI), and prevail over minds
 +
for the remains of the Third MillenniumWill not-now people not then look back
 +
on a wholly different "Topology Of Peers" (TOP) than what now transits sic, what
 +
the Scientism of the future will chastise as our benighted age of seculahilarity?
 +
These dim reflections make it clear that the notion of peerage is no explanation,
 +
but concocted after the fact to rationalize whatever fashion or fascism preveils.
 +
 
 +
The spirit of inquiry comes from the heart.
 +
Where it lives there's no need to force it.
 +
Where it's dead there's no way to argue it
 +
into being -- it demands an external shock
 +
or an internal quake, a sense of anharmony
 +
to kick-start it back to the realm of life.
 +
But don't underestimate the persistence of
 +
a static status quo to insulate its static
 +
atmospherics from all hope of resuscitance,
 +
by all the available routines of authority,
 +
parochial isolation, not to say xenophobia.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
POLA. Note 14
+
==OLOD. Quine On The Limits Of Decision==
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===OLOD. Note 1===
  
| 4.  Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb:  Beliefs, Etc.
+
<pre>
 +
| On the Limits of Decision
 
|
 
|
| You will remember that after speaking about atomic propositions
+
| Because these congresses occur at intervals of five years, they make
| I pointed out two more complicated forms of propositions which
+
| for retrospection.  I find myself thinking back over a century of logic.
| arise immediately on proceeding further than that: the 'first',
+
| A hundred years ago George Boole's algebra of classes was at hand.  Like
| which I call molecular propositions, which I dealt with last time,
+
| so many inventions, it had been needlessly clumsy when it first appeared;
| involving such words as "or", "and", "if", and the 'second' involving
+
| but meanwhile, in 1864, W.S. Jevons had taken the kinks out of it.  It was
| two or more verbs such as believing, wishing, willing, and so forth.
+
| only in that same year, 1864, that DeMorgan published his crude algebra of
 +
| relations.  Then, around a century ago, C.S. Peirce published three papers
 +
| refining and extending these two algebras -- Boole's of classes and DeMorgan's
 +
| of relations.  These papers of Peirce's appeared in 1867 and 1870.  Even our
 +
| conception of truth-function logic in terms of truth tables, which is so clear
 +
| and obvious as to seem inevitable today, was not yet explicit in the writings
 +
| of that time. As for the logic of quantification, it remained unknown until
 +
| 1879, when Frege published his 'Begriffsschrift';  and it was around three
 +
| years later still that Peirce began to become aware of this idea, through
 +
| independent efforts.  And even down to litle more than a half century ago
 +
| we were weak on decision procedures.  It was only in 1915 that Löwenheim
 +
| published a decision procedure for the Boolean algebra of classes, or,
 +
| what is equivalent, monadic quantification theory.  It was a clumsy
 +
| procedure, and obscure in the presentation -- the way, again, with
 +
| new inventions.  And it was less than a third of a century ago that
 +
| we were at last forced, by results of Gödel, Turing, and Church, to
 +
| despair of a decision procedure for the rest of quantification theory.
 
|
 
|
| In the case of molecular propositions it was not clear that we had to deal with
+
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", pp. 156-157.
| any new form of fact, but only with a new form of proposition, i.e. if you have
 
| a disjunctive proposition such as "p or q" it does not seem very plausible to
 
| say that there is in the world a disjunctive fact corresponding to "p or q"
 
| but merely that there is a fact corresponding to p and a fact corresponding
 
| to q, and the disjunctive proposition derives its truth or falsehood from
 
| those two separate facts.  Therefore in that case one was dealing only
 
| with a new form of proposition and not with new form of fact. Today
 
| we have to deal with a new form of fact.
 
 
|
 
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 79-80.
+
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
|
+
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
| MA, 1981A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985First published 1918.
+
| vol. 3, 1969.
 
+
</pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
  
POLA. Note 15
+
===OLOD. Note 2===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 
+
| On the Limits of Decision (cont.)
| 4.  Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb:  Beliefs, Etc. (cont.)
 
 
|
 
|
| I think that one might describe philosophical logic, the philosophical portion
+
| It is hard now to imagine not seeing truth-function logic
| of logic which is the portion that I am concerned with in these lectures since
+
| as a trivial matter of truth tables, and it is becoming hard
| Christmas (1917), as an inventory, or if you like a more humble word, a "zoo"
+
| even to imagine the decidability of monadic quantification theory
| containing all the different forms that facts may have. I should prefer to
+
| as other than obvious.  For monadic quantification theory in a modern
| say "forms of facts" rather than "forms of propositions".
+
| perspective is essentially just an elaboration of truth-function logic.
 +
| I want now to spend a few minutes developing this connection.
 
|
 
|
| To apply that to the case of molecular propositions which I dealt with
+
| What makes truth-function logic decidable by truth tables
| last time, if one were pursuing this analysis of the forms of facts,
+
| is that the truth value of a truth function can be computed
| it would be 'belief in' a molecular proposition that one would deal
+
| from the truth values of the arguments.  But is a formula of
| with rather than the molecular proposition itselfIn accordance
+
| quantification theory not a truth-function of quantifications?
| with the sort of realistic bias that should put into all study
+
| Its truth vaue can be computed from whatever truth values may be
| of metaphysics, I should always wish to be engaged in the
+
| assigned to its component quantificationsWhy does this not make
| investigation of some actual fact or set of facts, and it
+
| quantification theory decidable by truth tables?  Why not test a
| seems to me that that is so in logic just as much as it
+
| formula of quantification theory for validity by assigning all
| is in zoology.  In logic you are concerned with the
+
| combinations of truth values to its component quantifications
| forms of facts, with getting hold of the different
+
| and seeing whether the whole comes out true every time?
| sorts of facts, different 'logical' sorts of facts,
+
|  
| that there are in the world.
+
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", p. 157.
 
|
 
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 80.
+
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
|
+
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
| MA, 1981.  A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
+
| vol. 3, 1969.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===OLOD. Note 3===
  
POLA.  Note 16
+
<pre>
 
+
| On the Limits of Decision (cont.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 4.  Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb:  Beliefs, Etc. (cont.)
 
 
|
 
|
| Now I want to point out today that the facts that occur when one
+
| The answer obviously is that this criterion is too
| believes or wishes or wills have a different logical form from
+
| severe, because the component quantifications are
| the atomic facts containing a single verb which I dealt with
+
| not always independent of one another.  A formula
| in my second lecture.  (There are, of course, a good many
+
| of quantification theory might be valid in spite
| forms that facts that may have, a strictly infinite number,
+
| of failing this truth-table test.  It might fail
| and I do not wish you to suppose that I pretend to deal
+
| the test by turning out false for some assignment
| with all of them.)
+
| of truth values to its component quantifications,
 +
| but that assignment might be undeserving of notice
 +
| because incompatible with certain interdependences
 +
| of the component quantifications.
 
|
 
|
| Suppose you take any actual occurrence of a belief.  I want you to
+
| If, on the other hand, we can put a formula of quantification
| understand that I am not talking about beliefs in the sort of way
+
| theory into the form of a truth function of quantifications
| in which judgment is spoken of in theory of knowledge, in which
+
| which are independent of one another, then the truth table
| you would say there is 'the' judgment that two and two are four.
+
| will indeed serve as a validity test.  And this is just
| I am talking of the actual occurrence of a belief in a particular
+
| what we can do for monadic formulas of quantification
| person's mind at a particular moment, and discussing what sort of
+
| theory.  Herbrand showed this in 1930.
| fact that is.
 
 
|
 
|
| If I say "What day of the week is this?" and you say "Tuesday",
+
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", p. 157.
| there occurs in your mind at that moment the belief that this is
 
| Tuesday. The thing I want to deal with today is the question:
 
 
|
 
|
| What is the form of the fact which occurs when a person has a belief?
+
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
 +
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
 +
| MA, 1981.  A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
 +
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
 +
| vol. 3, 1969.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===OLOD. Note 4===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| On the Limits of Decision (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 80-81.
+
| ...
 +
|
 +
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", pp. 157-158.
 
|
 
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
+
| MA, 1981.  A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
 +
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
 +
| vol. 3, 1969.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
==POLA. Philosophy Of Logical Atomism==
  
POLANote 17
+
I am going to collect here a number of excerpts from the papers that Bertrand Russell wrote in the years 1910&ndash;1920, my interest being focused on the logical characters of belief and knowledgeI will take the liberty of breaking up some of Russell's longer paragraphs in whatever fashion serves to facilitate their study.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 1===
  
| 4.  Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb:  Beliefs, Etc. (cont.)
+
{| align="center" width="90%"
 
|
 
|
| Of course you see that the sort of obvious first notion that one would
+
<p>The Philosophy of Logical Atomism (1918)</p>
| naturally arrive at would be that a belief is a relation to the proposition.
+
 
| "I believe the proposition p." "I believe that today is Tuesday." "I believe
+
<p>The following [is the text] of a course of eight lectures delivered in [Gordon Square] London, in the first months of 1918, [which] are very largely concerned with explaining certain ideas which I learnt from my friend and former pupil Ludwig Wittgenstein. I have had no opportunity of knowing his views since August 1914, and I do not even know whether he is alive or deadHe has therefore no responsibility for what is said in these lectures beyond that of having originally supplied many of the theories contained in them(Russell, POLA, p.&nbsp;35).</p>
| that two and two are four." Something like that. It seems on the face of it
+
|}
| as if you had there a relation of the believing subject to a proposition.
+
 
 +
<p>Bertrand Russell, &ldquo;The Philosophy of Logical Atomism&rdquo;, pp.&nbsp;35&ndash;155 in ''The Philosophy of Logical Atomism'', edited with an introduction by David Pears, Open Court, La&nbsp;Salle, IL, 1985First published 1918.</p>
 +
 
 +
===POLA. Note 2===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| 1. Facts and Propositions
 
|
 
|
| That view won't do for various reasons which I shall go intoBut you
+
| This course of lectures which I am now beginning I have called
| have, therefore, got to have a theory of belief which is not exactly that.
+
| the Philosophy of Logical AtomismPerhaps I had better begin
| Take any sort of proposition, say "I believe Socrates is mortal".  Suppose
+
| by saying a word or two as to what I understand by that title.
| that that belief does actually occur.  The statement that it occurs is a
+
| The kind of philosophy that I wish to advocate, which I call
| statement of fact.  You have there two verbsYou may have more than two
+
| Logical Atomism, is one which has forced itself upon me in the
| verbs, you may have any number greater than one.  I may believe that Jones
+
| course of thinking about the philosophy of mathematics, although
| is of the opinion that Socrates is mortal.  There you have more than two
+
| I should find it hard to say exactly how far there is a definite
| verbs.  You may have any number, but you cannot have less than two.
+
| logical connection between the two.  The things I am going to say
 +
| in these lectures are mainly my own personal opinions and I do not
 +
| claim that they are more than that.
 
|
 
|
| You will perceive that it is not only the proposition that has the two verbs,
+
| As I have attempted to prove in 'The Principles of Mathematics', when
| but also the fact, which is expressed by the proposition, has two constituents
+
| we analyse mathematics we bring it all back to logic.  It all comes back
| corresponding to verbs.  I shall call those constituents verbs for the sake
+
| to logic in the strictest and most formal sense.  In the present lectures,
| of shortness, as it is very difficult to find any word to describe all those
+
| I shall try to set forth in a sort of outline, rather briefly and rather
| objects which one denotes by verbs. Of course, that is strictly using the
+
| unsatisfactorily, a kind of logical doctrine which seems to me to result
| word "verb" in two different senses, but I do not think it can lead to any
+
| from the philosophy of mathematics -- not exactly logically, but as what
| confusion if you understand that it is being so used.
+
| emerges as one reflects: a certain kind of logical doctrine, and on the
 +
| basis of this a certain kind of metaphysic.
 
|
 
|
| This fact (the belief) is one fact. It is not like what you had in molecular
+
| The logic which I shall advocate is atomistic, as opposed to
| propositions where you had (say) "p or q".  It is just one single fact that
+
| the monistic logic of the people who more or less follow Hegel.
| you have a belief. That is obvious from the fact that you can believe a
+
| When I say that my logic is atomistic, I mean that I share the
| falsehood.  It is obvious from the fact of false belief that you cannot
+
| common-sense belief that there are many separate things; I do
| cut off one part;  you cannot have:
+
| not regard the apparent multiplicity of the world as consisting
 +
| merely in phases and unreal divisions of a single indivisible
 +
| Reality.  It results from that, that a considerable part of
 +
| what one would have to do to justify the sort of philosophy
 +
| I wish to advocate would consist in justifying the process
 +
| of analysis.
 
|
 
|
| I believe / Socrates is mortal.
+
| One is often told that the process of analysis is falsification, that
 +
| when you analyse any given concrete whole you falsify it and that the
 +
| results of analysis are not true.  I do not think that is a right view.
 +
| I do not mean to say, of course, and nobody would maintain, that when you
 +
| have analysed you keep everything that you had before you analysed.  If you
 +
| did, you would never attain anything in analysing.  I do not propose to meet
 +
| the views that I disagree with by controversy, by arguing against those views,
 +
| but rather by positively setting forth what I believe to be the truth about the
 +
| matter, and endeavouring all the way through to make the views that I advocate
 +
| result inevitably from absolutely undeniable data.
 
|
 
|
| There are certain questions that arise about such facts,
+
| When I talk of "undeniable data" that is not to be regarded as synonymous
| and the first that arises is, Are they undeniable facts
+
| with "true data", because "undeniable" is a psychological term and "true"
| or can you reduce them in some way to relations of other
+
| is not.  When I say that something is "undeniable", I mean that it is not
| facts? Is it really necessary to suppose that there
+
| the sort of thing that anybody is going to deny; it does not follow from
| are irreducible facts, of which that sort of thing
+
| that that it is true, though it does follow that we shall all think it true --
| is a verbal expression?
+
| and that is as near to truth as we seem able to get.
 
|
 
|
| On that question until fairly lately I should certainly not have
+
| When you are considering any sort of theory of knowledge, you are more or less
| supposed that any doubt could arise.  It had not really seemed to
+
| tied to a certain unavoidable subjectivity, because you are not concerned simply
| me until fairly lately that that was a debatable point.  I still
+
| with the question what is true of the world, but "What can I know of the world?"
| believe that there are facts of that form, but I see that it is
+
| You always have to start any kind of argument from something which appears to
| a substantial question that needs to be discussed.
+
| you to be true;  if it appears to you to be true, there is no more to be done.
 +
| You cannot go outside yourself and consider abstractly whether the things that
 +
| appear to you to be true are true;  you may do this in a particular case, where
 +
| one of your beliefs is changed in consequence of others among your beliefs.
 
|
 
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 81-82.
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 35-37.
 
|
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 3===
  
POLA.  Note 18
+
<pre>
 
+
| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts?
 
 
|
 
|
| "Etc." covers understanding a proposition;  it covers desiring, willing,
+
| The reason that I call my doctrine 'logical' atomism is because
| any other attitude of that sort that you may think of that involves
+
| the atoms that I wish to arrive at as the sort of last residue
| a propositionIt seems natural to say one believes a proposition
+
| in analysis are logical atoms and not physical atomsSome of
| and unnatural to say one desires a proposition, but as a matter
+
| them will be what I call "particulars" -- such things as little
| of fact that is only a prejudice.  What you believe and what
+
| patches of colour or sounds, momentary things -- and some of them
| you desire are of exactly the same nature.  You may desire
+
| will be predicates or relations and so onThe point is that the
| to get some sugar tomorrow and of course you may possibly
+
| atom I wish to arrive at is the atom of logical analysis, not the
| believe that you will.  I am not sure that the logical
+
| atom of physical analysis.
| form is the same in the case of will.  I am inclined
 
| to think that the case of will is more analogous to
 
| that of perception, in going direct to facts, and
 
| excluding the possibility of falsehood.  In any
 
| case desire and belief are of exactly the same
 
| form logically.
 
 
|
 
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 82.
+
| Russell, POLA, p. 37.
 
|
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 4===
  
POLA.  Note 19
+
<pre>
 +
| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
 +
|
 +
| It is a rather curious fact in philosophy that the data which are
 +
| undeniable to start with are always rather vague and ambiguous.
 +
| You can, for instance, say:  "There are a number of people in
 +
| this room at this moment".  That is obviously in some sense
 +
| undeniable.  But when you come to try and define what this
 +
| room is, and what it is for a person to be in a room, and
 +
| how you are going to distinguish one person from another,
 +
| and so forth, you find that what you have said is most
 +
| fearfully vague and that you really do not know what
 +
| you meant.  That is a rather singular fact, that
 +
| everything you are really sure of, right off is
 +
| something that you do not know the meaning of,
 +
| and the moment you get a precise statement
 +
| you will not be sure whether it is true
 +
| or false, at least right off.
 +
|
 +
| The process of sound philosophizing, to my mind, consists mainly
 +
| in passing from those obvious, vague, ambiguous things, that we
 +
| feel quite sure of, to something precise, clear, definite, which
 +
| by reflection and analysis we find is involved in the vague thing
 +
| that we start from, and is, so to speak, the real truth of which
 +
| that vague thing is a sort of shadow.
 +
|
 +
| I should like, if time were longer and if I knew more than I do,
 +
| to spend a whole lecture on the conception of vagueness.  I think
 +
| vagueness is very much more important in the theory of knowledge
 +
| than you would judge it to be from the writings of most people.
 +
| Everything is vague to a degree you do not realize till you
 +
| have tried to make it precise, and everything precise is
 +
| so remote from everything that we normally think, that
 +
| you cannot for a moment suppose that is what we really
 +
| mean when we say what we think.
 +
|
 +
| Russell, POLA, pp. 37-38.
 +
|
 +
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 +
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 +
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 5===
  
| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (cont.)
+
<pre>
 +
| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| Pragmatists and some of the American realists, the school whom one calls
+
| The first truism to which I wish to draw your attention -- and I hope
| neutral monists, deny altogether that there is such a phenomenon as belief
+
| you will agree with me that these things that I call truisms are so
| in the sense I am dealing with.  They do not deny it in words, they do not
+
| obvious that it is almost laughable to mention them -- is that the
| use the same sort of language that I am using, and that makes it difficult
+
| world contains 'facts', which are what they are whatever we may
| to compare their views with the views I am speaking about.  One has really
+
| choose to think about them, and that there are also 'beliefs',
| to translate what they say into language more or less analogous to ours
+
| which have reference to facts, and by reference to facts are
| before one can make out where the points of contact or difference are.
+
| either true or false.
|
 
| If you take the works of James in his 'Essays in Radical Empiricism'
 
| or Dewey in his 'Essays in Experimental Logic' you will find that they
 
| are denying altogether that there is such a phenomenon as belief in the
 
| sense I am talking of.  They use the word "believe" but they mean something
 
| different.  You come to the view called "behaviourism", according to which
 
| you mean, if you say a person believes a thing, that he behaves in a certain
 
| fashion;  and that hangs together with James's pragmatism.  James and Dewey
 
| would say:  when I believe a proposition, that 'means' that I act in a certain
 
| fashion, that my behaviour has certain characteristics, and my belief is a true
 
| one if the behaviour leads to the desired result and is a false one if it does
 
| not.  That, if it is true, makes their pragmatism a perfectly rational account
 
| of truth and falsehood, if you do accept their view that belief as an isolated
 
| phenomenon does not occur.
 
 
|
 
|
| That is therefore the first thing one has to consider.
+
| I will try first of all to give you a preliminary explanation of what
| It would take me too far from logic to consider that
+
| I mean by a "fact".  When I speak of a fact -- I do not propose to
| subject as it deserves to be considered, because it
+
| attempt an exact definition, but an explanation, so that you will
| is a subject belonging to psychology, and it is only
+
| know what I am talking about -- I mean the kind of thing that
| relevant to logic in this one way that it raises a
+
| makes a proposition true or false.
| doubt whether there are any facts having the logical
 
| form that I am speaking of.
 
 
|
 
|
| In the question of this logical form that involves two or more verbs you
+
| If I say "It is raining", what I say is true in a certain condition of
| have a curious interlacing of logic with empirical studies, and of course
+
| weather and is false in other conditions of weatherThe condition of
| that may occur elsewhere, in this way, that an empirical study gives you
+
| weather that makes my statement true (or false as the case may be), is
| an example of a thing having a certain logical form, and you cannot really
+
| what I should call a "fact".
| be sure that there are things having a given logical form except by finding
 
| an example, and the finding of an example is itself empirical.  Therefore in
 
| that way empirical facts are relevant to logic at certain points.  I think
 
| theoretically one might know that there were those forms without knowing
 
| any instance of them, but practically, situated as we are, that does not
 
| seem to occurPractically, unless you can find an example of the form
 
| you won't know that there is that form.  If I cannot find an example
 
| containing two or more verbs, you will not have reason to believe
 
| in the theory that such a form occurs.
 
 
|
 
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 82-83.
+
| If I say, "Socrates is dead", my statement will be true owing to a
 +
| certain physiological occurrence which happened in Athens long ago.
 
|
 
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
| If I say, "Gravitation varies inversely as the square of the distance",
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
| my statement is rendered true by astronomical fact.
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
POLA.  Note 20
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (cont.)
 
 
|
 
|
| When you read the words of people like James and Dewey on the subject of belief,
+
| If I say, "Two and two are four", it is arithmetical fact that makes
| one thing that strikes you at once is that the sort of thing they are thinking of
+
| my statement true.
| as the object of belief is quite different from the sort of thing I am thinking of.
 
| They think of it always as a thing.  They think you believe in God or Homer:  you
 
| believe in an object.  That is the picture they have in their minds.  It is common
 
| enough, in common parlance, to talk that way, and they would say, the first crude
 
| approximation that they would suggest would be that you believe truly when there
 
| is such an object and that you believe falsely when there is not.  I do not mean
 
| they would say that exactly, but that would be the crude view from which they
 
| would start.  They do not seem to have grasped the fact that the objective side
 
| in belief is better expressed by a proposition than by a single word, and that,
 
| I think, has a great deal to do with their whole outlook on the matter of what
 
| belief consists of.  The object of belief in their view is generally, not
 
| relations between things, or things having qualities, or what not, but
 
| just single things which may or may not exist.  That view seems to me
 
| radically and absolutely mistaken.
 
 
|
 
|
| In the 'first' place there are a great many judgments you cannot possibly fit into
+
| On the other hand, if I say, "Socrates is alive",
| that scheme, and in the 'second' place it cannot possibly give any explanation to
+
| or "Gravitation varies directly as the distance",
| false beliefs, because when you believe that a thing exists and it does not exist,
+
| or "Two and two are five", the very same facts
| the thing is not there, it is nothing, and it cannot be the right analysis of a
+
| which made my previous statements true show
| false belief to regard it as a relation to what is really nothing.
+
| that these new statements are false.
 
|
 
|
| This an objection to supposing that belief consists simply in relation
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 40-41.
| to the object.  It is obvious that if you say "I believe in Homer" and
 
| there was no such person as Homer, your belief cannot be a relation to
 
| Homer, since there is no "Homer".
 
|
 
| Every fact that occurs in the world must be composed entirely of constituents
 
| that there are, and not of constituents that there are not.  Therefore when
 
| you say "I believe in Homer" it cannot be the right analysis of the thing
 
| to put it like that.  What the right analysis is I shall come on to in
 
| the theory of descriptions.
 
|
 
| Russell, POLA, pp. 83-84.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 6===
  
POLA.  Note 21
+
<pre>
 
+
| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (cont.)
 
 
|
 
|
| I come back now to the theory of behaviourism which I spoke of a moment ago.
+
| I want you to realize that when I speak of a fact I do not mean a
| Suppose, e.g. that you are said to believe that there is a train at 10.25.
+
| particular existing thing, such as Socrates or the rain or the sun.
| This means, we are told, that you start for the station at a certain time.
+
| Socrates himself does not render any statement true of false. You
| When you reach the station you see it is 10.24 and you runThat behaviour
+
| might be inclined to suppose that all by himself he would give truth
| constitutes your belief that there is a train at that timeIf you catch
+
| to the statement "Socrates existed", but as a matter of fact that is a
| your train by running, your belief was trueIf the train went at 10.23,
+
| mistake. It is due to a confusion which I shall try to explain in the
| you miss it, and your belief was false.  That is the sort of thing that
+
| sixth lecture of this course, when I come to deal with the notion of
| they would say constitutes belief.  There is not a single state of mind
+
| existenceSocrates himself, or any particular thing just by itself,
| which consists in contemplating this eternal verity, that the train
+
| does not make any proposition true or false"Socrates is dead" and
| starts at 10.25.
+
| "Socrates is alive" are both of them statements about SocratesOne is
 +
| true and the other false.  What I call a fact is the sort of thing that
 +
| is expressed by a whole sentence, not by a single name like "Socrates".
 +
| When a single word does come to express a fact, like "fire" or "wolf",
 +
| it is always due to an unexpressed context, and the full expression of
 +
| a fact will always involve a sentence.  We express a fact, for example,
 +
| when we say that a certain thing has a certain property, or that it
 +
| has a certain relation to another thing;  but the thing which has
 +
| the property or the relation is not what I call a "fact".
 
|
 
|
| They would apply that even to the most abstract things.
+
| Russell, POLA, p. 41.
| I do not myself feel that that view of things is tenable.
 
| It is a difficult one to refute because it goes very deep
 
| and one has the feeling that perhaps, if one thought it
 
| out long enough and became sufficiently aware of all
 
| its implications, one might find after all that it
 
| was a feasible view;  but yet I do not 'feel' it
 
| feasible.
 
 
|
 
|
| It hangs together, of course, with the theory of neutral monism, with
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| the theory that the material constituting the mental is the same as the
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| material constituting the physical, just like the Post Office directory
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985First published 1918.
| which gives you people arranged geographically and alphabeticallyThis
+
</pre>
| whole theory hangs together with that. I do not mean necessarily that
+
 
| all the people that profess the one profess the other, but that the
+
===POLA. Note 7===
| two do essentially belong together.
+
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| If you are going to take that view, you have to explain away belief
+
| It is important to observe that facts belong to the objective world.
| and desire, because things of that sort do seem to be mental phenomena.
+
| They are not created by our thought or beliefs except in special cases.
| They do seem rather far removed from the sort of thing that happens in
+
| That is one of the sort of things which I should set up as an obvious truism,
| the physical worldTherefore people will set to work to explain away
+
| but, of course, one is aware, the moment one has read any philosophy at all,
| such things as belief, and reduce them to bodily behaviour;  and your
+
| how very much there is to be said before such a statement as that can become
| belief in a certain proposition will consist in the behaviour of your
+
| the kind of position that you wantThe first thing I want to emphasize is
| body.  In the crudest terms that is what that view amounts to.  It
+
| that the outer world -- the world, so to speak, which knowledge is aiming
| does enable you to get on very well without mind.
+
| at knowing -- is not completely described by a lot of "particulars", but
 +
| that you must also take account of these things that I call facts, which
 +
| are the sort of things that you express by a sentence, and that these,
 +
| just as much as particular chairs and tables, are part of the real world.
 
|
 
|
| Truth and falsehood in that case consist in the relation of your
+
| Except in psychology, most of our statements are not intended merely to
| bodily behaviour to a certain fact, the sort of distant fact which
+
| express our condition of mind, though that is often all that they succeed
| is the purpose of your behaviour, as it were, and when your behaviour
+
| in doing.  They are intended to express facts, which (except when they are
| is satisfactory in regard to that fact your belief is true, and when
+
| psychological facts) will be about the outer world.  There are such facts
| your behaviour is unsatisfactory in regard to that fact your belief
+
| involved, equally when we speak truly and when we speak falsely.  When we
| is false.
+
| speak falsely it is an objective fact that makes what we say false, and
 +
| it is an objective fact which makes what we say true when we speak truly.
 
|
 
|
| The logical essence, in that view, will be a relation between two facts
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 41-42.
| having the same sort of form as a causal relation, i.e. on the one hand
 
| there will be your bodily behaviour which is one fact, and on the other
 
| hand the fact that the train starts at such and such a time, which is
 
| another fact, and out of a relation of those two the whole phenomenon
 
| is constituted.
 
|
 
| The thing you will get will be logically of the same form as you have
 
| in cause, where you have "This fact causes that fact".  It is quite
 
| a different logical form from the facts containing two verbs that
 
| I am talking of today.
 
|
 
| Russell, POLA, pp. 84-86.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 8===
  
POLANote 22
+
<pre>
 
+
| 1Facts and Propositions (cont.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
|
 
+
| There are a great many different kinds of facts, and we shall be
| 4.1Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (concl.)
+
| concerned in later lectures with a certain amount of classification
 +
| of factsI will just point out a few kinds of facts to begin with,
 +
| so that you may not imagine that facts are all very much alike.
 
|
 
|
| I have naturally a bias in favour of the theory of neutral monism
+
| There are 'particular facts', such as "This is white";  then there
| because it exemplifies Occam's razorI always wish to get on in
+
| are 'general facts', such as "All men are mortal"Of course, the
| philosophy with the smallest possible apparatus, partly because
+
| distinction between particular and general facts is one of the most
| it diminishes the risk of error, because it is not necessary to
+
| important.
| deny the entities you do not assert, and therefore you run less
 
| risk of error the fewer entities you assume.  The other reason --
 
| perhaps a somewhat frivolous one -- is that every diminution
 
| in the number of entities increases the amount of work for
 
| mathematical logic to do in building up things that look
 
| like the entities you used to assume.  Therefore the
 
| whole theory of neutral monism is pleasing to me,
 
| but I do find so far very great difficulty in
 
| believing it.
 
 
|
 
|
| You will find a discussion of the whole question in some
+
| There again it would be a very great mistake to suppose that
| articles I wrote in 'The Monist'*, especially in July 1914,
+
| you could describe the world completely by means of particular
| and in the two previous numbers also.  I should really want
+
| facts aloneSuppose that you had succeeded in chronicling every
| to rewrite them rather because I think some of the arguments
+
| single particular fact throughout the universe, and that there did
| I used against neutral monism are not validI place most
+
| not exist a single particular fact of any sort anywhere that you had
| reliance on the argument about "emphatic particulars", "this",
+
| not chronicled, you still would not have got a complete description of
| "I", all that class of words, that pick out certain particulars
+
| the universe unless you also added:  "These that I have chronicled are
| from the universe by their relation to oneself, and I think by
+
| all the particular facts there are"So you cannot hope to describe the
| the fact that they, or particulars related to them, are present
+
| world completely without having general facts as well as particular facts.
| to you at the moment of speaking"This", of course, is what
+
|
| I call an "emphatic particular". It is simply a proper name
+
| Another distinction, which is perhaps a little more difficult to make, is
| for the present object of attention, a proper name, meaning
+
| between positive facts and negative facts, such as "Socrates was alive" --
| nothing.  It is ambiguous, because, of course, the object
+
| a positive fact -- and "Socrates is not alive" -- you might say a negative
| of attention is always changing from moment to moment
+
| fact.  But the distinction is difficult to make precise.
| and from person to person.
 
 
|
 
|
| I think it is extremely difficult, if you get rid of consciousness
+
| Then there are facts concerning particular things or particular qualities
| altogether, to explain what you mean by such a word as "this", what
+
| or relations, and, apart from them, the completely general facts of the sort
| it is that makes the absence of impartiality.  You would say that in
+
| that you have in logic, where there is no mention of any constituent whatever
| a purely physical world there would be a complete impartiality.  All
+
| of the actual world, no mention of any particular thing or particular quality
| parts of time and all regions of space would seem equally emphatic.
+
| or particular relation, indeed strictly you may say no mention of anything.
| But what really happens is that we pick out certain facts, past and
 
| future and all that sort of thing;  they all radiate out from "this",
 
| and I have not myself seen how one can deal with the notion of "this"
 
| on the basis of neutral monism.  I do not lay that down dogmatically,
 
| only I do not see how it can be done.  I shall assume for the rest of
 
| this lecture that there are such facts as beliefs and wishes and so
 
| forth.  It would take me really the whole of my course to go into the
 
| question fully.  Thus we come back to more purely logical questions
 
| from this excursion into psychology, for which I apologize.
 
 
|
 
|
|*Reprinted as:  "On the Nature of Acquaintance", pp. 127-174
+
| That is one of the characteristics
| in Bertrand Russell, 'Logic and Knowledge: Essays 1901-1950',
+
| of logical propositions, that they
| edited by Robert Charles Marsh, Routledge, London, UK, 1992.
+
| mention nothing.
 
|
 
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 86-87.
+
| Such a proposition is:  "If one class is
 +
| part of another, a term which is a member
 +
| of the one is also a member of the other".
 
|
 
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
| All those words that come in the statement of a pure logical proposition
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
| are words really belonging to syntax.  They are words merely expressing
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
+
| form or connection, not mentioning any particular constituent of the
 
+
| proposition in which they occur.  This is, of course, a thing that
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| wants to be proved;  I am not laying it down as self-evident.
 +
|
 +
| Then there are facts about the properties of single things;  and facts
 +
| about the relations between two things, three things, and so on;  and
 +
| any number of different classifications of some of the facts in the
 +
| world, which are important for different purposes.
 +
|
 +
| Russell, POLA, pp. 42-43.
 +
|
 +
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 +
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 +
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
POLA. Note 23
+
===POLA. Note 9===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 
+
| 1. Facts and Propositions (cont.)
| 4.2. What is the Status of 'p' in "I believe 'p'"?
 
 
|
 
|
| You cannot say that you believe 'facts', because your beliefs are
+
| It is obvious that there is not a dualism of true and false facts;
| sometimes wrongYou can say that you 'perceive' facts, because
+
| there are only just factsIt would be a mistake, of course, to
| perceiving is not liable to error.  Wherever it is facts alone
+
| say that all facts are trueThat would be a mistake because
| that are involved, error is impossibleTherefore you cannot
+
| true and false are correlatives, and you would only say of
| say you believe facts.  You have to say that you believe
+
| a thing that it was true if it was the sort of thing that
| propositions.  The awkwardness of that is that obviously
+
| 'might' be falseA fact cannot be either true or false.
| propositions are nothingTherefore that cannot be the
 
| true account of the matter.
 
 
|
 
|
| When I say "Obviously propositions are nothing" it is not perhaps
+
| That brings us on to the question of statements or propositions or
| quite obviousTime was when I thought there were propositions,
+
| judgments, all those things that do have the quality of truth and
| but it does not seem to me very plausible to say that in addition
+
| falsehoodFor the purposes of logic, though not, I think, for the
| to facts there are also these curious shadowy things going about
+
| purposes of theory of knowledge, it is natural to concentrate upon
| such as "That today is Wednesday" when in fact it is Tuesday.
+
| the proposition as the thing which is going to be our typical vehicle
| I cannot believe they go about the real world.  It is more
+
| on the duality of truth and falsehood.
| than one can manage to believe, and I do think no person
 
| with a vivid sense of reality can imagine it.
 
 
|
 
|
| One of the difficulties of the study of logic is that it is an
+
| A proposition, one may say, is a sentence in the indicative,
| exceedingly abstract study dealing with the most abstract things
+
| a sentence asserting something, not questioning or commanding
| imaginable, and yet you cannot pursue it properly unless you have
+
| or wishingIt may also be a sentence of that sort preceded
| a vivid instinct as to what is realYou must have that instinct
+
| by the word "that"For example, "That Socrates is alive",
| rather well developed in logicI think otherwise you will get
+
| "That two and two are four", "That two and two are five",
| into fantastic things.
+
| anything of that sort will be a proposition.
 
|
 
|
| I think Meinong is rather deficient in just that instinct for reality.
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 43-44.
| Meinong maintains that there is such an object as the round square only
 
| it does not exist, and it does not even subsist, but nevertheless there
 
| is such an object, and when you say "The round square is a fiction",
 
| he takes it that there is an object "the round square" and there is
 
| a predicate "fiction".  No one with a sense of reality would so
 
| analyse that proposition.  He would see that the proposition
 
| wants analysing in such a way that you won't have to regard
 
| the round square as a constituent of that proposition.
 
|
 
| To suppose that in the actual world of nature there is a whole set of false
 
| propositions going about is to my mind monstrous.  I cannot bring myself
 
| to suppose it.  I cannot believe that they are there in the sense in
 
| which facts are there.  There seems to me something about the fact
 
| that "Today is Tuesday" on a different level of reality from the
 
| supposition "That today is Wednesday".  When I speak of the
 
| proposition "That today is Wednesday" I do not mean the
 
| occurrence in future of a state of mind in which you
 
| think it is Wednesday, but I am talking about the
 
| theory that there is something quite logical,
 
| something not involving mind in any way;  and
 
| such a thing as that I do not think you can
 
| take a false proposition to be.  I think a
 
| false proposition must, wherever it occurs,
 
| be subject to analysis, be taken to pieces,
 
| pulled to bits, and shown to be simply
 
| separate pieces of one fact in which
 
| the false proposition has been
 
| analysed away.  I say that
 
| simply on the ground of
 
| what I should call an
 
| instinct of reality.
 
|
 
| Russell, POLA, pp. 87-88.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 10===
  
POLANote 24
+
<pre>
 
+
| 1Facts and Propositions (cont.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
|
 
+
| A proposition is just a symbolIt is a complex symbol in the
| 4.2What is the Status of 'p' in "I believe 'p'"? (concl.)
+
| sense that it has parts which are also symbols:  a symbol may
 +
| be defined as complex when it has parts that are symbols.
 
|
 
|
| I ought to say a word or two about "reality".  It is a vague word,
+
| In a sentence containing several words, the several words are each symbols,
| and most of its uses are improper.  When I talk about reality as
+
| and the sentence comprising them is therefore a complex symbol in that sense.
| I am now doing, I can explain best what I mean by saying that
 
| I mean everything you would have to mention in a complete
 
| description of the world;  that will convey to you what
 
| I mean.
 
 
|
 
|
| Now I do 'not' think that false propositions would have to be
+
| There is a good deal of importance to philosophy in the theory of symbolism,
| mentioned in a complete description of the world. False beliefs
+
| a good deal more than one time I thought.  I think the importance is almost
| would, of course, false suppositions would, and desires for what
+
| entirely negative, i.e., the importance lies in the fact that unless you
| does not come to pass, but not false propositions all alone, and
+
| are fairly self-conscious about symbols, unless you are fairly aware of
| therefore when you, as one says, believe a false proposition, that
+
| the relation of the symbol to what it symbolizes, you will find yourself
| cannot be an accurate account of what occurs.
+
| attributing to the thing properties which only belong to the symbol.
 +
|
 +
| That, of course, is especially likely in very abstract studies such as
 +
| philosophical logic, because the subject-matter that you are supposed
 +
| to be thinking of is so exceedingly difficult and elusive that any
 +
| person who has ever tried to think about it knows you do not think
 +
| about it except perhaps once in six months for half a minute.
 +
| The rest of the time you think about the symbols, because
 +
| they are tangible, but the thing you are supposed to be
 +
| thinking about is fearfully difficult and one does not
 +
| often manage to think about it.
 
|
 
|
| It is not accurate to say "I believe the proposition 'p'" and
+
| The really good philosopher is the one who does
| regard the occurrence as a twofold relation between me and 'p'.
+
| once in six months think about it for a minute.
| The logical form is just the same whether you believe a false or
+
| Bad philosophers never do.  That is why the
| a true proposition.  Therefore in all cases you are not to regard
+
| theory of symbolism has a certain importance,
| belief as a two-term relation between yourself and a proposition,
+
| because otherwise you are so certain to
| and you have to analyse up the proposition and treat your belief
+
| mistake the properties of the symbolism
| differently.
+
| for the properties of the thing.
 
|
 
|
| Therefore the belief does not really contain a proposition as a constituent
+
| It has other interesting sides to it too.
| but only contains the constituents of the proposition as constituents. You
+
| There are different kinds of symbols,
| cannot say when you believe, "What is it that you believe?"  There is no
+
| different kinds of relation between
| answer to that question, i.e. there is not a single thing that you are
+
| symbol and what is symbolized, and
| believing.  "I believe that today is Tuesday."  You must not suppose
+
| very important fallacies arise
| that "That today is Tuesday" is a single object which I am believing.
+
| from not realizing this.
| That would be an error.  That is not the right way to analyse the
 
| occurrence, although that analysis is linguistically convenient,
 
| and one may keep it provided one knows that it is not the truth.
 
 
|
 
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 88-89.
+
| The sort of contradictions about which
 +
| I shall be speaking in connection with
 +
| types in a later lecture all arise from
 +
| mistakes in symbolism, from putting one
 +
| sort of symbol in the place where another
 +
| sort of symbol ought to be.
 
|
 
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
+
| Some of the notions that have been thought absolutely fundamental in philosophy
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
+
| have arisen, I believe, entirely through mistakes as to symbolism -- e.g. the
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
+
| notion of existence, or, if you like, reality.  Those two words stand for a
 
+
| great deal that has been discussed in philosophy.  There has been the theory
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| about every proposition being really a description of reality as a whole and
 
+
| so on, and altogther these notions of reality and existence have played a
POLA.  Note 25
+
| very prominent part in philosophy.  Now my own belief is that as they have
 +
| occurred in philosophy, they have been entirely the outcome of a muddle
 +
| about symbolism, and that when you have cleared up that muddle, you find
 +
| that practically everything that has been said about existence is sheer
 +
| and simple mistake, and that is all you can say about it.  I shall go
 +
| into that in a later lecture, but it is an example of the way in which
 +
| symbolism is important.
 +
|
 +
| Russell, POLA, pp. 44-45.
 +
|
 +
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 +
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 +
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 11===
  
| 4.3. How shall we describe the logical form of a belief?
+
<pre>
 +
| 1. Facts and Propositions (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| I want to try to get an account of the way that a belief is made up.
+
| Perhaps I ought to say a word or two about what I am
| That is not an easy question at all.  You cannot make what I should
+
| understanding by symbolism, because I think some people
| call a map-in-space of a beliefYou can make a map of an atomic fact
+
| think you only mean mathematical symbols when you talk
| but not of a belief, for the simple reason that space-relations always
+
| about symbolismI am using it in a sense to include
| are of the atomic sort or complications of the atomic sort.  I will try
+
| all language of every sort and kind, so that every
| to illustrate what I mean.
+
| word is a symbol, and every sentence, and so forth.
 
|
 
|
| The point is in connexion with there being two verbs in the judgment
+
| When I speak of a symbol I simply mean something that "means" something else,
| and with the fact that both verbs have got to occur as verbs, because
+
| and as to what I mean by "meaning" I am not prepared to tell you.  I will in
| if a thing is a verb it cannot occur otherwise than as a verb.
+
| the course of time enumerate a strictly infinite number of different things
 +
| that "meaning" may mean but I shall not consider that I have exhausted the
 +
| discussion by doing that.  I think that the notion of meaning is always
 +
| more or less psychological, and that it is not possible to get a pure
 +
| logical theory of meaning, nor therefore of symbolism.  I think that
 +
| it is of the very essence of the explanation of what you mean by a
 +
| symbol to take account of such things as knowing, of cognitive
 +
| relations, and probably also of association.  At any rate
 +
| I am pretty clear that the theory of symbolism and the
 +
| use of symbolism is not a thing that can be explained
 +
| in pure logic without taking account of the various
 +
| cognitive relations that you may have to things.
 
|
 
|
| Suppose I take "A believes that B loves C".
+
| Russell, POLA, p. 45.
| "Othello believes that Desdemona loves Cassio".
 
| There you have a false belief.  You have this odd
 
| state of affairs that the verb "loves" occurs in
 
| that proposition and seems to occur as relating
 
| Desdemona to Cassio whereas in fact it does not
 
| do so, but yet it does occur as a verb, it does
 
| occur in the sort of way that a verb should do.
 
|
 
| I mean that when A believes that B loves C, you have to have a verb
 
| in the place where "loves" occurs.  You cannot put a substantive in
 
| its place.  Therefore it is clear that the subordinate verb (i.e. the
 
| verb other than believing) is functioning as a verb, and seems to be
 
| relating two terms, but as a matter of fact does not when a judgment
 
| happens to be false.  That is what constitutes the puzzle about the
 
| nature of belief.
 
|
 
| You will notice that whenever one gets to really close quarters
 
| with the theory of error one has the puzzle of how to deal with
 
| error without assuming the existence of the non-existent.
 
|
 
| I mean that every theory of error sooner or later wrecks itself by assuming
 
| the existence of the non-existent.  As when I say "Desdemona loves Cassio",
 
| it seems as if you have a non-existent love between Desdemona and Cassio,
 
| but that is just as wrong as a non-existent unicorn.  So you have to
 
| explain the whole theory of judgment in some other way.
 
|
 
| I come now to this question of a map.  Suppose you try such a map as this:
 
|
 
|                                  Othello
 
|                                      |
 
|                                      |
 
|                                  believes
 
|                                      |
 
|                                      v
 
|                      Desdemona -----------> Cassio
 
|                                    loves
 
|
 
| This question of making a map is not so strange as you might suppose
 
| because it is part of the whole theory of symbolism.  It is important
 
| to realize where and how a symbolism of that sort would be wrong:
 
|
 
| Where and how it is wrong is that in the symbol you have this relationship
 
| relating these two things and in the fact it doesn't really relate them.
 
| You cannot get in space any occurrence which is logically of the same
 
| form as belief.
 
|
 
| When I say "logically of the same form" I mean that one can be obtained
 
| from the other by replacing the constituents of the one by the new terms.
 
|
 
| If I say "Desdemona loves Cassio" that is of
 
| the same form as "A is to the right of B".
 
|
 
| Those are of the same form, and I say that nothing
 
| that occurs in space is of the same form as belief.
 
|
 
| I have got on here to a new sort of thing, a new beast for our
 
| zoo, not another member of our former species but a new species.
 
|
 
| The discovery of this fact is due to Mr. Wittgenstein.
 
|
 
| Russell, POLA, pp. 89-91.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 12===
  
POLA.  Note 26
+
<pre>
 
+
| 1Facts and Propositions (cont.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 4.3How shall we describe the logical form of a belief? (cont.)
 
 
|
 
|
| There is a great deal that is odd about belief from a
+
| As to what one means by "meaning", I will give a few illustrations.
| logical point of view.  One of the things that are odd
+
| For instance, the word "Socrates", you will say, means a certain man;
| is that you can believe propositions of all sorts of forms.
+
| the word "mortal" means a certain quality;  and the sentence "Socrates
| I can believe that "This is white" and "Two and two are four".
+
| is mortal" means a certain fact. But these three sorts of meaning are
| They are quite different forms, yet one can believe both.  The
+
| entirely distinct, and you will get into the most hopeless contradictions
| actual occurrence can hardly be of exactly the same logical form
+
| if you think the word "meaning" has the same meaning in each of these three
| in those two cases because of the great difference in the forms
+
| casesIt is very important not to suppose that there is just one thing which
| of the propositions believedTherefore it would seem that
+
| is meant by "meaning", and that therefore there is just one sort of relation of
| belief cannot strictly be logically one in all different
+
| the symbol to what is symbolized.  A name would be a proper symbol to use for
| cases but must be distinguished according to the nature
+
| a person;  a sentence (or a proposition) is the proper symbol for a fact.
| of the proposition that you believe.
 
 
|
 
|
| If you have "I believe p" and I believe q" those two facts, if p and q are
+
| A belief or a statement has duality of truth and falsehood, which the
| not of the same logical form, are not of the same logical form in the sense
+
| fact does not have.  A belief or a statement always involves a proposition.
| I was speaking of a moment ago, that is in the sense that from "I believe p"
+
| You say that a man believes that so and so is the case.  A man believes that
| you can derive "I believe q" by replacing the constituents of one by the
+
| Socrates is dead.  What he believes is a proposition on the face of it, and
| constituents of the other.
+
| for formal purposes it is convenient to take the proposition as the essential
 +
| thing having the duality of truth and falsehood.
 
|
 
|
| That means that belief itself cannot be treated as being a proper sort of
+
| It is very important to realize such things, for instance,
| single termBelief will really have to have different logical forms
+
| as that 'propositions are not names for facts'.  It is quite
| according to the nature of what is believedSo that the apparent
+
| obvious as soon as it is pointed out to you, but as a matter
| sameness of believing in different cases is more or less illusory.
+
| of fact I never had realized it until it was pointed out to
|
+
| me by a former pupil of mine, WittgensteinIt is perfectly
| Russell, POLA, p. 91.
+
| evident as soon as you think of it, that a proposition is not
 +
| a name for a fact, from the mere circumstance that there are
 +
| 'two' propositions corresponding to each fact.  Suppose it
 +
| is a fact that Socrates is dead.  You have two propositions:
 +
| "Socrates is dead" and "Socrates is not dead".  And those two
 +
| propositions corresponding to the same fact;  there is one fact
 +
| in the world which makes one true and one false.  That is not
 +
| accidental, and illustrates how the relation of proposition
 +
| to fact is a totally different one from the relation of name
 +
| to the thing named.  For each fact there are two propositions,
 +
| one true and one false, and there is nothing in the nature of
 +
| the symbol to show us which is the true one and which is the
 +
| false oneIf there were, you could ascertain the truth
 +
| about the world by examining propositions without looking
 +
| around you.
 +
|
 +
| Russell, POLA, pp. 46-47.
 
|
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 13===
  
POLA.  Note 27
+
<pre>
 +
| 1.  Facts and Propositions (concl.)
 +
|
 +
| There are two different relations, as you see, that a proposition
 +
| may have to a fact:  the one the relation that you may call being
 +
| true to the fact, and the other being false to the fact.  Both are
 +
| equally essentially logical relations which may subsist between the
 +
| two, whereas in the case of a name, there is only one relation that
 +
| it can have to what it names.  A name can just name a particular,
 +
| or, if it does not, it is not a name at all, it is a noise.  It
 +
| cannot be a name without having just that one particular relation
 +
| of naming a certain thing, whereas a proposition does not cease
 +
| to be a proposition if it is false.  It has two ways, of being
 +
| true and being false, which together correspond to the property
 +
| of being a name.  Just as a word may be a name or be not a name
 +
| but just a meaningless noise, so a phrase which is apparently a
 +
| proposition may be either true or false, or may be meaningless,
 +
| but the true and false belong together as against the meaningless.
 +
| That shows, of course, that the formal logical characterictics of
 +
| propositions are quite different from those of names, and that the
 +
| relations they have to facts are quite different, and therefore
 +
| propositions are not names for facts.  You must not run away with
 +
| the idea that you can name facts in any other way;  you cannot.
 +
| You cannot name them at all.  You cannot properly name a fact.
 +
| The only thing you can do is to assert it, or deny it, or
 +
| desire it, or will it, or wish it, or question it, but all
 +
| those are things involving the whole proposition.  You can
 +
| never put the sort of thing that makes a proposition to be
 +
| true or false in the position of a logical subject.  You can
 +
| only have it there as something to be asserted or denied or
 +
| something of that sort, but not something to be named.
 +
|
 +
| Russell, POLA, p. 47.
 +
|
 +
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 +
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 +
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 14===
  
| 4.3. How shall we describe the logical form of a belief? (concl.)
+
<pre>
 +
| 4.  Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb:  Beliefs, Etc.
 
|
 
|
| There are really two main things that one wants to notice in this matter that
+
| You will remember that after speaking about atomic propositions
| I am treating of just now. The 'first' is the impossibility of treating the
+
| I pointed out two more complicated forms of propositions which
| proposition believed as an independent entity, entering as a unit into the
+
| arise immediately on proceeding further than that: the 'first',
| occurrence of the belief, and the 'other' is the impossibility of putting
+
| which I call molecular propositions, which I dealt with last time,
| the subordinate verb on a level with its terms as an object term in the
+
| involving such words as "or", "and", "if", and the 'second' involving
| belief.  That is a point in which I think that the theory of judgment
+
| two or more verbs such as believing, wishing, willing, and so forth.
| which I set forth once in print some years ago was a little unduly
 
| simple, because I did then treat the object verb as if one could
 
| put it as just an object like the terms, as if one could put
 
| "loves" on a level with Desdemona and Cassio as a term for
 
| the relation "believe".  That is why I have been laying
 
| such an emphasis on this lecture today on the fact
 
| that there are two verbs at least.
 
 
|
 
|
| I hope you will forgive the fact that so much of what I say today is tentative
+
| In the case of molecular propositions it was not clear that we had to deal with
| and consists of pointing out difficulties. The subject is not very easy and
+
| any new form of fact, but only with a new form of proposition, i.e. if you have
| it has not been much dealt with or discussed.  Practically nobody has until
+
| a disjunctive proposition such as "p or q" it does not seem very plausible to
| quite lately begun to consider the problem of the nature of belief with
+
| say that there is in the world a disjunctive fact corresponding to "p or q"
| anything like a proper logical apparatus and therefore one has very
+
| but merely that there is a fact corresponding to p and a fact corresponding
| little to help one in any discussion and so one has to be content
+
| to q, and the disjunctive proposition derives its truth or falsehood from
| on many points at present with pointing out difficulties rather
+
| those two separate facts.  Therefore in that case one was dealing only
| than laying down quite clear solutions.
+
| with a new form of proposition and not with new form of fact.  Today
 +
| we have to deal with a new form of fact.
 
|
 
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 91-92.
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 79-80.
 
|
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 15===
  
POLA.  Note 28
+
<pre>
 
+
| 4. Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb:  Beliefs, Etc. (cont.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 4.4. The Question of Nomenclature
 
 
|
 
|
| What sort of name shall we give to verbs like "believe"
+
| I think that one might describe philosophical logic, the philosophical portion
| and "wish" and so forth? I should be inclined to call
+
| of logic which is the portion that I am concerned with in these lectures since
| them "propositional verbs".  This is merely a suggested
+
| Christmas (1917), as an inventory, or if you like a more humble word, a "zoo"
| name for convenience, because they are verbs which have
+
| containing all the different forms that facts may have. I should prefer to
| the 'form' of relating an object to a proposition.  As
+
| say "forms of facts" rather than "forms of propositions".
| I have been explaining, that is not what they really do,
 
| but it is convenient to call them propositional verbs.
 
 
|
 
|
| Of course you might call them "attitudes", but I should not like that
+
| To apply that to the case of molecular propositions which I dealt with
| because it is a psychological term, and although all the instances in
+
| last time, if one were pursuing this analysis of the forms of facts,
| our experience are psychological, there is no reason to suppose that
+
| it would be 'belief in' a molecular proposition that one would deal
| all the verbs I am talking of are psychological.  There is never any
+
| with rather than the molecular proposition itself.  In accordance
| reason to suppose that sort of thing.
+
| with the sort of realistic bias that should put into all study
 +
| of metaphysics, I should always wish to be engaged in the
 +
| investigation of some actual fact or set of facts, and it
 +
| seems to me that that is so in logic just as much as it
 +
| is in zoology.  In logic you are concerned with the
 +
| forms of facts, with getting hold of the different
 +
| sorts of facts, different 'logical' sorts of facts,
 +
| that there are in the world.
 
|
 
|
| One should always remember Spinoza's infinite attributes of Deity.
+
| Russell, POLA, p. 80.
| It is quite likely that there are in the world the analogues of his
 
| infinite attributes.  We have no acquaintance with them, but there is
 
| no reason to suppose that the mental and the physical exhaust the whole
 
| universe, so one can never say that all the instances of any logical sort
 
| of thing are of such and such a nature which is not a logical nature:  you
 
| do not know enough about the world for that.  Therefore I should not suggest
 
| that all the verbs that have the form exemplified by believing and willing are
 
| psychological.  I can only say all I know are.
 
|
 
| Russell, POLA, p. 92.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 16===
  
POLANote 29
+
<pre>
 
+
| 4Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb:  Beliefs, Etc. (cont.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
|
 
+
| Now I want to point out today that the facts that occur when one
| 4.4The Question of Nomenclature (concl.)
+
| believes or wishes or wills have a different logical form from
 +
| the atomic facts containing a single verb which I dealt with
 +
| in my second lecture(There are, of course, a good many
 +
| forms that facts that may have, a strictly infinite number,
 +
| and I do not wish you to suppose that I pretend to deal
 +
| with all of them.)
 
|
 
|
| I notice that in my syllabus I said I was going to deal with truth and
+
| Suppose you take any actual occurrence of a belief.  I want you to
| falsehood today, but there is not much to say about them specifically
+
| understand that I am not talking about beliefs in the sort of way
| as they are coming in all the time.  The thing one first thinks of as
+
| in which judgment is spoken of in theory of knowledge, in which
| true or false is a proposition, and a proposition is nothing. But a
+
| you would say there is 'the' judgment that two and two are four.
| belief is true or false in the same way as a proposition is, so that
+
| I am talking of the actual occurrence of a belief in a particular
| you do have facts in the world that are true or false.
+
| person's mind at a particular moment, and discussing what sort of
 +
| fact that is.
 
|
 
|
| I said a while back that there was no distinction of true and false among
+
| If I say "What day of the week is this?" and you say "Tuesday",
| facts, but as regards that special class of facts that we call "beliefs",
+
| there occurs in your mind at that moment the belief that this is
| there is, in that sense that a belief which occurs may be true or false,
+
| Tuesday.  The thing I want to deal with today is the question:
| though it is equally a fact in either case.
 
 
|
 
|
| One 'might' call wishes false in the same sense when one wishes
+
| What is the form of the fact which occurs when a person has a belief?
| something that does not happen.  The truth or falsehood depends
 
| upon the proposition that enters in.
 
 
|
 
|
| I am inclined to think that perception, as opposed to belief, does go
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 80-81.
| straight to the fact and not through the proposition.  When you perceive
 
| the fact you do not, of course, have error coming in, because the moment it
 
| is a fact that is your object error is excluded.  I think that verification
 
| in the last resort would always reduce itself to the perception of facts.
 
| Therefore the logical form of perception will be different from the logical
 
| form of believing, just because of that circumstance that it is a 'fact' that
 
| comes in.  That raises also a number of logical difficulties which I do not
 
| propose to go into, but I think you can see for yourself that perceiving
 
| would also involve two verbs just as believing does.  I am inclined to
 
| think that volition differs from desire logically, in a way strictly
 
| analogous to that in which perception differs from belief.  But it
 
| would take us too far from logic to discuss this view.
 
|
 
| Russell, POLA, p. 93.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
  
==RTOK. Russell's Theory Of Knowledge==
+
===POLA. Note 17===
  
 
<pre>
 
<pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| 4Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb: Beliefs, Etc. (cont.)
 
 
RTOK.  Note 1
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
To anchor this thread I will copy out a focal passage from Russell's
 
1913 manuscript on the 'Theory of Knowledge', that was not published
 
in full until 1984If there is time, I will then go back and trace
 
more of the development that sets out the background of this excerpt.
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
RTOK. Note 2
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| We come now to the last problem which has to be treated
 
| in this chapter, namely:  What is the logical structure of
 
| the fact which consists in a given subject understanding a
 
| given proposition?  The structure of an understanding varies
 
| according to the proposition understood. At present, we are
 
| only concerned with the understanding of atomic propositions;
 
| the understanding of molecular propositions will be dealt with
 
| in Part 3.
 
 
|
 
|
| Let us again take the proposition "A and B are similar".
+
| Of course you see that the sort of obvious first notion that one would
 +
| naturally arrive at would be that a belief is a relation to the proposition.
 +
| "I believe the proposition p."  "I believe that today is Tuesday." "I believe
 +
| that two and two are four." Something like that.  It seems on the face of it
 +
| as if you had there a relation of the believing subject to a proposition.
 
|
 
|
| It is plain, to begin with, that the 'complex'
+
| That view won't do for various reasons which I shall go into.  But you
| "A and B being similar", even if it exists,
+
| have, therefore, got to have a theory of belief which is not exactly that.
| does not enter in, for if it did, we could
+
| Take any sort of proposition, say "I believe Socrates is mortal".  Suppose
| not understand false propositions, because
+
| that that belief does actually occur.  The statement that it occurs is a
| in their case there is no such complex.
+
| statement of fact.  You have there two verbs.  You may have more than two
 +
| verbs, you may have any number greater than one.  I may believe that Jones
 +
| is of the opinion that Socrates is mortal.  There you have more than two
 +
| verbs.  You may have any number, but you cannot have less than two.
 
|
 
|
| It is plain, also, from what has been said, that we cannot understand
+
| You will perceive that it is not only the proposition that has the two verbs,
| the proposition unless we are acquainted with A and B and similarity
+
| but also the fact, which is expressed by the proposition, has two constituents
| and the form "something and something have some relation"Apart
+
| corresponding to verbsI shall call those constituents verbs for the sake
| from these four objects, there does not appear, so far as we can
+
| of shortness, as it is very difficult to find any word to describe all those
| see, to be any object with which we need be acquainted in order
+
| objects which one denotes by verbs.  Of course, that is strictly using the
| to understand the proposition.
+
| word "verb" in two different senses, but I do not think it can lead to any
 +
| confusion if you understand that it is being so used.
 
|
 
|
| It seems to follow that these four objects, and these only, must be
+
| This fact (the belief) is one fact.  It is not like what you had in molecular
| united with the subject in one complex when the subject understands
+
| propositions where you had (say) "p or q".  It is just one single fact that
| the proposition.  It cannot be any complex composed of them that
+
| you have a belief.  That is obvious from the fact that you can believe a
| enters in, since they need not form any complex, and if they do,
+
| falsehoodIt is obvious from the fact of false belief that you cannot
| we need not be acquainted with itBut they themselves must
+
| cut off one part;  you cannot have:
| all enter in, since if they did not, it would be at least
 
| theoretically possible to understand the proposition
 
| without being acquainted with them.
 
 
|
 
|
| In this argument, I appeal to the principle that,
+
| I believe / Socrates is mortal.
| when we understand, those objects with which we
 
| must be acquainted when we understand, and those
 
| only, are object-constituents (i.e. constituents
 
| other than understanding itself and the subject)
 
| of the understanding-complex.
 
 
|
 
|
| Russell, TOK, pp. 116-117.
+
| There are certain questions that arise about such facts,
 +
| and the first that arises is, Are they undeniable facts
 +
| or can you reduce them in some way to relations of other
 +
| facts?  Is it really necessary to suppose that there
 +
| are irreducible facts, of which that sort of thing
 +
| is a verbal expression?
 
|
 
|
| Bertrand Russell, 'Theory of Knowledge:  The 1913 Manuscript',
+
| On that question until fairly lately I should certainly not have
| edited by Elizabeth Ramsden Eames in collaboration with Kenneth Blackwell,
+
| supposed that any doubt could arise.  It had not really seemed to
| Routledge, London, UK, 1992.  First published, George Allen & Unwin, 1984.
+
| me until fairly lately that that was a debatable point.  I still
 
+
| believe that there are facts of that form, but I see that it is
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| a substantial question that needs to be discussed.
 +
|
 +
| Russell, POLA, pp. 81-82.
 +
|
 +
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 +
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
 +
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
 +
</pre>
  
RTOK. Note 3
+
===POLA. Note 18===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
 
+
| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts?
| It follows that, when a subject S understands "A and B are similar",
 
| "understanding" is the relating relation, and the terms are S and
 
| A and B and similarity and R(x, y), where R(x, y) stands for the
 
| form "something and something have some relation".  Thus a first
 
| symbol for the complex will be:
 
 
|
 
|
|     U{S, A, B, similarity, R(x, y)}.
+
| "Etc." covers understanding a proposition;  it covers desiring, willing,
 +
| any other attitude of that sort that you may think of that involves
 +
| a proposition.  It seems natural to say one believes a proposition
 +
| and unnatural to say one desires a proposition, but as a matter
 +
| of fact that is only a prejudice.  What you believe and what
 +
| you desire are of exactly the same nature.  You may desire
 +
| to get some sugar tomorrow and of course you may possibly
 +
| believe that you will.  I am not sure that the logical
 +
| form is the same in the case of will.  I am inclined
 +
| to think that the case of will is more analogous to
 +
| that of perception, in going direct to facts, and
 +
| excluding the possibility of falsehood.  In any
 +
| case desire and belief are of exactly the same
 +
| form logically.
 
|
 
|
| This symbol, however, by no means exhausts the analysis of
+
| Russell, POLA, p. 82.
| the form of the understanding-complex. There are many kinds
 
| of five-term complexes, and we have to decide what the kind is.
 
 
|
 
|
| It is obvious, in the first place, that S is related to the
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| four other terms in a way different from that in which any
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| of the four other terms are related to each other.
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
|
 
| (It is to be observed that we can derive from our five-term complex a complex
 
| having any smaller number of terms by replacing any one or more of the terms
 
| by "something".  If S is replaced by "something", the resulting complex is
 
| of a different form from that which results from replacing any other term
 
| by "something".  This explains what is meant by saying that S enters in
 
| a different way from the other constituents.)
 
|
 
| It is obvious, in the second place, that R(x, y) enters in a different
 
| way from the other three objects, and that "similarity" has a different
 
| relation to R(x, y) from that which A and B have, while A and B have the
 
| same relation to R(x, y). Also, because we are dealing with a proposition
 
| asserting a symmetrical relation between A and B, A and B have each the same
 
| relation to "similarity", whereas, if we had been dealing with an asymmetrical
 
| relation, they would have had different relations to it.  Thus we are led to the
 
| following map of our five-term complex:
 
|
 
|    A o
 
|        \  <
 
|        ^\      *
 
|          \          *
 
|        % \              *
 
|            \                  *
 
|          %  \    R(x, y)            *
 
|              o------o------>            o---------<---------o Similarity
 
|          % /      ^              *                      ^
 
|           /        |          *                          /
 
|          /%        |    *                            /
 
|          /          |*                                /
 
|        /  %  *  |                              /
 
|        /  <        |                            /
 
|    B o      %      |                          /
 
|        ^            |                        /
 
|        \    %    |                      /
 
|          \          |                    /
 
|          \    %    |                  /
 
|            \        |                /
 
|            \  %  |              /
 
|              \      |            /
 
|              \  %  |          /
 
|                \    |        /
 
|                \ % |      /
 
|                  \  |    /
 
|                  \%|  /
 
|                    \| /
 
|                    o
 
|                    S
 
|
 
| In this figure, one relation goes from S to the four objects;
 
| one relation goes from R(x, y) to similarity, and another to
 
| A and B, while one relation goes from similarity to A and B.
 
|
 
| This figure, I hope, will help to make clearer the map of
 
| our five-term complex.  But to explain in detail the exact
 
| abstract meaning of the various items in the figure would
 
| demand a lengthy formal logical discussion.  Meanwhile the
 
| above attempt must suffice, for the present, as an analysis
 
| of what is meant by "understanding a proposition".
 
|
 
| Russell, TOK, pp. 117-118.
 
|
 
| Bertrand Russell, 'Theory of Knowledge:  The 1913 Manuscript',
 
| edited by Elizabeth Ramsden Eames in collaboration with Kenneth Blackwell,
 
| Routledge, London, UK, 1992.  First published, George Allen & Unwin, 1984.
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
  
==RTOP. Russell's Treatise On Propositions==
+
===POLA. Note 19===
  
 
<pre>
 
<pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (cont.)
 
 
RTOP. Note 1
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
September creeps forward on little cheetah's feet,
 
and I cannot say when I will be able to return to
 
these issues in any detail, so for the time being
 
I'll just record what I regard as one significant
 
passage from Russell's paper "On Propositions".
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
RTOPNote 2
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| On Propositions:  What They Are and How They Mean (1919)
 
 
|
 
|
| Let us illustrate the content of a belief
+
| Pragmatists and some of the American realists, the school whom one calls
| by an exampleSuppose I am believing,
+
| neutral monists, deny altogether that there is such a phenomenon as belief
| but not in words, that "it will rain".
+
| in the sense I am dealing withThey do not deny it in words, they do not
| What is happening?
+
| use the same sort of language that I am using, and that makes it difficult
 +
| to compare their views with the views I am speaking about.  One has really
 +
| to translate what they say into language more or less analogous to ours
 +
| before one can make out where the points of contact or difference are.
 +
|
 +
| If you take the works of James in his 'Essays in Radical Empiricism'
 +
| or Dewey in his 'Essays in Experimental Logic' you will find that they
 +
| are denying altogether that there is such a phenomenon as belief in the
 +
| sense I am talking of.  They use the word "believe" but they mean something
 +
| different.  You come to the view called "behaviourism", according to which
 +
| you mean, if you say a person believes a thing, that he behaves in a certain
 +
| fashion;  and that hangs together with James's pragmatism.  James and Dewey
 +
| would say:  when I believe a proposition, that 'means' that I act in a certain
 +
| fashion, that my behaviour has certain characteristics, and my belief is a true
 +
| one if the behaviour leads to the desired result and is a false one if it does
 +
| not. That, if it is true, makes their pragmatism a perfectly rational account
 +
| of truth and falsehood, if you do accept their view that belief as an isolated
 +
| phenomenon does not occur.
 
|
 
|
| (1) Images, say, of the visual appearance of rain,
+
| That is therefore the first thing one has to consider.
|     the feeling of wetness, the patter of drops,
+
| It would take me too far from logic to consider that
|     interrelated, roughly, as the sensations
+
| subject as it deserves to be considered, because it
|    would be if it were raining, i.e., there
+
| is a subject belonging to psychology, and it is only
|     is a complex 'fact composed of images',
+
| relevant to logic in this one way that it raises a
|     having a structure analogous to that
+
| doubt whether there are any facts having the logical
|     of the objective fact which would
+
| form that I am speaking of.
|     make the belief true.
 
 
|
 
|
| (2) There is 'expectation', i.e.,
+
| In the question of this logical form that involves two or more verbs you
|     that form of belief which
+
| have a curious interlacing of logic with empirical studies, and of course
|     refers to the future;
+
| that may occur elsewhere, in this way, that an empirical study gives you
|     we shall examine
+
| an example of a thing having a certain logical form, and you cannot really
|     this shortly.
+
| be sure that there are things having a given logical form except by finding
 +
| an example, and the finding of an example is itself empirical. Therefore in
 +
| that way empirical facts are relevant to logic at certain points. I think
 +
| theoretically one might know that there were those forms without knowing
 +
| any instance of them, but practically, situated as we are, that does not
 +
| seem to occur.  Practically, unless you can find an example of the form
 +
| you won't know that there is that form.  If I cannot find an example
 +
| containing two or more verbs, you will not have reason to believe
 +
| in the theory that such a form occurs.
 
|
 
|
| (3) There is a relation between (1) and (2),
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 82-83.
|    making us say that (1) is "what is expected".
 
|    This relation also demands investigation.
 
 
|
 
|
| The most important thing about a proposition is that, whether
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| it consists of images or of words, it is, whenever it occurs, an
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| actual fact, having a certain analogy -- to be further investigated --
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
| with the fact which makes it true or false.  A word-proposition, apart
+
</pre>
| from niceties, "means" the corresponding image-proposition, and an
+
 
| image-proposition has an objective reference dependent upon the
+
===POLA. Note 20===
| meanings of its constituent images.
+
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (cont.)
 +
|
 +
| When you read the words of people like James and Dewey on the subject of belief,
 +
| one thing that strikes you at once is that the sort of thing they are thinking of
 +
| as the object of belief is quite different from the sort of thing I am thinking of.
 +
| They think of it always as a thing.  They think you believe in God or Homer:  you
 +
| believe in an object.  That is the picture they have in their minds.  It is common
 +
| enough, in common parlance, to talk that way, and they would say, the first crude
 +
| approximation that they would suggest would be that you believe truly when there
 +
| is such an object and that you believe falsely when there is not.  I do not mean
 +
| they would say that exactly, but that would be the crude view from which they
 +
| would start.  They do not seem to have grasped the fact that the objective side
 +
| in belief is better expressed by a proposition than by a single word, and that,
 +
| I think, has a great deal to do with their whole outlook on the matter of what
 +
| belief consists of.  The object of belief in their view is generally, not
 +
| relations between things, or things having qualities, or what not, but
 +
| just single things which may or may not exist.  That view seems to me
 +
| radically and absolutely mistaken.
 +
|
 +
| In the 'first' place there are a great many judgments you cannot possibly fit into
 +
| that scheme, and in the 'second' place it cannot possibly give any explanation to
 +
| false beliefs, because when you believe that a thing exists and it does not exist,
 +
| the thing is not there, it is nothing, and it cannot be the right analysis of a
 +
| false belief to regard it as a relation to what is really nothing.
 +
|
 +
| This an objection to supposing that belief consists simply in relation
 +
| to the objectIt is obvious that if you say "I believe in Homer" and
 +
| there was no such person as Homer, your belief cannot be a relation to
 +
| Homer, since there is no "Homer".
 +
|
 +
| Every fact that occurs in the world must be composed entirely of constituents
 +
| that there are, and not of constituents that there are not.  Therefore when
 +
| you say "I believe in Homer" it cannot be the right analysis of the thing
 +
| to put it like that.  What the right analysis is I shall come on to in
 +
| the theory of descriptions.
 
|
 
|
| Russell, OP, p. 309.
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 83-84.
 
|
 
|
| Bertrand Russell,
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
|"On Propositions:  What They Are And How They Mean" (1919),
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| pp. 285-320 in 'Logic and Knowledge:  Essays, 1901-1950',
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
| edited by Robert Charles Marsh, Routledge, London, UK, 1956.
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
  
==SABI. Synthetic/Analytic = Boundary/Interior?==
+
===POLA. Note 21===
  
 
<pre>
 
<pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| 4.1Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (cont.)
 
 
SABINote 1
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
Let's go back to Quine's topological metaphor:
 
the "web of belief", "fabric of knowledge",
 
or "epistemological field theory" picture,
 
and see if we can extract something that
 
might be useful in our present task,
 
settling on a robust architecture
 
for generic knowledge bases.
 
 
 
| 6.  Empiricism without the Dogmas
 
 
|
 
|
| The totality of our so-called knowledge or beliefs, from the most
+
| I come back now to the theory of behaviourism which I spoke of a moment ago.
| casual matters of geography and history to the profoundest laws of
+
| Suppose, e.g. that you are said to believe that there is a train at 10.25.
| atomic physics or even of pure mathematics and logic, is a man-made
+
| This means, we are told, that you start for the station at a certain time.
| fabric which impinges on experience only along the edges. Or, to
+
| When you reach the station you see it is 10.24 and you run.  That behaviour
| change the figure, total science is like a field of force whose
+
| constitutes your belief that there is a train at that timeIf you catch
| boundary conditions are experience.  A conflict with experience at
+
| your train by running, your belief was trueIf the train went at 10.23,
| the periphery occasions readjustments in the interior of the field.
+
| you miss it, and your belief was false.  That is the sort of thing that
| Truth values have to be redistributed over some of our statements.
+
| they would say constitutes beliefThere is not a single state of mind
| Re-evaluation of some statements entails re-evaluation of others,
+
| which consists in contemplating this eternal verity, that the train
| because of their logical interconnections -- the logical laws
+
| starts at 10.25.
| being in turn simply certain further statements of the system,
 
| certain further elements of the fieldHaving re-evaluated one
 
| statement we must re-evaluate some others, which may be statements
 
| logically connected with the first or may be the statements of logical
 
| connections themselvesBut the total field is so underdetermined by
 
| its boundary conditions, experience, that there is much latitude of
 
| choice as to what statements to re-evaluate in the light of any
 
| single contrary experienceNo particular experiences are
 
| linked with any particular statements in the interior of
 
| the field, except indirectly through considerations
 
| of equilibrium affecting the field as a whole.
 
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 42-43.
+
| They would apply that even to the most abstract things.
 +
| I do not myself feel that that view of things is tenable.
 +
| It is a difficult one to refute because it goes very deep
 +
| and one has the feeling that perhaps, if one thought it
 +
| out long enough and became sufficiently aware of all
 +
| its implications, one might find after all that it
 +
| was a feasible view;  but yet I do not 'feel' it
 +
| feasible.
 
|
 
|
| W.V. Quine,
+
| It hangs together, of course, with the theory of neutral monism, with
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
| the theory that the material constituting the mental is the same as the
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
+
| material constituting the physical, just like the Post Office directory
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
+
| which gives you people arranged geographically and alphabetically.  This
 +
| whole theory hangs together with that.  I do not mean necessarily that
 +
| all the people that profess the one profess the other, but that the
 +
| two do essentially belong together.
 +
|
 +
| If you are going to take that view, you have to explain away belief
 +
| and desire, because things of that sort do seem to be mental phenomena.
 +
| They do seem rather far removed from the sort of thing that happens in
 +
| the physical world.  Therefore people will set to work to explain away
 +
| such things as belief, and reduce them to bodily behaviour;  and your
 +
| belief in a certain proposition will consist in the behaviour of your
 +
| body.  In the crudest terms that is what that view amounts to. It
 +
| does enable you to get on very well without mind.
 +
|
 +
| Truth and falsehood in that case consist in the relation of your
 +
| bodily behaviour to a certain fact, the sort of distant fact which
 +
| is the purpose of your behaviour, as it were, and when your behaviour
 +
| is satisfactory in regard to that fact your belief is true, and when
 +
| your behaviour is unsatisfactory in regard to that fact your belief
 +
| is false.
 +
|
 +
| The logical essence, in that view, will be a relation between two facts
 +
| having the same sort of form as a causal relation, i.e. on the one hand
 +
| there will be your bodily behaviour which is one fact, and on the other
 +
| hand the fact that the train starts at such and such a time, which is
 +
| another fact, and out of a relation of those two the whole phenomenon
 +
| is constituted.
 +
|
 +
| The thing you will get will be logically of the same form as you have
 +
| in cause, where you have "This fact causes that fact".  It is quite
 +
| a different logical form from the facts containing two verbs that
 +
| I am talking of today.
 +
|
 +
| Russell, POLA, pp. 84-86.
 
|
 
|
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04935.html
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
 
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
There are some things that I am not trying to do.
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
One of them is reducing natural language to math,
+
</pre>
and another is reducing math to natural language.
 
So I tend to regard the usual sorts of examples,
 
Bachelors and Hesperus and Phosphorus and so on,
 
as being useful for stock illustrations only so
 
long as nobody imagines that all we do with our
 
natural languages can really be ruled that way.
 
The semantics of natural language is more like
 
the semantics of music, and it would take many
 
octaves of 8-track tapes just to keep track of
 
all the meaning that is being layered into it.
 
  
So let me resort to a mathematical example, where Frege really lived,
+
===POLA. Note 22===
and where all of this formal semantics stuff really has Frege's ghost
 
of a chance of actually making sense someday, if hardly come what may.
 
  
There is a "clear" distinction between equations like 2 = 0 and x = x,
+
<pre>
that are called "noncontingent equations", because they have constant
+
| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (concl.)
truth values for all values of whatever variables they may have, and
+
|
equations like x^2 + 1 = 0, that are called "contingent equations",
+
| I have naturally a bias in favour of the theory of neutral monism
because they are have different truth values for different values
+
| because it exemplifies Occam's razor. I always wish to get on in
of their variables.
+
| philosophy with the smallest possible apparatus, partly because
 
+
| it diminishes the risk of error, because it is not necessary to
But wait a minute, you or somebody says, the equation x^2 + 1 = 0 is false
+
| deny the entities you do not assert, and therefore you run less
for all values of its variables, and of course I remind you that it does
+
| risk of error the fewer entities you assumeThe other reason --
have solutions in the complex domain CSo models of numbers really
+
| perhaps a somewhat frivolous one -- is that every diminution
are as fleeting as models of cars.  And this explains the annoying
+
| in the number of entities increases the amount of work for
habit that mathematicians have of constantly indexing formulas
+
| mathematical logic to do in building up things that look
with the names of the mathematical domains over which they
+
| like the entities you used to assume.  Therefore the
are intended to be interpreted as having their values.
+
| whole theory of neutral monism is pleasing to me,
 
+
| but I do find so far very great difficulty in
And then someone else reminds us that 2 = 0 is true mod 2.
+
| believing it.
 
 
Those are the types of examples that I would like to keep in mind when we examime
 
the relativity of the analytic/synthetic distinction, or, to put a finer point on
 
this slippery slope, the contingency of the noncontingent/contingent distinction.
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
</pre>
 
 
 
 
 
==TDOE. Two Dogmas Of Empiricism==
 
 
 
<pre>
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
TDOE.  Note 1
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| Two Dogmas of Empiricism
 
 
|
 
|
| Modern empiricism has been conditioned in large part by two dogmas.
+
| You will find a discussion of the whole question in some
| One is a belief in some fundamental cleavage between truths which
+
| articles I wrote in 'The Monist'*, especially in July 1914,
| are 'analytic', or grounded in meanings independently of matters
+
| and in the two previous numbers also. I should really want
| of fact, and truths which are 'synthetic', or grounded in fact.
+
| to rewrite them rather because I think some of the arguments
| The other dogma is 'reductionism': the belief that each
+
| I used against neutral monism are not valid.  I place most
| meaningful statement is equivalent to some logical
+
| reliance on the argument about "emphatic particulars", "this",
| construct upon terms which refer to immediate
+
| "I", all that class of words, that pick out certain particulars
| experienceBoth dogmas, I shall argue, are
+
| from the universe by their relation to oneself, and I think by
| ill-foundedOne effect of abandoning them
+
| the fact that they, or particulars related to them, are present
| is, as we shall see, a blurring of the
+
| to you at the moment of speaking. "This", of course, is what
| supposed boundary between speculative
+
| I call an "emphatic particular".  It is simply a proper name
| metaphysics and natural science.
+
| for the present object of attention, a proper name, meaning
| Another effect is a shift
+
| nothing. It is ambiguous, because, of course, the object
| toward pragmatism.
+
| of attention is always changing from moment to moment
 +
| and from person to person.
 +
|
 +
| I think it is extremely difficult, if you get rid of consciousness
 +
| altogether, to explain what you mean by such a word as "this", what
 +
| it is that makes the absence of impartiality.  You would say that in
 +
| a purely physical world there would be a complete impartialityAll
 +
| parts of time and all regions of space would seem equally emphatic.
 +
| But what really happens is that we pick out certain facts, past and
 +
| future and all that sort of thing;  they all radiate out from "this",
 +
| and I have not myself seen how one can deal with the notion of "this"
 +
| on the basis of neutral monism.  I do not lay that down dogmatically,
 +
| only I do not see how it can be done.  I shall assume for the rest of
 +
| this lecture that there are such facts as beliefs and wishes and so
 +
| forthIt would take me really the whole of my course to go into the
 +
| question fully.  Thus we come back to more purely logical questions
 +
| from this excursion into psychology, for which I apologize.
 +
|
 +
|*Reprinted as:  "On the Nature of Acquaintance", pp. 127-174
 +
| in Bertrand Russell, 'Logic and Knowledge: Essays 1901-1950',
 +
| edited by Robert Charles Marsh, Routledge, London, UK, 1992.
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 20.
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 86-87.
 
|
 
|
| W.V. Quine,
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985. First published 1918.
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
+
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 23===
  
TDOE. Note 2
+
<pre>
 
+
| 4.2.  What is the Status of 'p' in "I believe 'p'"?
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 1Background for Analyticity
 
 
|
 
|
| Kant's cleavage between analytic and synthetic truths
+
| You cannot say that you believe 'facts', because your beliefs are
| was foreshadowed in Hume's distinction between relations
+
| sometimes wrongYou can say that you 'perceive' facts, because
| of ideas and matters of fact, and in Leibniz's distinction
+
| perceiving is not liable to error. Wherever it is facts alone
| between truths of reason and truths of factLeibniz spoke
+
| that are involved, error is impossibleTherefore you cannot
| of the truths of reason as true in all possible worlds.
+
| say you believe facts. You have to say that you believe
| Picturesqueness aside, this is to say that the truths
+
| propositions.  The awkwardness of that is that obviously
| of reason are those which could not possibly be false.
+
| propositions are nothingTherefore that cannot be the
| In the same vein we hear analytic statements defined as
+
| true account of the matter.
| statements whose denials are self-contradictoryBut this
 
| definition has small explanatory value; for the notion of
 
| self-contradictoriness, in the quite broad sense needed for
 
| this definition of analyticity, stands in exactly the same
 
| need of clarification as does the notion of analyticity
 
| itselfThe two notions are the two sides of a single
 
| dubious coin.
 
 
|
 
|
| Kant conceived of an analytic statement as one that attributes to its
+
| When I say "Obviously propositions are nothing" it is not perhaps
| subject no more than is already conceptually contained in the subject.
+
| quite obvious. Time was when I thought there were propositions,
| This formulation has two shortcomings:  it limits itself to statements of
+
| but it does not seem to me very plausible to say that in addition
| subject-predicate form, and it appeals to a notion of containment which is
+
| to facts there are also these curious shadowy things going about
| left at a metaphorical levelBut Kant's intent, evident more from the use
+
| such as "That today is Wednesday" when in fact it is Tuesday.
| he makes of the notion of analyticity than from his definition of it, can be
+
| I cannot believe they go about the real worldIt is more
| restated thus:  a statement is analytic when it is true by virtue of meanings
+
| than one can manage to believe, and I do think no person
| and independently of fact.  Pursuing this line, let us examine the concept of
+
| with a vivid sense of reality can imagine it.
| 'meaning' which is presupposed.
 
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 20-21.
+
| One of the difficulties of the study of logic is that it is an
 +
| exceedingly abstract study dealing with the most abstract things
 +
| imaginable, and yet you cannot pursue it properly unless you have
 +
| a vivid instinct as to what is real.  You must have that instinct
 +
| rather well developed in logic. I think otherwise you will get
 +
| into fantastic things.
 
|
 
|
| W.V. Quine,
+
| I think Meinong is rather deficient in just that instinct for reality.
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
| Meinong maintains that there is such an object as the round square only
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
+
| it does not exist, and it does not even subsist, but nevertheless there
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
+
| is such an object, and when you say "The round square is a fiction",
 
+
| he takes it that there is an object "the round square" and there is
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| a predicate "fiction".  No one with a sense of reality would so
 
+
| analyse that propositionHe would see that the proposition
TDOENote 3
+
| wants analysing in such a way that you won't have to regard
 
+
| the round square as a constituent of that proposition.
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 1.  Background for Analyticity (cont.)
 
 
|
 
|
| Meaning, let us remember, is not to be identified with naming.
+
| To suppose that in the actual world of nature there is a whole set of false
| Frege's example of "Evening Star" and "Morning Star", and Russell's
+
| propositions going about is to my mind monstrous.  I cannot bring myself
| of "Scott" and "the author of 'Waverley'", illustrate that terms can
+
| to suppose it.  I cannot believe that they are there in the sense in
| name the same thing but differ in meaning. The distinction between
+
| which facts are there. There seems to me something about the fact
| meaning and naming is no less important at the level of abstract
+
| that "Today is Tuesday" on a different level of reality from the
| termsThe terms "9" and "the number of the planets" name one
+
| supposition "That today is Wednesday".  When I speak of the
| and the same abstract entity but presumably must be regarded as
+
| proposition "That today is Wednesday" I do not mean the
| unlike in meaning; for astronomical observation was needed, and
+
| occurrence in future of a state of mind in which you
| not mere reflection on meanings, to determine the sameness of the
+
| think it is Wednesday, but I am talking about the
| entity in question.
+
| theory that there is something quite logical,
 +
| something not involving mind in any way; and
 +
| such a thing as that I do not think you can
 +
| take a false proposition to beI think a
 +
| false proposition must, wherever it occurs,
 +
| be subject to analysis, be taken to pieces,
 +
| pulled to bits, and shown to be simply
 +
| separate pieces of one fact in which
 +
| the false proposition has been
 +
| analysed away. I say that
 +
| simply on the ground of
 +
| what I should call an
 +
| instinct of reality.
 
|
 
|
| The above examples consists of singular terms, concrete and
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 87-88.
| abstract.  With general terms, or predicates, the situation
 
| is somewhat different but parallel.  Whereas a singular term
 
| purports to name an entity, abstract or concrete, a general
 
| term does not;  but a general term is 'true of' an entity,
 
| or of each of many, or of none.  The class of all entities
 
| of which a general term is true is called the 'extension'
 
| of the term.  Now paralleling the contrast between the
 
| meaning of a singular term and the entity named, we
 
| must distinguish equally between the meaning of a
 
| general term and its extension. The general terms
 
| "creature with a heart" and "creature with kidneys",
 
| for example, are perhaps alike in extension but unlike
 
| in meaning.
 
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 21.
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
|
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| W.V. Quine,
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985. First published 1918.
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
</pre>
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 24===
  
TDOENote 4
+
<pre>
 
+
| 4.2.  What is the Status of 'p' in "I believe 'p'"? (concl.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
|
 
+
| I ought to say a word or two about "reality".  It is a vague word,
| 1Background for Analyticity (cont.)
+
| and most of its uses are improperWhen I talk about reality as
 +
| I am now doing, I can explain best what I mean by saying that
 +
| I mean everything you would have to mention in a complete
 +
| description of the world;  that will convey to you what
 +
| I mean.
 +
|
 +
| Now I do 'not' think that false propositions would have to be
 +
| mentioned in a complete description of the worldFalse beliefs
 +
| would, of course, false suppositions would, and desires for what
 +
| does not come to pass, but not false propositions all alone, and
 +
| therefore when you, as one says, believe a false proposition, that
 +
| cannot be an accurate account of what occurs.
 
|
 
|
| Confusion of meaning with extension, in the case of general terms,
+
| It is not accurate to say "I believe the proposition 'p'" and
| is less common than confusion of meaning with naming in the case
+
| regard the occurrence as a twofold relation between me and 'p'.
| of singular termsIt is indeed a commonplace in philosophy to
+
| The logical form is just the same whether you believe a false or
| oppose intension (or meaning) to extension, or, in a variant
+
| a true propositionTherefore in all cases you are not to regard
| vocabulary, connotation to denotation.
+
| belief as a two-term relation between yourself and a proposition,
 +
| and you have to analyse up the proposition and treat your belief
 +
| differently.
 
|
 
|
| The Aristotelian notion of essence was the forerunner, no doubt,
+
| Therefore the belief does not really contain a proposition as a constituent
| of the modern notion of intension or meaningFor Aristotle it
+
| but only contains the constituents of the proposition as constituentsYou
| was essential in men to be rational, accidental to be two-legged.
+
| cannot say when you believe, "What is it that you believe?"  There is no
| But there is an important difference between this attitude and the
+
| answer to that question, i.e. there is not a single thing that you are
| doctrine of meaningFrom the latter point of view it may indeed
+
| believing"I believe that today is Tuesday."  You must not suppose
| be conceded (if only for the sake of argument) that rationality is
+
| that "That today is Tuesday" is a single object which I am believing.
| involved in the meaning of the word "man" while two-leggedness is
+
| That would be an error. That is not the right way to analyse the
| not; but two-leggedness may at the same time be viewed as involved
+
| occurrence, although that analysis is linguistically convenient,
| in the meaning of "biped" while rationality is not.  Thus from the
+
| and one may keep it provided one knows that it is not the truth.
| point of view of the doctrine of meaning it makes no sense to say
 
| of the actual individual, who is at once a man and a biped, that
 
| his rationality is essential and his two-leggedness accidental
 
| or vice versa.  Things had essences, for Aristotle, but only
 
| linguistic forms have meanings.  Meaning is what essence
 
| becomes when it is divorced from the object of reference
 
| and wedded to the word.
 
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 21-22.
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 88-89.
 
|
 
|
| W.V. Quine,
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
+
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===POLA. Note 25===
 +
 
 +
{| align="center" width="90%"
 +
|
 +
<p><b><i>4.3. How shall we describe the logical form of a belief?</i></b></p>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<p>I want to try to get an account of the way that a belief is made up.  That is not an easy question at all.  You cannot make what I should call a map-in-space of a belief.  You can make a map of an atomic fact but not of a belief, for the simple reason that space-relations always are of the atomic sort or complications of the atomic sort.  I will try to illustrate what I mean.</p>
  
TDOE. Note 5
+
<p>The point is in connexion with there being two verbs in the judgment and with the fact that both verbs have got to occur as verbs, because if a thing is a verb it cannot occur otherwise than as a verb.</p>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<p>Suppose I take &lsquo;''A'' believes that ''B'' loves ''C''&rsquo;.  &lsquo;Othello believes that Desdemona loves Cassio&rsquo;.  There you have a false belief.  You have this odd state of affairs that the verb &lsquo;loves&rsquo; occurs in that proposition and seems to occur as relating Desdemona to Cassio whereas in fact it does not do so, but yet it does occur as a verb, it does occur in the sort of way that a verb should do.</p>
  
| 1Background for Analyticity (cont.)
+
<p>I mean that when ''A'' believes that ''B'' loves ''C'', you have to have a verb in the place where &lsquo;loves&rsquo; occursYou cannot put a substantive in its placeTherefore it is clear that the subordinate verb (i.e. the verb other than believing) is functioning as a verb, and seems to be relating two terms, but as a matter of fact does not when a judgment happens to be falseThat is what constitutes the puzzle about the nature of belief.</p>
|
 
| For the theory of meaning a conspicuous question is the nature
 
| of its objects:  what sort of things are meanings?  A felt need
 
| for meant entities may derive from an earlier failure to appreciate
 
| that meaning and reference are distinctOnce the theory of meaning
 
| is sharply separated from the theory of reference, it is a short step
 
| to recognizing as the primary business of the theory of meaning simply
 
| the synonymy of linguistic forms and the analyticity of statements;
 
| meanings themselves, as obscure intermediary entities, may well be
 
| abandoned.
 
|
 
| The problem of analyticity then confronts us anew.  Statements which are
 
| analytic by general philosophical acclaim are not, indeed, far to seek.
 
| They fall into two classes. Those of the first class, which may be
 
| called 'logically true', are typified by:
 
|
 
| (1) No unmarried man is married.
 
|
 
| The relevant feature of this example is that it not merely
 
| is true as it stands, but remains true under any and all
 
| reinterpretations of "man" and "married".  If we suppose
 
| a prior inventory of 'logical' particles, comprising "no",
 
| "un-", "not", "if", "then", "and", etc., then in general
 
| a logical truth is a statement which is true and remains
 
| true under all reinterpretations of its components than
 
| than the logical particles.
 
|
 
| But there is also a second class of analytic statements,
 
| typified by:
 
|
 
| (2)  No bachelor is married.
 
|
 
| The characteristic of such a statement is that it can be
 
| turned into a logical truth by putting synonyms for synonyms;
 
| thus (2) can be turned into (1) by putting "unmarried man" for
 
| its synonym "bachelor"We still lack a proper characterization
 
| of this second class of analytic statements, and therewith of
 
| analyticity generally, inasmuch as we have had in the above
 
| description to lean on a notion of "synonymy" which is no
 
| less in need of clarification than analyticity itself.
 
|
 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 22-23.
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
 
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<p>You will notice that whenever one gets to really close quarters with the theory of error one has the puzzle of how to deal with error without assuming the existence of the non-existent.</p>
  
TDOENote 6
+
<p>I mean that every theory of error sooner or later wrecks itself by assuming the existence of the non-existentAs when I say &lsquo;Desdemona loves Cassio&rsquo;, it seems as if you have a non-existent love between Desdemona and Cassio, but that is just as wrong as a non-existent unicorn.  So you have to explain the whole theory of judgment in some other way.</p>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<p>I come now to this question of a map.  Suppose you try such a map as this:</p>
  
| 1.  Background for Analyticity (concl.)
+
{| align="center" cellspacing="6" style="text-align:center; width:50%"
 
|
 
|
| In recent years Carnap has tended to explain analyticity by appeal to
+
<pre>
| what he calls state-descriptions.  A state-description is any exhaustive
+
                               
| assignment of truth values to the atomic, or noncompound, statements of
+
            Othello           
| the language. All other statements of the language are, Carnap assumes,
+
                |               
| built up of their component clauses by means of familiar logical devices,
+
                |              
| in such a way that the truth value of any complex statement is fixed for
+
            believes           
| each state-description by specifiable logical laws.  A statement is then
+
                |              
| explained as analytic when it comes out true under every state-description.
+
                v               
| This account is an adaptation of Leibniz's "true in all possible worlds".
+
Desdemona -----------> Cassio 
| But note that this version of analyticity serves its purpose only if the
+
              loves             
| atomic statements of the language are, unlike "John is a bachelor" and
+
                               
| "John is married", mutually independent.  Otherwise there would be a
+
</pre>
| state-description which assigned truth to "John is a bachelor" and to
+
|}
| "John is married", and consequently "No bachelors are married" would
+
   
| turn out synthetic rather than analytic under the proposed criterion.
+
<p>This question of making a map is not so strange as you might suppose because it is part of the whole theory of symbolism.  It is important to realize where and how a symbolism of that sort would be wrong:</p>
| Thus the criterion of analyticity in terms of state-descriptions
+
 
| serves only for languages devoid of extralogical synonym-pairs,
+
<p>Where and how it is wrong is that in the symbol you have this relationship relating these two things and in the fact it doesn't really relate them. You cannot get in space any occurrence which is logically of the same form as belief.</p>
| such as "bachelor" and "unmarried man" -- synonym-pairs of the
+
 
| type which give rise to the "second class" of analytic statements.
+
<p>When I say &lsquo;logically of the same form&rsquo; I mean that one can be obtained from the other by replacing the constituents of the one by the new terms.</p>
| The criterion in terms of state-descriptions is a reconstruction
+
 
| at best of logical truth, not of analyticity.
+
<p>If I say &lsquo;Desdemona loves Cassio&rsquo; that is of the same form as &lsquo;''A'' is to the right of ''B''&rsquo;.</p>
|
+
 
| I do not mean to suggest that Carnap is under any illusions on this
+
<p>Those are of the same form, and I say that nothing that occurs in space is of the same form as belief.</p>
| point.  His simplified model language with its state-descriptions
+
 
| is aimed primarily not at the general problem of analyticity but
+
<p>I have got on here to a new sort of thing, a new beast for our zoo, not another member of our former species but a new species.</p>
| at another purpose, the clarification of probability and induction.
+
 
| Our problem, however, is analyticity;  and here the major difficulty
+
<p>The discovery of this fact is due to Mr. Wittgenstein.</p>
| lies not in the first class of analytic statements, the logical truths,
 
| but rather in the second class, which depends on the notion of synonymy.
 
|
 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 23-24.
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
 
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<p>Russell, POLA, pp. 89&ndash;91.</p>
 +
|}
  
TDOENote 7
+
<p>Bertrand Russell, &ldquo;The Philosophy of Logical Atomism&rdquo;, pp.&nbsp;35&ndash;155 in ''The Philosophy of Logical Atomism'', edited with an introduction by David Pears, Open Court, La&nbsp;Salle, IL, 1985First published 1918.</p>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 26===
  
| 2Definition
+
<pre>
 +
| 4.3How shall we describe the logical form of a belief? (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| There are those who find it soothing to say that the analytic statements
+
| There is a great deal that is odd about belief from a
| of the second class reduce to those of the first class, the logical truths,
+
| logical point of view.  One of the things that are odd
| by 'definition';  "bachelor", for example, is 'defined' as "unmarried man".
+
| is that you can believe propositions of all sorts of forms.
| But how do we find that "bachelor" is defined as "unmarried man"?  Who
+
| I can believe that "This is white" and "Two and two are four".
| defined it thus, and when? Are we to appeal to the nearest dictionary,
+
| They are quite different forms, yet one can believe both. The
| and accept the lexicographer's formulation as law? Clearly this would
+
| actual occurrence can hardly be of exactly the same logical form
| be to put the cart before the horse. The lexicographer is an empirical
+
| in those two cases because of the great difference in the forms
| scientist, whose business is the recording of antecedent facts;  and if
+
| of the propositions believed. Therefore it would seem that
| he glosses "bachelor" as "unmarried man" it is because of his belief that
+
| belief cannot strictly be logically one in all different
| there is a relation of synonymy between those forms, implicit in general or
+
| cases but must be distinguished according to the nature
| preferred usage prior to his own work.  The notion of synonymy presupposed
+
| of the proposition that you believe.
| here has still to be clarified, presumably in terms relating to linguistic
+
|
| behavior.  Certainly the "definition" which is the lexicographer's report
+
| If you have "I believe p" and I believe q" those two facts, if p and q are
| of an observed synonymy cannot be taken as the ground of the synonymy.
+
| not of the same logical form, are not of the same logical form in the sense
 +
| I was speaking of a moment ago, that is in the sense that from "I believe p"
 +
| you can derive "I believe q" by replacing the constituents of one by the
 +
| constituents of the other.
 +
|
 +
| That means that belief itself cannot be treated as being a proper sort of
 +
| single term.  Belief will really have to have different logical forms
 +
| according to the nature of what is believed.  So that the apparent
 +
| sameness of believing in different cases is more or less illusory.
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 24.
+
| Russell, POLA, p. 91.
 
|
 
|
| W.V. Quine,
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985. First published 1918.
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
+
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 27===
  
TDOE.  Note 8
+
<pre>
 
+
| 4.3How shall we describe the logical form of a belief? (concl.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 2Definition (cont.)
 
 
|
 
|
| Definition is not, indeed, an activity exclusively of philologists.
+
| There are really two main things that one wants to notice in this matter that
| Philosophers and scientists frequently have occasion to "define"
+
| I am treating of just now.  The 'first' is the impossibility of treating the
| a recondite term by paraphrasing it into terms of a more familiar
+
| proposition believed as an independent entity, entering as a unit into the
| vocabularyBut ordinarily such a definition, like the philologist's,
+
| occurrence of the belief, and the 'other' is the impossibility of putting
| is pure lexicography, affirming a relation of synonymy antecedent to
+
| the subordinate verb on a level with its terms as an object term in the
| the exposition in hand.
+
| beliefThat is a point in which I think that the theory of judgment
 +
| which I set forth once in print some years ago was a little unduly
 +
| simple, because I did then treat the object verb as if one could
 +
| put it as just an object like the terms, as if one could put
 +
| "loves" on a level with Desdemona and Cassio as a term for
 +
| the relation "believe".  That is why I have been laying
 +
| such an emphasis on this lecture today on the fact
 +
| that there are two verbs at least.
 
|
 
|
| Just what it means to affirm synonymy, just what the interconnections
+
| I hope you will forgive the fact that so much of what I say today is tentative
| may be which are necessary and sufficient in order that two linguistic
+
| and consists of pointing out difficulties.  The subject is not very easy and
| forms be properly describable as synonymous, is far from clear;  but,
+
| it has not been much dealt with or discussed.  Practically nobody has until
| whatever these interconnections may be, ordinarily they are grounded
+
| quite lately begun to consider the problem of the nature of belief with
| in usage.  Definitions reporting selected instances of synonymy come
+
| anything like a proper logical apparatus and therefore one has very
| then as reports upon usage.
+
| little to help one in any discussion and so one has to be content
 +
| on many points at present with pointing out difficulties rather
 +
| than laying down quite clear solutions.
 
|
 
|
| There is also, however, a variant type of definitional activity which does
+
| Russell, POLA, pp. 91-92.
| not limit itself to the reporting of pre-existing synonymies.  I have in
 
| mind what Carnap calls 'explication' -- an activity to which philosophers
 
| are given, and scientists also in their more philosophical moments.  In
 
| explication the purpose is not merely to paraphrase the definiendum into
 
| an outright synonym, but actually to improve upon the definiendum by
 
| refining or supplementing its meaning. But even explication, though
 
| not merely reporting a pre-existing synonymy between definiendum and
 
| definiens, does rest nevertheless on 'other' pre-existing synonymies.
 
| The matter might be viewed as follows.  Any word worth explicating
 
| has some contexts which, as wholes, are clear and precise enough
 
| to be useful;  and the purpose of explication is to preserve the
 
| usage of these favored contexts while sharpening the usage of
 
| other contexts.  In order that a given definition be suitable
 
| for purposes of explication, therefore, what is required is not
 
| that the definiendum in its antecedent usage be synonymous with
 
| the definiens, but just that each of these favored contexts of
 
| the definiendum, taken as a whole in its antecedent usage, be
 
| synonymous with the corrsponding context of the definiens.
 
|
 
| Two alternative definientia may be equally appropriate for the purposes
 
| of a given task of explication and yet not be synonymous with each other;
 
| for they may serve interchangeably within the favored contexts but diverge
 
| elsewhere.  By cleaving to one of these definientia rather than the other,
 
| a definition of explicative kind generates, by fiat, a relation of synonymy
 
| between definiendum and definiens which did not hold before.  But such a
 
| definition still owes its explicative function, as seen, to pre-existing
 
| synonymies.
 
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 24-25.
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
|
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| W.V. Quine,
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985. First published 1918.
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
</pre>
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 28===
  
TDOE.  Note 9
+
<pre>
 
+
| 4.4The Question of Nomenclature
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 2Definition (cont.)
 
 
|
 
|
| There does, however, remain still an extreme sort of definition
+
| What sort of name shall we give to verbs like "believe"
| which does not hark back to prior synonymies at all:  namely,
+
| and "wish" and so forth?  I should be inclined to call
| the explicitly conventional introduction of novel notations
+
| them "propositional verbs".  This is merely a suggested
| for purposes of sheer abbreviation. Here the definiendum
+
| name for convenience, because they are verbs which have
| becomes synonymous with the definiens simply because it
+
| the 'form' of relating an object to a proposition.  As
| has been created expressly for the purpose of being
+
| I have been explaining, that is not what they really do,
| synonymous with the definiensHere we have a
+
| but it is convenient to call them propositional verbs.
| really transparent case of synonymy created
+
|
| by definition;  would that all species of
+
| Of course you might call them "attitudes", but I should not like that
| synonymy were as intelligibleFor the
+
| because it is a psychological term, and although all the instances in
| rest, definition rests on synonymy
+
| our experience are psychological, there is no reason to suppose that
| rather than explaining it.
+
| all the verbs I am talking of are psychological.  There is never any
 +
| reason to suppose that sort of thing.
 +
|
 +
| One should always remember Spinoza's infinite attributes of Deity.
 +
| It is quite likely that there are in the world the analogues of his
 +
| infinite attributesWe have no acquaintance with them, but there is
 +
| no reason to suppose that the mental and the physical exhaust the whole
 +
| universe, so one can never say that all the instances of any logical sort
 +
| of thing are of such and such a nature which is not a logical nature:  you
 +
| do not know enough about the world for thatTherefore I should not suggest
 +
| that all the verbs that have the form exemplified by believing and willing are
 +
| psychological.  I can only say all I know are.
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 25-26.
+
| Russell, POLA, p. 92.
 
|
 
|
| W.V. Quine,
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985. First published 1918.
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
+
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===POLA. Note 29===
  
TDOE.  Note 10
+
<pre>
 
+
| 4.4The Question of Nomenclature (concl.)
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 2Definition (concl.)
 
 
|
 
|
| The word "definition" has come to have a dangerously reassuring sound,
+
| I notice that in my syllabus I said I was going to deal with truth and
| owing no doubt to its frequent occurrence in logical and mathematical
+
| falsehood today, but there is not much to say about them specifically
| writingsWe shall do well to digress now into a brief appraisal of
+
| as they are coming in all the time.  The thing one first thinks of as
| the role of definition in formal work.
+
| true or false is a proposition, and a proposition is nothingBut a
 +
| belief is true or false in the same way as a proposition is, so that
 +
| you do have facts in the world that are true or false.
 
|
 
|
| In logical and mathematical systems either of two mutually antagonistic
+
| I said a while back that there was no distinction of true and false among
| types of economy may be striven for, and each has its peculiar practical
+
| facts, but as regards that special class of facts that we call "beliefs",
| utility.  On the one hand we may seek economy of practical expression --
+
| there is, in that sense that a belief which occurs may be true or false,
| ease and brevity in the statement of multifarious relations.  This sort
+
| though it is equally a fact in either case.
| of economy calls usually for distinctive concise notations for a wealth
 
| of concepts.  Second, however, and oppositely, we may seek economy in
 
| grammar and vocabulary;  we may try to find a minimum of basic concepts
 
| such that, once a distinctive notation has been appropriated to each of
 
| them, it becomes possible to express any desired further concept by mere
 
| combination and iteration of our basic notations.  This second sort of
 
| economy is impractical in one way, since a poverty in basic idioms tends
 
| to a necessary lengthening of discourse.  But it is practical in another
 
| way:  it greatly simplifies theoretical discourse 'about' the language,
 
| through minimizing the terms and the forms of construction wherein the
 
| language consists.
 
 
|
 
|
| Both sorts of economy, though prima facie incompatible, are valuable in
+
| One 'might' call wishes false in the same sense when one wishes
| their separate ways.  The custom has consequently arisen of combining
+
| something that does not happen.  The truth or falsehood depends
| both sorts of economy by forging in effect two langauges, the one
+
| upon the proposition that enters in.
| a part of the other.  The inclsuive language, though redundant
 
| in grammar and vocabulary, is economical in message lengths,
 
| while the part, called primitive notation, is economical in
 
| grammar and vocabulary.  Whole and part are correlated by
 
| rules of translation whereby each idiom not in primitive
 
| notation is equated to some complex built up of primitive
 
| notation.  These rules of translation are the so-called
 
| 'definitions' which appear in formalized systems.  They
 
| are best viewed not as adjuncts to one language but as
 
| correlations between two languages, the one a part of
 
| the other.
 
 
|
 
|
| But these correlations are not arbitrary.  They are supposed
+
| I am inclined to think that perception, as opposed to belief, does go
| to show how the primitive notations can accomplish all purposes,
+
| straight to the fact and not through the propositionWhen you perceive
| save brevity and convenience, of the redundant languageHence
+
| the fact you do not, of course, have error coming in, because the moment it
| the definiendum and its definiens may be expected, in each case,
+
| is a fact that is your object error is excluded.  I think that verification
| to be related in one or another of the three ways lately noted.
+
| in the last resort would always reduce itself to the perception of facts.
| The definiens may be a faithful paraphrase of the definiendum
+
| Therefore the logical form of perception will be different from the logical
| into the narrower notation, preseving a direct synonymy* as
+
| form of believing, just because of that circumstance that it is a 'fact' that
| of antecedent usage;  or the definiens may, in the spirit
+
| comes in.  That raises also a number of logical difficulties which I do not
| of explication, improve upon the antecedent usage of the
+
| propose to go into, but I think you can see for yourself that perceiving
| definiendum; or finally, the definiendum may be a newly
+
| would also involve two verbs just as believing does. I am inclined to
| created notation, newly endowed with meaning here and now.
+
| think that volition differs from desire logically, in a way strictly
 +
| analogous to that in which perception differs from belief.  But it
 +
| would take us too far from logic to discuss this view.
 
|
 
|
| In formal and informal work alike, thus, we find
+
| Russell, POLA, p. 93.
| that definition -- except in the extreme case of the
 
| explicitly conventional introduction of new notations --
 
| hinges on prior relations of synonymy. Recognizing then
 
| that the notion of definition does not hold the key to
 
| synonymy and analyticity, let us look further into
 
| synonymy and say no more of definition.
 
 
|
 
|
|*According to an important variant sense of "definition", the relation
+
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| preserved may be the weaker relation of mere agreement in reference;
+
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| see below, p. 132.  But definition in this sense is better ignored in
+
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.
| the present connection, being irrelevant to the question of synonymy.
 
|
 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 26-27.
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
 
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
  
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 +
</pre>
 +
 +
==RTOK. Russell's Theory Of Knowledge==
  
TDOE. Note 11
+
===RTOK. Note 1===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
To anchor this thread I will copy out a focal passage from Russell's 1913 manuscript on the &ldquo;Theory of Knowledge&rdquo;, that was not published in full until 1984.  If there is time, I will then go back and trace more of the development that sets out the background of this excerpt.
 +
 
 +
===RTOK. Note 2===
  
| 3.  Interchangeability
+
{| align="center" width="90%"
 
|
 
|
| A natural suggestion, deserving close examination, is that the synonymy
+
<p>We come now to the last problem which has to be treated in this chapter, namely:  What is the logical structure of the fact which consists in a given subject understanding a given proposition?  The structure of an understanding varies according to the proposition understood.  At present, we are only concerned with the understanding of atomic propositions; the understanding of molecular propositions will be dealt with in Part 3.</p>
| of two linguistic forms consists simply in their interchangeability in
+
 
| all contexts without change of truth value -- interchangeability, in
+
<p>Let us again take the proposition "A and B are similar".</p>
| Leibniz's phrase 'salva veritate'.  Note that synonyms so conceived
+
 
| need not even be free from vagueness, as long as the vaguenesses
+
<p>It is plain, to begin with, that the 'complex' "A and B being similar", even if it exists, does not enter in, for if it did, we could not understand false propositions, because in their case there is no such complex.</p>
| match.
+
 
 +
<p>It is plain, also, from what has been said, that we cannot understand the proposition unless we are acquainted with A and B and similarity and the form "something and something have some relation".  Apart from these four objects, there does not appear, so far as we can see, to be any object with which we need be acquainted in order to understand the proposition.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>It seems to follow that these four objects, and these only, must be united with the subject in one complex when the subject understands the proposition.  It cannot be any complex composed of them that enters in, since they need not form any complex, and if they do, we need not be acquainted with it.  But they themselves must all enter in, since if they did not, it would be at least theoretically possible to understand the proposition without being acquainted with them.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>In this argument, I appeal to the principle that, when we understand, those objects with which we must be acquainted when we understand, and those only, are object-constituents (i.e. constituents other than understanding itself and the subject) of the understanding-complex.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>(Russell, TOK, pp. 116&ndash;117).</p>
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
<p>Bertrand Russell, ''Theory of Knowledge : The 1913 Manuscript'', edited by Elizabeth Ramsden Eames in collaboration with Kenneth Blackwell, Routledge, London, UK, 1992First published, George Allen and Unwin, 1984.</p>
 +
 
 +
===RTOK. Note 3===
 +
 
 +
{| align="center" width="90%"
 
|
 
|
| But it is not quite true that the synonyms "bachelor" and "unmarried man"
+
<p>It follows that, when a subject S understands "A and B are similar", "understanding" is the relating relation, and the terms are S and A and B and similarity and R(x, y), where R(x, y) stands for the form "something and something have some relation". Thus a first symbol for the complex will be:</p>
| are everywhere interchangeable 'salva veritate'.  Truths which become false
+
 
| under substitution of "unmarried man" for "bachelor" are easily constructed
+
<center>U{S, A, B, similarity, R(x, y)}.</center>
| with the help of "bachelor of arts" or "bachelor's buttons"; also with the
+
 
| help of quotation, thus:
+
<p>This symbol, however, by no means exhausts the analysis of the form of the understanding-complex.  There are many kinds of five-term complexes, and we have to decide what the kind is.</p>
|
+
 
|    "Bachelor" has less than ten letters.
+
<p>It is obvious, in the first place, that S is related to the four other terms in a way different from that in which any of the four other terms are related to each other.</p>
|
+
 
| Such counterinstances can, however, be set aside by treating
+
<p>(It is to be observed that we can derive from our five-term complex a complex having any smaller number of terms by replacing any one or more of the terms by "something".  If S is replaced by "something", the resulting complex is of a different form from that which results from replacing any other term by "something".  This explains what is meant by saying that S enters in a different way from the other constituents.)</p>
| the phrases "bachelor of arts" and "bachelor's buttons" and the
+
 
| quotation '"bachelor"' each as a single indivisible word and then
+
<p>It is obvious, in the second place, that R(x, y) enters in a different way from the other three objects, and that "similarity" has a different relation to R(x, y) from that which A and B have, while A and B have the same relation to R(x, y).  Also, because we are dealing with a proposition asserting a symmetrical relation between A and B, A and B have each the same relation to "similarity", whereas, if we had been dealing with an asymmetrical relation, they would have had different relations to it.  Thus we are led to the following map of our five-term complex:</p>
| stipulating that the interchangeability 'salva veritate' which
+
 
| is to be the touchstone of synonymy is not supposed to apply
+
<pre>
| to fragmentary occurrences inside of a word.  This account of
+
 
| synonymy, supposing it acceptable on other counts, has indeed
+
    A o
| the drawback of appealing to a prior conception of "word" which
+
        \  <
| can be counted on to present difficulties of formulation in its
+
        ^\      *
| turn. Nevertheless some progress might be claimed in having
+
          \          *
| reduced the problem of synonymy to a problem of wordhood.
+
        % \              *
| Let us pursue this line a bit, taking "word" for granted.
+
            \                  *
|
+
          %  \    R(x, y)            *
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 27-28.
+
              o------o------>            o---------<---------o Similarity
|
+
          % /      ^              *                      ^
| W.V. Quine,
+
            /        |          *                          /
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
          /%        |    *                            /
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
+
          /          |*                                /
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
+
        /  %  *  |                              /
 +
        /  <        |                            /
 +
    B o      %      |                          /
 +
        ^            |                        /
 +
        \    %    |                      /
 +
          \          |                    /
 +
          \    %    |                  /
 +
            \        |                /
 +
            \  %  |              /
 +
              \      |            /
 +
              \  %  |          /
 +
                \    |         /
 +
                \ % |       /
 +
                  \ |    /
 +
                  \%|  /
 +
                    \| /
 +
                    o
 +
                    S
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
<p>In this figure, one relation goes from S to the four objects;  one relation goes from R(x, y) to similarity, and another to A and B, while one relation goes from similarity to A and B.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>This figure, I hope, will help to make clearer the map of our five-term complex.  But to explain in detail the exact abstract meaning of the various items in the figure would demand a lengthy formal logical discussion. Meanwhile the above attempt must suffice, for the present, as an analysis of what is meant by "understanding a proposition".</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>(Russell, TOK, pp. 117&ndash;118).</p>
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
<p>Bertrand Russell, ''Theory of Knowledge : The 1913 Manuscript'', edited by Elizabeth Ramsden Eames in collaboration with Kenneth Blackwell, Routledge, London, UK, 1992.  First published, George Allen and Unwin, 1984.</p>
 +
 
 +
==RTOP. Russell's Treatise On Propositions==
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===RTOP. Note 1===
  
TDOE. Note 12
+
September creeps forward on little cheetah's feet, and I cannot say when I will be able to return to these issues in any detail, so for the time being I'll just record what I regard as one significant passage from Russell's paper &ldquo;On Propositions&rdquo;.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===RTOP. Note 2===
  
| 3. Interchangeability (cont.)
+
<pre>
 +
| On Propositions: What They Are and How They Mean (1919)
 
|
 
|
| The question remains whether interchangeability
+
| Let us illustrate the content of a belief
| 'salva veritate' (apart from occurrences within words)
+
| by an exampleSuppose I am believing,
| is a strong enough condition for synonymy, or whether,
+
| but not in words, that "it will rain".
| on the contrary, some heteronymous expressions might be thus
+
| What is happening?
| interchangeable.  Now let us be clear that we are not concerned
 
| here with synonymy in the sense of complete identity in psychological
 
| associations or poetic quality;  indeed no two expressions are synonymous
 
| in such a sense.  We are concerned only with what may be called 'cognitive'
 
| synonymyJust what this is cannot be said without successfully finishing the
 
| present study;  but we know something about it from the need which arose for
 
| it in connection with analyticity in Section 1.  The sort of synonymy needed
 
| there was merely such that any analytic statement could be turned into a
 
| logical truth by putting synonyms for synonyms.  Turning the tables and
 
| assuming analyticity, indeed, we could explain cognitive synonymy of
 
| terms as follows (keeping to the familiar example):  to say that
 
| "bachelor" and "unmarried man" are cognitively synonymous is
 
| to say no more or less than that the statement:
 
 
|
 
|
| (3)  All and only bachelors are unmarried men
+
| (1) Images, say, of the visual appearance of rain,
|
+
|    the feeling of wetness, the patter of drops,
| is analytic.*
+
|    interrelated, roughly, as the sensations
 +
|    would be if it were raining, i.e., there
 +
|    is a complex 'fact composed of images',
 +
|    having a structure analogous to that
 +
|    of the objective fact which would
 +
|    make the belief true.
 +
|
 +
| (2) There is 'expectation', i.e.,
 +
|    that form of belief which
 +
|    refers to the future;
 +
|    we shall examine
 +
|    this shortly.
 +
|
 +
| (3) There is a relation between (1) and (2),
 +
|    making us say that (1) is "what is expected".
 +
|    This relation also demands investigation.
 +
|
 +
| The most important thing about a proposition is that, whether
 +
| it consists of images or of words, it is, whenever it occurs, an
 +
| actual fact, having a certain analogy -- to be further investigated --
 +
| with the fact which makes it true or false. A word-proposition, apart
 +
| from niceties, "means" the corresponding image-proposition, and an
 +
| image-proposition has an objective reference dependent upon the
 +
| meanings of its constituent images.
 
|
 
|
|*This is cognitive synonymy in a primary, broad sense.  Carnap ([3],
+
| Russell, OP, p. 309.
| pp. 56ff) and Lewis ([2], pp. 83ff) have suggested how, once this
 
| notion is at hand, a narrower sense of cognitive synonymy which
 
| is preferable for some purposes can in turn be derived.  But
 
| this special ramification of concept-building lies aside
 
| from the present purposes and must not be confused with
 
| the broad sort of cognitive synonymy here concerned.
 
|
 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 28-29.
 
 
|
 
|
| W.V. Quine,
+
| Bertrand Russell,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
|"On Propositions:  What They Are And How They Mean" (1919),
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
+
| pp. 285-320 in 'Logic and Knowledge:  Essays, 1901-1950',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
+
| edited by Robert Charles Marsh, Routledge, London, UK, 1956.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
==SABI. Synthetic/Analytic &#8799; Boundary/Interior==
  
TDOE.  Note 13
+
<pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Let's go back to Quine's topological metaphor:
 +
the "web of belief", "fabric of knowledge",
 +
or "epistemological field theory" picture,
 +
and see if we can extract something that
 +
might be useful in our present task,
 +
settling on a robust architecture
 +
for generic knowledge bases.
  
| 3Interchangeability (cont.)
+
| 6Empiricism without the Dogmas
 
|
 
|
| What we need is an account of cognitive synonymy
+
| The totality of our so-called knowledge or beliefs, from the most
| not presupposing analyticity -- if we are to explain
+
| casual matters of geography and history to the profoundest laws of
| analyticity conversely with help of cognitive synonymy
+
| atomic physics or even of pure mathematics and logic, is a man-made
| as undertaken in Section 1. And indeed such an independent
+
| fabric which impinges on experience only along the edges.  Or, to
| account of cognitive synonymy is at present up for consideration,
+
| change the figure, total science is like a field of force whose
| namely, interchangeability 'salva veritate' everywhere except within
+
| boundary conditions are experience.  A conflict with experience at
| wordsThe question before us, to resume the thread at last, is whether
+
| the periphery occasions readjustments in the interior of the field.
| such interchangeability is a sufficient condition for cognitive synonymy.
+
| Truth values have to be redistributed over some of our statements.
| We can quickly assure ourselves that it is, by examples of the following
+
| Re-evaluation of some statements entails re-evaluation of others,
| sortThe statement:
+
| because of their logical interconnections -- the logical laws
 +
| being in turn simply certain further statements of the system,
 +
| certain further elements of the fieldHaving re-evaluated one
 +
| statement we must re-evaluate some others, which may be statements
 +
| logically connected with the first or may be the statements of logical
 +
| connections themselves.  But the total field is so underdetermined by
 +
| its boundary conditions, experience, that there is much latitude of
 +
| choice as to what statements to re-evaluate in the light of any
 +
| single contrary experienceNo particular experiences are
 +
| linked with any particular statements in the interior of
 +
| the field, except indirectly through considerations
 +
| of equilibrium affecting the field as a whole.
 
|
 
|
| (4)  Necessarily all and only bachelors are bachelors
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 42-43.
|
 
| is evidently true, even supposing "necessarily" so narrowly construed as
 
| to be truly applicable only to analytic statements.  Then, if "bachelor"
 
| and "unmarried man" are interchangeable 'salva veritate', the result:
 
|
 
| (5)  Necessarily all and only bachelors are unmarried men
 
|
 
| of putting "unmarried man" for an occurrence of "bachelor" in (4) must,
 
| like (4), be true.  But to say that (5) is true is to say that (3) is
 
| analytic, and hence that "bachelor" and "unmarried man" are cognitively
 
| synonymous.
 
|
 
| Let us see what there is about the above argument that gives it its air
 
| of hocus-pocus.  The condition of interchangeability 'salva veritate'
 
| varies in its force with variations in the richness of the language
 
| at hand.  The above argument supposes we are working with a language
 
| rich enough to contain the adverb "necessarily", this adverb being so
 
| construed as to yield truth when and only when applied to an analytic
 
| statement.  But can we condone a language which contains such an adverb?
 
| Does the adverb really make sense?  To suppose that it does is to suppose
 
| that we have already made satisfactory sense of "analytic".  Then what are
 
| we so hard at work on right now?
 
|
 
| Our argument is not flatly circular, but something like it.
 
| It has the form, figuratively speaking, of a closed curve
 
| in space.
 
|
 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 29-30.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 6,374: Line 8,241:
 
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 +
|
 +
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04935.html
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
There are some things that I am not trying to do.
 
+
One of them is reducing natural language to math,
TDOE. Note 14
+
and another is reducing math to natural language.
 +
So I tend to regard the usual sorts of examples,
 +
Bachelors and Hesperus and Phosphorus and so on,
 +
as being useful for stock illustrations only so
 +
long as nobody imagines that all we do with our
 +
natural languages can really be ruled that way.
 +
The semantics of natural language is more like
 +
the semantics of music, and it would take many
 +
octaves of 8-track tapes just to keep track of
 +
all the meaning that is being layered into it.
 +
 
 +
So let me resort to a mathematical example, where Frege really lived,
 +
and where all of this formal semantics stuff really has Frege's ghost
 +
of a chance of actually making sense someday, if hardly come what may.
 +
 
 +
There is a "clear" distinction between equations like 2 = 0 and x = x,
 +
that are called "noncontingent equations", because they have constant
 +
truth values for all values of whatever variables they may have, and
 +
equations like x^2 + 1 = 0, that are called "contingent equations",
 +
because they are have different truth values for different values
 +
of their variables.
 +
 
 +
But wait a minute, you or somebody says, the equation x^2 + 1 = 0 is false
 +
for all values of its variables, and of course I remind you that it does
 +
have solutions in the complex domain C.  So models of numbers really
 +
are as fleeting as models of cars.  And this explains the annoying
 +
habit that mathematicians have of constantly indexing formulas
 +
with the names of the mathematical domains over which they
 +
are intended to be interpreted as having their values.
 +
 
 +
And then someone else reminds us that 2 = 0 is true mod 2.
 +
 
 +
Those are the types of examples that I would like to keep in mind when we examime
 +
the relativity of the analytic/synthetic distinction, or, to put a finer point on
 +
this slippery slope, the contingency of the noncontingent/contingent distinction.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
==SYNF. Syntactic Fallacy==
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
A syntactic fallacy is an error of mistaking
 +
the properties of signs for the properties
 +
of objects (that they may or may not have).
 +
 
 +
For example, from the fact that signs exist, are actual,
 +
possible, necessary, or related in various syntactic ways,
 +
nothing follows about the existence, actuality, possibility,
 +
necessity, or objective relationships of their objects, since
 +
it is conceivable that a sign does not denote anything at all.
 +
 
 +
Notice that a syntactic fallacy is an error even when signs are icons,
 +
that is, when they propose a denotation of their objects by virtue of
 +
sharing certain properties with them.
 +
 
 +
So watch out for that ...
 +
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
==TDOE. Quine's Two Dogmas Of Empiricism==
 +
 
 +
===TDOE. Note 1===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 3.  Interchangeability (cont.)
+
| Two Dogmas of Empiricism
 
|
 
|
| Interchangeability 'salva veritate' is meaningless until relativized to
+
| Modern empiricism has been conditioned in large part by two dogmas.
| a language whose extent is specified in relevant respects. Suppose now
+
| One is a belief in some fundamental cleavage between truths which
| we consider a language containing just the following materials.  There
+
| are 'analytic', or grounded in meanings independently of matters
| is an indefinitely large stock of one-place predicates, (for example,
+
| of fact, and truths which are 'synthetic', or grounded in fact.
| "F" where "Fx" means that x is a man) and many-place predicates (for
+
| The other dogma is 'reductionism':  the belief that each
| example, "G" where "Gxy" means that x loves y), mostly having to
+
| meaningful statement is equivalent to some logical
| do with extralogical subject matter.  The rest of the language
+
| construct upon terms which refer to immediate
| is logical.  The atomic sentences consist each of a predicate
+
| experience.  Both dogmas, I shall argue, are
| followed by one or more variables "x", "y", etc.;  and the
+
| ill-founded.  One effect of abandoning them
| complex sentences are built up of the atomic ones by truth
+
| is, as we shall see, a blurring of the
| functions ("not", "and", "or", etc.) and quantification.
+
| supposed boundary between speculative
| In effect such a language enjoys the benefits also of
+
| metaphysics and natural science.
| descriptions and indeed singular terms generally,
+
| Another effect is a shift
| these being contextually definable in known ways.
+
| toward pragmatism.
| Even abstract singular terms naming classes,
 
| classes of classes, etc., are contextually
 
| definable in case the assumed stock of
 
| predicates includes the two-place
 
| predicate of class membership.
 
| Such a language can be adequate
 
| to classical mathematics and
 
| indeed to scientific discourse
 
| generally, except in so far as
 
| the latter involves debatable
 
| devices such as contrary-to-fact
 
| conditionals or modal adverbs like
 
| "necessarily". Now a language of this
 
| type is extensional, in this sense:  any
 
| two predicates which agree extensionally
 
| (that is, are true of the same objects)
 
| are interchangeable 'salva veritate'.
 
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 30.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 20.
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 6,422: Line 8,336:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 15
+
===TDOE. Note 2===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 3Interchangeability (cont.)
+
| 1Background for Analyticity
 
|
 
|
| In an extensional language, therefore, interchangeability
+
| Kant's cleavage between analytic and synthetic truths
| 'salva veritate' is no assurance of cognitive synonymy of
+
| was foreshadowed in Hume's distinction between relations
| the desired type. That "bachelor" and "unmarried man" are
+
| of ideas and matters of fact, and in Leibniz's distinction
| interchangeable 'salva veritate' in an extensional language
+
| between truths of reason and truths of fact.  Leibniz spoke
| assures us of no more than that (3) is trueThere is no
+
| of the truths of reason as true in all possible worlds.
| assurance here that the extensional agreement of "bachelor"
+
| Picturesqueness aside, this is to say that the truths
| and "unmarried man" rests on meaning rather than merely on
+
| of reason are those which could not possibly be false.
| accidental matters of fact, as does the extensional agreement
+
| In the same vein we hear analytic statements defined as
| of "creature with a heart" and "creature with kidneys".
+
| statements whose denials are self-contradictoryBut this
 +
| definition has small explanatory value;  for the notion of
 +
| self-contradictoriness, in the quite broad sense needed for
 +
| this definition of analyticity, stands in exactly the same
 +
| need of clarification as does the notion of analyticity
 +
| itself.  The two notions are the two sides of a single
 +
| dubious coin.
 
|
 
|
| For most purposes extensional agreement is the nearest approximation
+
| Kant conceived of an analytic statement as one that attributes to its
| to synonymy we need care about.  But the fact remains that extensional
+
| subject no more than is already conceptually contained in the subject.
| agreement falls far short of cognitive synonymy of the type required for
+
| This formulation has two shortcomings:  it limits itself to statements of
| explaining analyticity in the manner of Section 1.  The type of cognitive
+
| subject-predicate form, and it appeals to a notion of containment which is
| synonymy required there is such as to equate the synonymy of "bachelor"
+
| left at a metaphorical level.  But Kant's intent, evident more from the use
| and "unmarried man" with the analyticity of (3), not merely with the
+
| he makes of the notion of analyticity than from his definition of it, can be
| truth of (3).
+
| restated thus:  a statement is analytic when it is true by virtue of meanings
 +
| and independently of fact.  Pursuing this line, let us examine the concept of
 +
| 'meaning' which is presupposed.
 
|
 
|
| So we must recognize that interchangeability 'salva veritate',
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 20-21.
| if construed in relation to an extensional language, is not
 
| a sufficient condition of cognitive synonymy in the sense
 
| needed for deriving analyticity in the manner of Section 1.
 
| If a language contains an intensional adverb "necessarily" in
 
| the sense lately noted, or other particles to the same effect,
 
| then interchangeability 'salva veritate' in such a language
 
| does afford a sufficient condition of cognitive synonymy;
 
| but such a language is intelligible only in so far as the
 
| notion of analyticity is already understood in advance.
 
|
 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 31.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 6,466: Line 8,377:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 16
+
===TDOE. Note 3===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 3Interchangeability (concl.)
+
| 1Background for Analyticity (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| The effort to explain cognitive synonymy first, for the sake
+
| Meaning, let us remember, is not to be identified with naming.
| of deriving analyticity from it afterward as in Section 1, is
+
| Frege's example of "Evening Star" and "Morning Star", and Russell's
| perhaps the wrong approachInstead we might try explaining
+
| of "Scott" and "the author of 'Waverley'", illustrate that terms can
| analyticity somehow without appeal to cognitive synonymy.
+
| name the same thing but differ in meaningThe distinction between
| Afterward we could doubtless derive cognitive synonymy from
+
| meaning and naming is no less important at the level of abstract
| analyticity satisfactorily enough if desiredWe have seen
+
| termsThe terms "9" and "the number of the planets" name one
| that cognitive synonymy of "bachelor" and "unmarried man" can
+
| and the same abstract entity but presumably must be regarded as
| be explained as analyticity of (3). The same explanation works
+
| unlike in meaning; for astronomical observation was needed, and
| for any pair of one-place predicates, of course, and it can
+
| not mere reflection on meanings, to determine the sameness of the
| be extended in obvious fashion to many-place predicates.
+
| entity in question.
| Other syntactical categories can also be accommodated in
+
|
| fairly parallel fashionSingular terms may be said to be
+
| The above examples consists of singular terms, concrete and
| cognitively synonymous when the statement of identity formed
+
| abstractWith general terms, or predicates, the situation
| by putting "=" between them is analyticStatements may be said
+
| is somewhat different but parallelWhereas a singular term
| simply to be cognitively synonymous when their biconditional (the
+
| purports to name an entity, abstract or concrete, a general
| result of joining them by "if and only if") is analyticIf we
+
| term does not;  but a general term is 'true of' an entity,
| care to lump all categories into a single formulation, at the
+
| or of each of many, or of noneThe class of all entities
| expense of assuming again the notion of "word" which was
+
| of which a general term is true is called the 'extension'
| appealed to early in this section, we can describe any two
+
| of the term.  Now paralleling the contrast between the
| linguistic forms as cognitively synonymous when the two forms
+
| meaning of a singular term and the entity named, we
| are interchangeable (apart from occurrences within "words")
+
| must distinguish equally between the meaning of a
| 'salva' (no longer 'veritate' but) 'analyticitate'Certain
+
| general term and its extensionThe general terms
| technical questions arise, indeed, over cases of ambiguity
+
| "creature with a heart" and "creature with kidneys",
| or homonymy;  let us not pause for them, however, for we
+
| for example, are perhaps alike in extension but unlike
| are already digressing.  Let us rather turn our backs
+
| in meaning.
| on the problem of synonymy and address ourselves
 
| anew to that of analyticity.
 
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 31-32.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 21.
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 6,509: Line 8,418:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 17
+
===TDOE. Note 4===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 4Semantical Rules
+
| 1Background for Analyticity (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| Analyticity at first seemed most naturally definable by appeal
+
| Confusion of meaning with extension, in the case of general terms,
| to a realm of meanings.  On refinement, the appeal to meanings
+
| is less common than confusion of meaning with naming in the case
| gave way to an appeal to synonymy or definitionBut definition
+
| of singular termsIt is indeed a commonplace in philosophy to
| turned out to be a will-o'-the-wisp, and synonymy turned out to be
+
| oppose intension (or meaning) to extension, or, in a variant
| best understood only by dint of a prior appeal to analyticity itself.
+
| vocabulary, connotation to denotation.
| So we are back at the problem of analyticity.
 
 
|
 
|
| I do not know whether the statement "Everything green is extended"
+
| The Aristotelian notion of essence was the forerunner, no doubt,
| is analyticNow does my indecision over this example really betray
+
| of the modern notion of intension or meaningFor Aristotle it
| an incomplete understanding, an incomplete grasp of the "meanings",
+
| was essential in men to be rational, accidental to be two-legged.
| of "green" and "extended"?  I think not.  The trouble is not with
+
| But there is an important difference between this attitude and the
| "green" or "extended", but with "analytic".
+
| doctrine of meaning.  From the latter point of view it may indeed
 +
| be conceded (if only for the sake of argument) that rationality is
 +
| involved in the meaning of the word "man" while two-leggedness is
 +
| not;  but two-leggedness may at the same time be viewed as involved
 +
| in the meaning of "biped" while rationality is not.  Thus from the
 +
| point of view of the doctrine of meaning it makes no sense to say
 +
| of the actual individual, who is at once a man and a biped, that
 +
| his rationality is essential and his two-leggedness accidental
 +
| or vice versa.  Things had essences, for Aristotle, but only
 +
| linguistic forms have meanings.  Meaning is what essence
 +
| becomes when it is divorced from the object of reference
 +
| and wedded to the word.
 
|
 
|
| It is often hinted that the difficulty in separating analytic
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 21-22.
| statements from synthetic ones in ordinary language is due to
 
| the vagueness of ordinary language and that the distinction is
 
| clear when we have a precise artificial language with explicit
 
| "semantical rules".  This, however, as I shall now attempt to
 
| show, is a confusion.
 
|
 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 32.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 6,544: Line 8,456:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 18
+
===TDOE. Note 5===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 4Semantical Rules (cont.)
+
| 1Background for Analyticity (cont.)
 +
|
 +
| For the theory of meaning a conspicuous question is the nature
 +
| of its objects:  what sort of things are meanings?  A felt need
 +
| for meant entities may derive from an earlier failure to appreciate
 +
| that meaning and reference are distinct.  Once the theory of meaning
 +
| is sharply separated from the theory of reference, it is a short step
 +
| to recognizing as the primary business of the theory of meaning simply
 +
| the synonymy of linguistic forms and the analyticity of statements;
 +
| meanings themselves, as obscure intermediary entities, may well be
 +
| abandoned.
 
|
 
|
| The notion of analyticity about which we are worrying is a purported
+
| The problem of analyticity then confronts us anew.  Statements which are
| relation between statements and languages:  a statement S is said to
+
| analytic by general philosophical acclaim are not, indeed, far to seek.
| be 'analytic for' a language L, and the problem is to make sense of
+
| They fall into two classesThose of the first class, which may be
| this relation generally, that is, for variable "S" and "L". The
+
| called 'logically true', are typified by:
| gravity of this problem is not perceptibly less for artificial
 
| languages than for natural onesThe problem of making sense
 
| of the idiom "S is analytic for L", with variable "S" and "L",
 
| retains its stubbornness even if we limit the range of the
 
| variable "L" to artificial languages.  Let me now try to
 
| make this point evident.
 
 
|
 
|
| For artificial languages and semantical rules we look naturally
+
| (1)  No unmarried man is married.
| to the writings of Carnap.  His semantical rules take various forms,
+
|
| and to make my point I shall have to distinguish certain of the forms.
+
| The relevant feature of this example is that it not merely
| Let us suppose, to begin with, an artificial language L_0 whose semantical
+
| is true as it stands, but remains true under any and all
| rules have the form explicitly of a specification, by recursion or otherwise,
+
| reinterpretations of "man" and "married"If we suppose
| of all the analytic statements of L_0The rules tell us that such and such
+
| a prior inventory of 'logical' particles, comprising "no",
| statements, and only those, are the analytic statements of L_0.  Now here
+
| "un-", "not", "if", "then", "and", etc., then in general
| the difficulty is simply that the rules contain the word "analytic",
+
| a logical truth is a statement which is true and remains
| which we do not understand!  We understand what expressions the
+
| true under all reinterpretations of its components than
| rules attribute analyticity to, but we do not understand what
+
| than the logical particles.
| the rules attribute to those expressions. In short, before
+
|
| we can understand a rule which begins "A statement S is
+
| But there is also a second class of analytic statements,
| analytic for language L_0 if and only if ...", we must
+
| typified by:
| understand the general relative term "analytic for";
 
| we must understand "S is analytic for L" where "S"
 
| and "L" are variables.
 
 
|
 
|
| Alternatively we may, indeed, view the so-called rule as a conventional
+
| (2) No bachelor is married.
| definition of a new simple symbol "analytic-for-L_0", which might better
 
| be written untendentiously as "K" so as not to seem to throw light on the
 
| interesting word "analytic". Obviously any number of classes K, M, N, etc.
 
| of statements of L_0 can be specified for various purposes or for no purpose;
 
| what does it mean to say that K, as against M, N, etc., is the class of the
 
| "analytic" statements of L_0?
 
 
|
 
|
| By saying what statements are analytic for L_0 we explain
+
| The characteristic of such a statement is that it can be
| "analytic-for-L_0" but not "analytic", not "analytic for".
+
| turned into a logical truth by putting synonyms for synonyms;
| We do not begin to explain the idiom "S is analytic for L"
+
| thus (2) can be turned into (1) by putting "unmarried man" for
| with variable "S" and "L", even if we are content to limit
+
| its synonym "bachelor". We still lack a proper characterization
| the range of "L" to the realm of artificial languages.
+
| of this second class of analytic statements, and therewith of
 +
| analyticity generally, inasmuch as we have had in the above
 +
| description to lean on a notion of "synonymy" which is no
 +
| less in need of clarification than analyticity itself.
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 33-34.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 22-23.
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 6,601: Line 8,511:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 19
+
===TDOE. Note 6===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 4Semantical Rules (cont.)
+
| 1Background for Analyticity (concl.)
 
|
 
|
| Actually we do know enough about the intended significance of
+
| In recent years Carnap has tended to explain analyticity by appeal to
| "analytic" to know that analytic statements are supposed to
+
| what he calls state-descriptionsA state-description is any exhaustive
| be trueLet us then turn to a second form of semantical
+
| assignment of truth values to the atomic, or noncompound, statements of
| rule, which says not that such and such statements are
+
| the language.  All other statements of the language are, Carnap assumes,
| analytic but simply that such and such statements are
+
| built up of their component clauses by means of familiar logical devices,
| included among the truths.  Such a rule is not subject
+
| in such a way that the truth value of any complex statement is fixed for
| to the criticism of containing the un-understood word
+
| each state-description by specifiable logical laws.  A statement is then
| "analytic";  and we may grant for the sake of argument
+
| explained as analytic when it comes out true under every state-description.
| that there is no difficulty over the broader term "true".
+
| This account is an adaptation of Leibniz's "true in all possible worlds".
| A semantical rule of this second type, a rule of truth,
+
| But note that this version of analyticity serves its purpose only if the
| is not supposed to specify all the truths of the language;
+
| atomic statements of the language are, unlike "John is a bachelor" and
| it merely stipulates, recursively or otherwise, a certain
+
| "John is married", mutually independent.  Otherwise there would be a
| multitude of statements which, along with others unspecified,
+
| state-description which assigned truth to "John is a bachelor" and to
| are to count as true.  Such a rule may be conceded to be quite
+
| "John is married", and consequently "No bachelors are married" would
| clear. Derivatively, afterward, analyticity can be demarcated
+
| turn out synthetic rather than analytic under the proposed criterion.
| thus:  a statement is analytic if it is (not merely true but)
+
| Thus the criterion of analyticity in terms of state-descriptions
| true according to the semantical rule.
+
| serves only for languages devoid of extralogical synonym-pairs,
 +
| such as "bachelor" and "unmarried man" -- synonym-pairs of the
 +
| type which give rise to the "second class" of analytic statements.
 +
| The criterion in terms of state-descriptions is a reconstruction
 +
| at best of logical truth, not of analyticity.
 
|
 
|
| Still there is really no progressInstead of appealing to an unexplained
+
| I do not mean to suggest that Carnap is under any illusions on this
| word "analytic", we are now appealing to an unexplained phrase "semantical
+
| pointHis simplified model language with its state-descriptions
| rule". Not every true statement which says that the statements of some
+
| is aimed primarily not at the general problem of analyticity but
| class are true can count as a semantical rule -- otherwise 'all' truths
+
| at another purpose, the clarification of probability and induction.
| would be "analytic" in the sense of being true according to semantical
+
| Our problem, however, is analyticity; and here the major difficulty
| rules.  Semantical rules are distinguishable, apparently, only by the
+
| lies not in the first class of analytic statements, the logical truths,
| fact of appearing on a page under the heading "Semantical Rules";
+
| but rather in the second class, which depends on the notion of synonymy.
| and this heading is itself then meaningless.
 
 
|
 
|
| We can say indeed that a statement is 'analytic-for-L_0' if and
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 23-24.
| only if it is true according to such and such specifically appended
 
| "semantical rules", but then we find ourselves back at essentially the
 
| same case which was originally discussed:  "S is analytic-for-L_0" if and
 
| only if ...".  Once we seek to explain "S is analytic for L" generally for
 
| variable "L" (even allowing limitation of "L" to artificial languages),
 
| the explanation "true according to the semantical rules of L" is
 
| unavailing;  for the relative term "semantical rule of" is as
 
| much in need of clarification, at least, as "analytic for".
 
|
 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 34.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 6,653: Line 8,556:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 20
+
===TDOE. Note 7===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 4Semantical Rules (cont.)
+
| 2Definition
 
|
 
|
| It may be instructive to compare the notion of semantical rule with that
+
| There are those who find it soothing to say that the analytic statements
| of postulate.  Relative to a given set of postulates, it is easy to say
+
| of the second class reduce to those of the first class, the logical truths,
| what a postulate is: it is a member of the set. Relative to a given
+
| by 'definition'; "bachelor", for example, is 'defined' as "unmarried man".
| set of semantical rules, it is equally easy to say what a semantical
+
| But how do we find that "bachelor" is defined as "unmarried man"?  Who
| rule is. But given simply a notation, mathematical or otherwise,
+
| defined it thus, and when? Are we to appeal to the nearest dictionary,
| and indeed as thoroughly understood a notation as you please in
+
| and accept the lexicographer's formulation as law? Clearly this would
| point of the translations or truth conditions of its statements,
+
| be to put the cart before the horseThe lexicographer is an empirical
| who can say which of its true statements rank as postulates?
+
| scientist, whose business is the recording of antecedent facts;  and if
| Obviously the question is meaningless -- as meaningless as
+
| he glosses "bachelor" as "unmarried man" it is because of his belief that
| asking which points in Ohio are starting pointsAny finite
+
| there is a relation of synonymy between those forms, implicit in general or
| (or effectively specifiable infinite) selection of statements
+
| preferred usage prior to his own workThe notion of synonymy presupposed
| (preferably true ones, perhaps) is as much 'a' set of postulates
+
| here has still to be clarified, presumably in terms relating to linguistic
| as any other.  The word "postulate" is significant only relative
+
| behaviorCertainly the "definition" which is the lexicographer's report
| to an act of inquiry;  we apply the word to a set of statements just
+
| of an observed synonymy cannot be taken as the ground of the synonymy.
| in so far as we happen, for the year or the moment, to be thinking of
 
| those statements in relation to the statements which can be reached from
 
| them by some set of transformations to which we have seen fit to direct our
 
| attentionNow the notion of semantical rule is as sensible and meaningful as
 
| that of postulate, if conceived in a similarly relative spirit -- relative, this
 
| time, to one or another particular enterprise of schooling unconversant persons
 
| in sufficient conditions for truth of statements of some natural or artificial
 
| language LBut from this point of view no one signalization of a subclass
 
| of the truths of L is intrinsically more a semantical rule than another;
 
| and, if "analytic" means "true by semantical rules", no one truth of L
 
| is analytic to the exclusion of another.*
 
 
|
 
|
|*The foregoing paragraph was not part of the present essay as
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 24.
| originally published.  It was prompted by Martin [R.M. Martin,
 
| "On 'Analytic'", 'Philosophical Studies', vol. 3 (1952), 42-47],
 
| as was the end of Essay 7.
 
|
 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 35.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 6,699: Line 8,586:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 21
+
===TDOE. Note 8===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 4Semantical Rules (concl.)
+
| 2Definition (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| It might conceivably be protested that an artificial language L
+
| Definition is not, indeed, an activity exclusively of philologists.
| (unlike a natural one) is a language in the ordinary sense 'plus'
+
| Philosophers and scientists frequently have occasion to "define"
| a set of explicit semantical rules -- the whole constituting, let
+
| a recondite term by paraphrasing it into terms of a more familiar
| us say, an ordered pair;  and that the semantical rules of L then
+
| vocabulary.  But ordinarily such a definition, like the philologist's,
| are specifiable simply as the second component of the pair L.  But,
+
| is pure lexicography, affirming a relation of synonymy antecedent to
| by the same token and more simply, we might construe an artificial
+
| the exposition in hand.
| language L outright as an ordered pair whose second component is the
 
| class of its analytic statements;  and then the analytic statements of L
 
| become specifiable simply as the statements in the second component of L.
 
| Or better still, we might just stop tugging at our bootstraps altogether.
 
 
|
 
|
| Not all the explanations of analyticity known to Carnap
+
| Just what it means to affirm synonymy, just what the interconnections
| and his readers have been covered explicitly in the above
+
| may be which are necessary and sufficient in order that two linguistic
| considerations, but the extension to other forms is not hard
+
| forms be properly describable as synonymous, is far from clear;  but,
| to see.  Just one additional factor should be mentioned which
+
| whatever these interconnections may be, ordinarily they are grounded
| sometimes enters:  sometimes the semantical rules are in effect
+
| in usageDefinitions reporting selected instances of synonymy come
| rules of translation into ordinary language, in which case the
+
| then as reports upon usage.
| analytic statements of the artificial language are in effect
 
| recognized as such from the analyticity of their specified
 
| translations in ordinary languageHere certainly there
 
| can be no thought of an illumination of the problem of
 
| analyticity from the side of the artificial language.
 
 
|
 
|
| From the point of view of the problem of analyticity the notion of an
+
| There is also, however, a variant type of definitional activity which does
| artificial language with semantical rules is a 'feu follet par excellence'.
+
| not limit itself to the reporting of pre-existing synonymies.  I have in
| Semantical rules determining the analytic statements of an artificial language
+
| mind what Carnap calls 'explication' -- an activity to which philosophers
| are of interest only in so far as we already understand the notion of analyticity;
+
| are given, and scientists also in their more philosophical moments. In
| they are of no help in gaining this understanding.
+
| explication the purpose is not merely to paraphrase the definiendum into
|
+
| an outright synonym, but actually to improve upon the definiendum by
| Appeal to hypothetical languages of an artificially simple
+
| refining or supplementing its meaning.  But even explication, though
| kind could conceivably be useful in clarifying analyticity,
+
| not merely reporting a pre-existing synonymy between definiendum and
| if the mental or behavioral or cultural factors relevant to
+
| definiens, does rest nevertheless on 'other' pre-existing synonymies.
| analyticity -- whatever they may be -- were somehow sketched
+
| The matter might be viewed as followsAny word worth explicating
| into the simplified modelBut a model which takes analyticity
+
| has some contexts which, as wholes, are clear and precise enough
| merely as an irreducible character is unlikely to throw light on
+
| to be useful;  and the purpose of explication is to preserve the
| the problem of explicating analyticity.
+
| usage of these favored contexts while sharpening the usage of
|
+
| other contexts. In order that a given definition be suitable
| It is obvious that truth in general depends on both language and extralinguistic
+
| for purposes of explication, therefore, what is required is not
| fact.  The statement "Brutus killed Caesar" would be false if the world had
+
| that the definiendum in its antecedent usage be synonymous with
| been different in certain ways, but it would also be false if the word
+
| the definiens, but just that each of these favored contexts of
| "killed" happened rather to have the sense of "begat". Thus one is
+
| the definiendum, taken as a whole in its antecedent usage, be
| tempted to suppose in general that the truth of a statement is
+
| synonymous with the corrsponding context of the definiens.
| somehow analyzable into a linguistic component and a factual
+
|  
| component.  Given this supposition, it next seems reasonable
+
| Two alternative definientia may be equally appropriate for the purposes
| that in some statements the factual component should be null;
+
| of a given task of explication and yet not be synonymous with each other;
| and these are the analytic statements.  But, for all its
+
| for they may serve interchangeably within the favored contexts but diverge
| a priori reasonableness, a boundary between analytic
+
| elsewhere.  By cleaving to one of these definientia rather than the other,
| and synthetic statements simply has not been drawn.
+
| a definition of explicative kind generates, by fiat, a relation of synonymy
| That there is such a distinction to be drawn at
+
| between definiendum and definiens which did not hold before. But such a
| all is an unempirical dogma of empiricists,
+
| definition still owes its explicative function, as seen, to pre-existing
| a metaphysical article of faith.
+
| synonymies.
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 35-37.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 24-25.
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 6,766: Line 8,644:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 22
+
===TDOE. Note 9===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 5The Verification Theory and Reductionism
+
| 2Definition (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| In the course of these somber reflections we have taken a dim view first
+
| There does, however, remain still an extreme sort of definition
| of the notion of meaning, then of the notion of cognitive synonymy, and
+
| which does not hark back to prior synonymies at all:  namely,
| finally of the notion of analyticityBut what, it may be asked, of
+
| the explicitly conventional introduction of novel notations
| the verification theory of meaning? This phrase has established
+
| for purposes of sheer abbreviationHere the definiendum
| itself so firmly as a catchword of empiricism that we should be
+
| becomes synonymous with the definiens simply because it
| very unscientific indeed not to look beneath it for a possible
+
| has been created expressly for the purpose of being
| key to the problem of meaning and the associated problems.
+
| synonymous with the definiens.  Here we have a
 +
| really transparent case of synonymy created
 +
| by definition; would that all species of
 +
| synonymy were as intelligible.  For the
 +
| rest, definition rests on synonymy
 +
| rather than explaining it.
 
|
 
|
| The verification theory of meaning, which has been conspicuous in the
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 25-26.
| literature from Peirce onward, is that the meaning of a statement is
 
| the method of empirically confirming or infirming it. An analytic
 
| statement is that limiting case which is confirmed no matter what.
 
 
|
 
|
| As urged in Section 1, we can as well pass over the question of
+
| W.V. Quine,
| meanings as entities and move straight to sameness of meaning,
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| or synonymy.  Then what the verification theory says is that
 
| statements are synonymous if and only if they are alike in
 
| point of method of empirical confirmation or infirmation.
 
|
 
| This is an account of cognitive synonymy not of linguistic forms generally,
 
| but of statements.*  However, from the concept of synonymy of statements
 
| we could derive the concept of synonymy for other linguistic forms, by
 
| considerations somewhat similar to those at the end of Section 3.
 
| Assuming the notion of "word", indeed, we could explain any
 
| two forms as synonymous when the putting of one form for
 
| an occurrence of the other in any statement (apart from
 
| occurrences within "words") yields a synonymous statement.
 
| Finally, given the concept of synonymy thus for linguistic
 
| forms generally, we could define analyticity in terms of
 
| synonymy and logical truth as in Section 1.  For that
 
| matter, we could define analyticity more simply in
 
| terms of just synonymy of statements together with
 
| logical truth;  it is not necessary to appeal to
 
| synonymy of linguistic forms other than statements.
 
| For a statement may be described as analytic simply
 
| when it is synonymous with a logically true statement.
 
|
 
|*The doctrine can indeed be formulated with terms rather than statements as the
 
| units.  Thus Lewis describes the meaning of a term as "'a criterion in mind',
 
| by reference to which one is able to apply or refuse to apply the expression
 
| in question in the case of presented, or imagined, things or situations"
 
| [C.I. Lewis, 'An Analysis of Knowledge and Valuation', Open Court, LaSalle,
 
| IL, 1946, p. 133]. -- For an instructive account of the vicissitudes of
 
| the verification theory of meaning, centered however on the question
 
| of meaning'fulness' rather than synonymy and analyticity, see Hempel.
 
|
 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 37-38.
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
 
 
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 23
+
===TDOE. Note 10===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 5The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
+
| 2Definition (concl.)
 
|
 
|
| So, if the verification theory can be accepted as an adequate account
+
| The word "definition" has come to have a dangerously reassuring sound,
| of statement synonymy, the notion of analyticity is saved after all.
+
| owing no doubt to its frequent occurrence in logical and mathematical
| However, let us reflectStatement synonymy is said to be likeness
+
| writingsWe shall do well to digress now into a brief appraisal of
| of method of empirical confirmation or infirmation.  Just what are
+
| the role of definition in formal work.
| these methods which are to be compared for likeness?  What, in
 
| other words, is the nature of the relation between a statement
 
| and the experiences which contribute to or detract from its
 
| confirmation?
 
 
|
 
|
| The most naive view of the relation is that it is one of direct report.
+
| In logical and mathematical systems either of two mutually antagonistic
| This is 'radical reductionism'Every meaningful statement is held to be
+
| types of economy may be striven for, and each has its peculiar practical
| translatable into a statement (true or false) about immediate experience.
+
| utilityOn the one hand we may seek economy of practical expression --
| Radical reductionism, in one form or another, well antedates the verification
+
| ease and brevity in the statement of multifarious relations. This sort
| theory of meaning explicitly so calledThus Locke and Hume held that every
+
| of economy calls usually for distinctive concise notations for a wealth
| idea must either originate directly in sense experience or else be compounded
+
| of conceptsSecond, however, and oppositely, we may seek economy in
| of ideas thus originatingand taking a hint from Tooke we might rephrase
+
| grammar and vocabularywe may try to find a minimum of basic concepts
| this doctrine in semantical jargon by saying that a term, to be significant
+
| such that, once a distinctive notation has been appropriated to each of
| at all, must be either a name of a sense datum or a compound of such names or
+
| them, it becomes possible to express any desired further concept by mere
| an abbreviation of such a compoundSo stated, the doctrine remains ambiguous
+
| combination and iteration of our basic notationsThis second sort of
| as between sense data as sensory events and sense data as sensory qualities;
+
| economy is impractical in one way, since a poverty in basic idioms tends
| and it remains vague as to the admissible ways of compoundingMoreover, the
+
| to a necessary lengthening of discourseBut it is practical in another
| doctrine is unnecessarily and intolerably restrictive in the term-by-term
+
| way:  it greatly simplifies theoretical discourse 'about' the language,
| critique which it imposes.  More reasonably, and without yet exceeding
+
| through minimizing the terms and the forms of construction wherein the
| the limits of what I have called radical reductionism, we may take full
+
| language consists.
| statements as our significant units -- thus demanding that our statements
 
| as wholes be translatable into sense-datum language, but not that they be
 
| translatable term by term.
 
 
|
 
|
| This emendation would unquestionably have been welcome to Locke and Hume
+
| Both sorts of economy, though prima facie incompatible, are valuable in
| and Tooke, but historically it had to await an important reorientation in
+
| their separate ways.  The custom has consequently arisen of combining
| semantics -- the reorientation whereby the primary vehicle of meaning came
+
| both sorts of economy by forging in effect two langauges, the one
| to be seen no longer in the term but in the statementThis reorientation,
+
| a part of the otherThe inclsuive language, though redundant
| seen in Bentham and Frege, underlies Russell's concept of incomplete symbols
+
| in grammar and vocabulary, is economical in message lengths,
| defined in use; also it is implicit in the verification theory of meaning,
+
| while the part, called primitive notation, is economical in
| since the objects of verification are statements.
+
| grammar and vocabulary. Whole and part are correlated by
 +
| rules of translation whereby each idiom not in primitive
 +
| notation is equated to some complex built up of primitive
 +
| notation.  These rules of translation are the so-called
 +
| 'definitions' which appear in formalized systems.  They
 +
| are best viewed not as adjuncts to one language but as
 +
| correlations between two languages, the one a part of
 +
| the other.
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 38-39.
+
| But these correlations are not arbitrary.  They are supposed
 +
| to show how the primitive notations can accomplish all purposes,
 +
| save brevity and convenience, of the redundant language. Hence
 +
| the definiendum and its definiens may be expected, in each case,
 +
| to be related in one or another of the three ways lately noted.
 +
| The definiens may be a faithful paraphrase of the definiendum
 +
| into the narrower notation, preseving a direct synonymy* as
 +
| of antecedent usage;  or the definiens may, in the spirit
 +
| of explication, improve upon the antecedent usage of the
 +
| definiendum;  or finally, the definiendum may be a newly
 +
| created notation, newly endowed with meaning here and now.
 
|
 
|
| W.V. Quine,
+
| In formal and informal work alike, thus, we find
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
| that definition -- except in the extreme case of the
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
+
| explicitly conventional introduction of new notations --
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
+
| hinges on prior relations of synonymyRecognizing then
 
+
| that the notion of definition does not hold the key to
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| synonymy and analyticity, let us look further into
 
+
| synonymy and say no more of definition.
TDOENote 24
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| 5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
 
 
|
 
|
| Radical reductionism, conceived now with statements as units,
+
|*According to an important variant sense of "definition", the relation
| set itself the task of specifying a sense-datum language and
+
| preserved may be the weaker relation of mere agreement in reference;
| showing how to translate the rest of significant discourse,
+
| see below, p. 132But definition in this sense is better ignored in
| statement by statement, into itCarnap embarked on this
+
| the present connection, being irrelevant to the question of synonymy.
| project in the 'Aufbau'.
 
 
|
 
|
| The language which Carnap adopted as his starting point was not
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 26-27.
| a sense-datum language in the narrowest conceivable sense, for
 
| it included also the notations of logic, up through higher set
 
| theory.  In effect it included the whole language of pure
 
| mathematics.  The ontology implicit in it (that is, the
 
| range of values of its variables) embraced not only
 
| sensory events but classes, classes of classes, and
 
| so on.  Empiricists there are who would boggle at
 
| such prodigality.  Carnap's starting point is
 
| very parsimonious, however, in its extralogical
 
| or sensory part.  In a series of constructions in
 
| which he exploits the resources of modern logic with
 
| much ingenuity, Carnap succeeds in defining a wide array
 
| of important additional sensory concepts which, but for his
 
| constructions, one would not have dreamed were definable on
 
| so slender a basis.  He was the first empiricist who, not
 
| content with asserting the reducibility of science to
 
| terms of immediate experience, took serious steps
 
| toward carrying out the reduction.
 
|
 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 39.
 
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 6,919: Line 8,748:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 25
+
===TDOE. Note 11===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 5The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
+
| 3Interchangeability
 
|
 
|
| If Carnap's starting point is satisfactory,
+
| A natural suggestion, deserving close examination, is that the synonymy
| still his constructions were, as he himself
+
| of two linguistic forms consists simply in their interchangeability in
| stressed, only a fragment of the full program.
+
| all contexts without change of truth value -- interchangeability, in
| The construction of even the simplest statements
+
| Leibniz's phrase 'salva veritate'. Note that synonyms so conceived
| about the physical world was left in a sketchy state.
+
| need not even be free from vagueness, as long as the vaguenesses
| Carnap's suggestions on this subject were, despite their
+
| match.
| sketchiness, very suggestive. He explained spatio-temporal
+
|
| point-instants as quadruples of real numbers and envisaged
+
| But it is not quite true that the synonyms "bachelor" and "unmarried man"
| assignment of sense qualities to point-instants according
+
| are everywhere interchangeable 'salva veritate'Truths which become false
| to certain canonsRoughly summarized, the plan was that
+
| under substitution of "unmarried man" for "bachelor" are easily constructed
| qualities should be assigned to point-instants in such a
+
| with the help of "bachelor of arts" or "bachelor's buttons";  also with the
| way as to achieve the laziest world compatible with our
+
| help of quotation, thus:
| experience.  The principle of least action was to be
 
| our guide in constructing a world from experience.
 
 
|
 
|
| Carnap did not seem to recognize, however, that his treatment
+
|   "Bachelor" has less than ten letters.
| of physical objects fell short of reduction not merely through
 
| sketchiness, but in principle.  Statements of the form "Quality
 
| q is at point-instant x;y;z;t" were, according to his canons,
 
| to be apportioned truth vakues in such a way as to maximize
 
| and minimize certain over-all features, and with growth of
 
| experience the truth values were to be progressively revised
 
| in the same spirit.  I think that this is a good schematization
 
| (deliberately oversimplified, to be sure) of what science really
 
| does;  but it provides no indication, not even the sketchiest, of
 
| how a statement of the form "Quality q is at x;y;z;t" could ever
 
| be translated into Carnap's initial language of sense data and
 
| logic.  The connective "is at" remains an added undefined
 
| connective;  the canons counsel us in its use but not
 
| in its elimination.
 
 
|
 
|
| Carnap seems to have appreciated this point afterward;
+
| Such counterinstances can, however, be set aside by treating
| for in his later writings he abandoned all notion of
+
| the phrases "bachelor of arts" and "bachelor's buttons" and the
| the translatability of statements about the physical
+
| quotation '"bachelor"' each as a single indivisible word and then
| world into statements about immediate experience.
+
| stipulating that the interchangeability 'salva veritate' which
| Reductionism in its radical form has long since
+
| is to be the touchstone of synonymy is not supposed to apply
| ceased to figure in Carnap's philosophy.
+
| to fragmentary occurrences inside of a word. This account of
 +
| synonymy, supposing it acceptable on other counts, has indeed
 +
| the drawback of appealing to a prior conception of "word" which
 +
| can be counted on to present difficulties of formulation in its
 +
| turn.  Nevertheless some progress might be claimed in having
 +
| reduced the problem of synonymy to a problem of wordhood.
 +
| Let us pursue this line a bit, taking "word" for granted.
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 39-40.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 27-28.
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 6,972: Line 8,791:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 26
+
===TDOE. Note 12===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 5The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
+
| 3Interchangeability (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| But the dogma of reductionism has, in a subtler and more tenuous form,
+
| The question remains whether interchangeability
| continued to influence the thought of empiricistsThe notion lingers
+
| 'salva veritate' (apart from occurrences within words)
| that to each statement, or each synthetic statement, there is associated
+
| is a strong enough condition for synonymy, or whether,
| a unique range of possible sensory events such that the occurrence of any
+
| on the contrary, some heteronymous expressions might be thus
| of them would add to the likelihood of truth of the statement, and that
+
| interchangeable.  Now let us be clear that we are not concerned
| there is associated also another unique range of possible sensory events
+
| here with synonymy in the sense of complete identity in psychological
| whose occurrence would detract from that likelihood.  This notion is of
+
| associations or poetic quality;  indeed no two expressions are synonymous
| course implicit in the verification theory of meaning.
+
| in such a senseWe are concerned only with what may be called 'cognitive'
 +
| synonymy.  Just what this is cannot be said without successfully finishing the
 +
| present study;  but we know something about it from the need which arose for
 +
| it in connection with analyticity in Section 1.  The sort of synonymy needed
 +
| there was merely such that any analytic statement could be turned into a
 +
| logical truth by putting synonyms for synonyms.  Turning the tables and
 +
| assuming analyticity, indeed, we could explain cognitive synonymy of
 +
| terms as follows (keeping to the familiar example):  to say that
 +
| "bachelor" and "unmarried man" are cognitively synonymous is
 +
| to say no more or less than that the statement:
 
|
 
|
| The dogma of reductionism survives in the supposition that each statement,
+
| (3) All and only bachelors are unmarried men
| taken in isolation from its fellows, can admit of confirmation or infirmation
 
| at all. My countersuggestion, issuing essentially from Carnap's doctrine of
 
| the physical world in the 'Aufbau', is that our statements about the external
 
| world face the tribunal of sense experience not individually but only as a
 
| corporate body.*
 
 
|
 
|
|*This doctrine was well argued by Duhem [Pierre Duhem, 'La Theorie Physique:
+
| is analytic.*
| Son Object et Sa Structure', Paris, 1906, pp. 303-328].  Or see Lowinger
 
| Armand Lowinger, 'The Methodology of Pierre Duhem', Columbia University
 
| Press, New York, NY, 1941, pp. 132-140].
 
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 40-41.
+
|*This is cognitive synonymy in a primary, broad sense.  Carnap ([3],
 +
| pp. 56ff) and Lewis ([2], pp. 83ff) have suggested how, once this
 +
| notion is at hand, a narrower sense of cognitive synonymy which
 +
| is preferable for some purposes can in turn be derived.  But
 +
| this special ramification of concept-building lies aside
 +
| from the present purposes and must not be confused with
 +
| the broad sort of cognitive synonymy here concerned.
 +
|
 +
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 28-29.
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 7,008: Line 8,836:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 27
+
===TDOE. Note 13===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 5The Verification Theory and Reductionism (concl.)
+
| 3Interchangeability (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| The dogma of reductionism, even in its attenuated form, is intimately
+
| What we need is an account of cognitive synonymy
| connected with the other dogma -- that there is a cleavage between
+
| not presupposing analyticity -- if we are to explain
| the analytic and the syntheticWe have found ourselves led,
+
| analyticity conversely with help of cognitive synonymy
| indeed, from the latter problem to the former through the
+
| as undertaken in Section 1And indeed such an independent
| verification theory of meaningMore directly, the one
+
| account of cognitive synonymy is at present up for consideration,
| dogma clearly supports the other in this way:  as long
+
| namely, interchangeability 'salva veritate' everywhere except within
| as it is taken to be significant in general to speak
+
| wordsThe question before us, to resume the thread at last, is whether
| of the confirmation and infirmation of a statement,
+
| such interchangeability is a sufficient condition for cognitive synonymy.
| it seems significant to speak also of a limiting
+
| We can quickly assure ourselves that it is, by examples of the following
| kind of statement which is vacuously confirmed,
+
| sort. The statement:
| 'ipso facto', come what may; and such
 
| a statement is analytic.
 
 
|
 
|
| The two dogmas are, indeed, at root identical. We lately reflected
+
| (4) Necessarily all and only bachelors are bachelors
| that in general the truth of statements does obviously depend both
 
| upon language and upon extralinguistic fact;  and we noted that
 
| this obvious circumstance carries in its train, not logically
 
| but all too naturally, a feeling that the truth of a statement
 
| is somehow analyzable into a linguistic component and a factual
 
| component.  The factual component must, if we are empiricists,
 
| boil down to a range of confirmatory experiences.  In the
 
| extreme case where the linguistic component is all that
 
| matters, a true statement is analytic.  But I hope we are
 
| now impressed with how stubbornly the distinction between
 
| analytic and synthetic has resisted any straightforward
 
| drawing.  I am impressed also, apart from prefabricated
 
| examples of black and white balls in an urn, with how
 
| baffling the problem has always been of arriving at
 
| any explicit theory of the empirical confirmation of
 
| a synthetic statement.  My present suggestion is that
 
| it is nonsense, and the root of much nonsense, to speak
 
| of a linguistic component and a factual component in the
 
| truth of any individual statement.  Taken collectively,
 
| science has its double dependence upon language and
 
| experience;  but this duality is not significantly
 
| traceable into the statements of science taken
 
| one by one.
 
 
|
 
|
| The idea of defining a symbol in use was, as remarked, an advance
+
| is evidently true, even supposing "necessarily" so narrowly construed as
| over the impossible term-by-term empiricism of Locke and Hume.
+
| to be truly applicable only to analytic statementsThen, if "bachelor"
| The statement, rather than the term, came with Bentham to be
+
| and "unmarried man" are interchangeable 'salva veritate', the result:
| recognized as the unit accountable to an empiricist critique.
 
| But what I am now urging is that even in taking the statement
 
| as unit we have drawn our grid too finelyThe unit of empirical
 
| significance is the whole of science.
 
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 41-42.
+
| (5)  Necessarily all and only bachelors are unmarried men
 
|
 
|
| W.V. Quine,
+
| of putting "unmarried man" for an occurrence of "bachelor" in (4) must,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
+
| like (4), be true. But to say that (5) is true is to say that (3) is
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
+
| analytic, and hence that "bachelor" and "unmarried man" are cognitively
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
+
| synonymous.
 
+
|
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| Let us see what there is about the above argument that gives it its air
 
+
| of hocus-pocus.  The condition of interchangeability 'salva veritate'
TDOENote 28
+
| varies in its force with variations in the richness of the language
 
+
| at handThe above argument supposes we are working with a language
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| rich enough to contain the adverb "necessarily", this adverb being so
 
+
| construed as to yield truth when and only when applied to an analytic
| 6Empiricism without the Dogmas
+
| statement.  But can we condone a language which contains such an adverb?
 +
| Does the adverb really make sense?  To suppose that it does is to suppose
 +
| that we have already made satisfactory sense of "analytic"Then what are
 +
| we so hard at work on right now?
 
|
 
|
| The totality of our so-called knowledge or beliefs, from the most
+
| Our argument is not flatly circular, but something like it.
| casual matters of geography and history to the profoundest laws of
+
| It has the form, figuratively speaking, of a closed curve
| atomic physics or even of pure mathematics and logic, is a man-made
+
| in space.
| fabric which impinges on experience only along the edges.  Or, to
 
| change the figure, total science is like a field of force whose
 
| boundary conditions are experience. A conflict with experience at
 
| the periphery occasions readjustments in the interior of the field.
 
| Truth values have to be redistributed over some of our statements.
 
| Re-evaluation of some statements entails re-evaluation of others,
 
| because of their logical interconnections -- the logical laws
 
| being in turn simply certain further statements of the system,
 
| certain further elements of the field.  Having re-evaluated one
 
| statement we must re-evaluate some others, which may be statements
 
| logically connected with the first or may be the statements of logical
 
| connections themselves.  But the total field is so underdetermined by
 
| its boundary conditions, experience, that there is much latitude of
 
| choice as to what statements to re-evaluate in the light of any
 
| single contrary experience.  No particular experiences are
 
| linked with any particular statements in the interior of
 
| the field, except indirectly through considerations
 
| of equilibrium affecting the field as a whole.
 
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 42-43.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 29-30.
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 7,106: Line 8,890:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 29
+
===TDOE. Note 14===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 6Empiricism without the Dogmas (cont.)
+
| 3Interchangeability (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| If this view is right, it is misleading to speak of the empirical content of
+
| Interchangeability 'salva veritate' is meaningless until relativized to
| an individual statement -- especially if it is a statement at all remote from
+
| a language whose extent is specified in relevant respects.  Suppose now
| the experiential periphery of the fieldFurthermore it becomes folly to seek
+
| we consider a language containing just the following materialsThere
| a boundary between synthetic statements, which hold contingently on experience,
+
| is an indefinitely large stock of one-place predicates, (for example,
| and analytic statements, which hold come what mayAny statement can be held
+
| "F" where "Fx" means that x is a man) and many-place predicates (for
| true come what may, if we make drastic enough adjustments elsewhere in the
+
| example, "G" where "Gxy" means that x loves y), mostly having to
| systemEven a statement very close to the periphery can be held true in
+
| do with extralogical subject matterThe rest of the language
| the face of recalcitrant experience by pleading hallucination or by amending
+
| is logical.  The atomic sentences consist each of a predicate
| certain statements of the kind called logical laws. Conversely, by the same
+
| followed by one or more variables "x", "y", etc.; and the
| token, no statement is immune to revision. Revision even of the logical law
+
| complex sentences are built up of the atomic ones by truth
| of the excluded middle has been proposed as a means of simplifying quantum
+
| functions ("not", "and", "or", etc.) and quantification.
| mechanics;  and what difference is there in principle between such a shift
+
| In effect such a language enjoys the benefits also of
| and the shift whereby Kepler superseded Ptolemy, or Einstein Newton, or
+
| descriptions and indeed singular terms generally,
| Darwin Aristotle?
+
| these being contextually definable in known ways.
 +
| Even abstract singular terms naming classes,
 +
| classes of classes, etc., are contextually
 +
| definable in case the assumed stock of
 +
| predicates includes the two-place
 +
| predicate of class membership.
 +
| Such a language can be adequate
 +
| to classical mathematics and
 +
| indeed to scientific discourse
 +
| generally, except in so far as
 +
| the latter involves debatable
 +
| devices such as contrary-to-fact
 +
| conditionals or modal adverbs like
 +
| "necessarily".  Now a language of this
 +
| type is extensional, in this sense:  any
 +
| two predicates which agree extensionally
 +
| (that is, are true of the same objects)
 +
| are interchangeable 'salva veritate'.
 +
|
 +
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 30.
 
|
 
|
| For vividness I have been speaking in terms of varying distances
+
| W.V. Quine,
| from a sensory periphery. Let me try now to clarify this notion
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| without metaphor.  Certain statements, though 'about' physical
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| objects and not sense experience, seem peculiarly germane to
+
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
| sense experience -- and in a selective way:  some statements to
+
 
| some experiences, others to othersSuch statements, especially
+
</pre>
| germane to particular experiences, I picture as near the periphery.
+
 
| But in this relation of "germaneness" I envisage nothing more than a
+
===TDOE. Note 15===
| loose association reflecting the relative likelihood, in practice, of
+
 
| our choosing one statement rather than another for revision in the event
+
<pre>
| of recalcitrant experience. For example, we can imagine recalcitrant
+
 
| experiences to which we would surely be inclined to accommodate our
+
| 3Interchangeability (cont.)
| system by re-evaluating just the statement that there are brick
+
|
| houses on Elm Street, together with related statements on the
+
| In an extensional language, therefore, interchangeability
| same topicWe can imagine other recalcitrant experiences
+
| 'salva veritate' is no assurance of cognitive synonymy of
| to which we would be inclined to accommodate our system by
+
| the desired type. That "bachelor" and "unmarried man" are
| re-evaluating just the statement that there are no centaurs,
+
| interchangeable 'salva veritate' in an extensional language
| along with kindred statemnts. A recalcitrant experience can,
+
| assures us of no more than that (3) is true.  There is no
| I have urged, be accommodated by any of various alternative
+
| assurance here that the extensional agreement of "bachelor"
| re-evaluations in various alternative quarters of the total
+
| and "unmarried man" rests on meaning rather than merely on
| system;  but, in the cases which we are now imagining, our
+
| accidental matters of fact, as does the extensional agreement
| natural tendency to disturb the total system as little as
+
| of "creature with a heart" and "creature with kidneys".
| possible would lead us to focus our revisions upon these
+
|
| specific statements concerning brick houses or centaurs.
+
| For most purposes extensional agreement is the nearest approximation
| These statements are felt, therefore, to have a sharper
+
| to synonymy we need care about.  But the fact remains that extensional
| empirical reference than highly theoretical statements
+
| agreement falls far short of cognitive synonymy of the type required for
| of physics or logic or ontology.  The latter statements
+
| explaining analyticity in the manner of Section 1The type of cognitive
| may be thought of as relatively centrally located within
+
| synonymy required there is such as to equate the synonymy of "bachelor"
| the total network, meaning merely that little preferential
+
| and "unmarried man" with the analyticity of (3), not merely with the
| connection with any particular sense data obtrudes itself.
+
| truth of (3).
 +
|
 +
| So we must recognize that interchangeability 'salva veritate',
 +
| if construed in relation to an extensional language, is not
 +
| a sufficient condition of cognitive synonymy in the sense
 +
| needed for deriving analyticity in the manner of Section 1.
 +
| If a language contains an intensional adverb "necessarily" in
 +
| the sense lately noted, or other particles to the same effect,
 +
| then interchangeability 'salva veritate' in such a language
 +
| does afford a sufficient condition of cognitive synonymy;
 +
| but such a language is intelligible only in so far as the
 +
| notion of analyticity is already understood in advance.
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 43-44.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 31.
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 7,167: Line 8,981:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 30
+
===TDOE. Note 16===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 6Empiricism without the Dogmas (cont.)
+
| 3Interchangeability (concl.)
 
|
 
|
| As an empiricist I continue to think of the conceptual scheme of science as
+
| The effort to explain cognitive synonymy first, for the sake
| a tool, ultimately, for predicting future experience in the light of past
+
| of deriving analyticity from it afterward as in Section 1, is
| experiencePhysical objects are conceptually imported into the situation
+
| perhaps the wrong approach.  Instead we might try explaining
| as convenient intermediaries -- not by definition in terms of experience,
+
| analyticity somehow without appeal to cognitive synonymy.
| but simply as irreducible posits comparable, epistemologically, to the
+
| Afterward we could doubtless derive cognitive synonymy from
| gods of HomerFor my part I do, qua lay physicist, believe in physical
+
| analyticity satisfactorily enough if desired.  We have seen
| objects and not in Homer's gods;  and I consider it a scientific error
+
| that cognitive synonymy of "bachelor" and "unmarried man" can
| to believe otherwise.  But in point of epistemological footing the
+
| be explained as analyticity of (3)The same explanation works
| physical objects and the gods differ only in degree and not in kind.
+
| for any pair of one-place predicates, of course, and it can
| Both sorts of entities enter our conception only as cultural posits.
+
| be extended in obvious fashion to many-place predicates.
| The myth of physical objects is epistemologically superior to most
+
| Other syntactical categories can also be accommodated in
| in that it has proved more efficacious than other myths as a device
+
| fairly parallel fashion.  Singular terms may be said to be
| for working a manageable structure into the flux of experience.
+
| cognitively synonymous when the statement of identity formed
 +
| by putting "=" between them is analytic.  Statements may be said
 +
| simply to be cognitively synonymous when their biconditional (the
 +
| result of joining them by "if and only if") is analyticIf we
 +
| care to lump all categories into a single formulation, at the
 +
| expense of assuming again the notion of "word" which was
 +
| appealed to early in this section, we can describe any two
 +
| linguistic forms as cognitively synonymous when the two forms
 +
| are interchangeable (apart from occurrences within "words")
 +
| 'salva' (no longer 'veritate' but) 'analyticitate'. Certain
 +
| technical questions arise, indeed, over cases of ambiguity
 +
| or homonymy;  let us not pause for them, however, for we
 +
| are already digressing.  Let us rather turn our backs
 +
| on the problem of synonymy and address ourselves
 +
| anew to that of analyticity.
 
|
 
|
| Positing does not stop with macroscopic physical objects.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 31-32.
| Objects at the atomic level are posited to make the laws of
 
| macroscopic objects, and ultimately the laws of experience,
 
| simpler and more manageable;  and we need not expect or demand
 
| full definition of atomic and subatomic entities in terms of
 
| macroscopic ones, any more than definition of macroscopic things
 
| in terms of sense data. Science is a continuation of common sense,
 
| and it continues the common-sense expedient of swelling ontology to
 
| simplify theory.
 
 
|
 
|
| Physical objects, small and large, are not the only posits.
+
| W.V. Quine,
| Forces are another example; and indeed we are told nowadays that
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| the boundary between energy and matter is obsoleteMoreover, the
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| abstract entities which are the substance of mathematics -- ultimately
+
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
| classes and classes of classes and so on up -- are another posit in the
+
 
| same spiritEpistemologically these are myths on the same footing with
+
</pre>
| physical objects and gods, neither better nor worse except for differences
+
 
| in the degree to which they expedite our dealings with sense experiences.
+
===TDOE. Note 17===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
 
 +
| 4. Semantical Rules
 +
|
 +
| Analyticity at first seemed most naturally definable by appeal
 +
| to a realm of meaningsOn refinement, the appeal to meanings
 +
| gave way to an appeal to synonymy or definition.  But definition
 +
| turned out to be a will-o'-the-wisp, and synonymy turned out to be
 +
| best understood only by dint of a prior appeal to analyticity itself.
 +
| So we are back at the problem of analyticity.
 +
|
 +
| I do not know whether the statement "Everything green is extended"
 +
| is analyticNow does my indecision over this example really betray
 +
| an incomplete understanding, an incomplete grasp of the "meanings",
 +
| of "green" and "extended"?  I think not.  The trouble is not with
 +
| "green" or "extended", but with "analytic".
 
|
 
|
| The over-all algebra of rational and irrational numbers is
+
| It is often hinted that the difficulty in separating analytic
| underdetermined by the algebra of rational numbers, but is
+
| statements from synthetic ones in ordinary language is due to
| smoother and more convenient;  and it includes the algebra
+
| the vagueness of ordinary language and that the distinction is
| of rational numbers as a jagged or gerrymandered part.
+
| clear when we have a precise artificial language with explicit
| Total science, mathematical and natural and human,
+
| "semantical rules"This, however, as I shall now attempt to
| is similarly but more extremely underdetermined
+
| show, is a confusion.
| by experienceThe edge of the system must be
 
| kept squared with experience;  the rest, with
 
| all its elaborate myths or fictions, has as
 
| its objective the simplicty of laws.
 
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 44-45.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 32.
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 7,226: Line 9,059:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
TDOE. Note 31
+
===TDOE. Note 18===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| 6Empiricism without the Dogmas (concl.)
+
| 4Semantical Rules (cont.)
 
|
 
|
| Ontological questions, under this view, are on a par with questions
+
| The notion of analyticity about which we are worrying is a purported
| of natural science. Consider the question whether to countenance
+
| relation between statements and languages: a statement S is said to
| classes as entities.  This, as I have argued elsewhere, is the
+
| be 'analytic for' a language L, and the problem is to make sense of
| question whether to quantify with respect to variables which
+
| this relation generally, that is, for variable "S" and "L"The
| take classes as valuesNow Carnap [*] has maintained that
+
| gravity of this problem is not perceptibly less for artificial
| this is a question not of matters of fact but of choosing
+
| languages than for natural onesThe problem of making sense
| a convenient language form, a convenient conceptual scheme
+
| of the idiom "S is analytic for L", with variable "S" and "L",
| or framework for scienceWith this I agree, but only on the
+
| retains its stubbornness even if we limit the range of the
| proviso that the same be conceded regarding scientific hypotheses
+
| variable "L" to artificial languages. Let me now try to
| generally.  Carnap ([*], p. 32n) has recognized that he is able to
+
| make this point evident.
| preserve a double standard for ontological questions and scientific
 
| hypotheses only by assuming an absolute distinction between the
 
| analytic and the synthetic; and I need not say again that
 
| this is a distinction which I reject.
 
 
|
 
|
| The issue over there being classes seems more a question of convenient
+
| For artificial languages and semantical rules we look naturally
| conceptual scheme;  the issue over there being centaurs, or brick houses
+
| to the writings of Carnap.  His semantical rules take various forms,
| on Elm street, seems more a question of factBut I have been urging that
+
| and to make my point I shall have to distinguish certain of the forms.
| this difference is only one of degree, and that it turns upon our vaguely
+
| Let us suppose, to begin with, an artificial language L_0 whose semantical
| pragmatic inclination to adjust one strand of the fabric of science rather
+
| rules have the form explicitly of a specification, by recursion or otherwise,
| than another in accommodating some particular recalcitrant experience.
+
| of all the analytic statements of L_0The rules tell us that such and such
| Conservatism figures in such choices, and so does the quest for
+
| statements, and only those, are the analytic statements of L_0.  Now here
| simplicity.
+
| the difficulty is simply that the rules contain the word "analytic",
 +
| which we do not understand!  We understand what expressions the
 +
| rules attribute analyticity to, but we do not understand what
 +
| the rules attribute to those expressions.  In short, before
 +
| we can understand a rule which begins "A statement S is
 +
| analytic for language L_0 if and only if ...", we must
 +
| understand the general relative term "analytic for";
 +
| we must understand "S is analytic for L" where "S"
 +
| and "L" are variables.
 
|
 
|
| Carnap, Lewis, and others take a pragmatic stand on the question of choosing
+
| Alternatively we may, indeed, view the so-called rule as a conventional
| between language forms, scientific frameworks;  but their pragmatism leaves
+
| definition of a new simple symbol "analytic-for-L_0", which might better
| off at the imagined boundary between the analytic and the syntheticIn
+
| be written untendentiously as "K" so as not to seem to throw light on the
| repudiating such a boundary I espouse a more thorough pragmatism. Each
+
| interesting word "analytic"Obviously any number of classes K, M, N, etc.
| man is given a scientific heritage plus a continuing barrage of sensory
+
| of statements of L_0 can be specified for various purposes or for no purpose;
| stimulation; and the considerations which guide him in warping his
+
| what does it mean to say that K, as against M, N, etc., is the class of the
| scientific heritage to fit his continuing sensory promptings are,
+
| "analytic" statements of L_0?
| where rational, pragmatic.
 
 
|
 
|
|*Rudolf Carnap, "Empiricism, Semantics, and Ontology",
+
| By saying what statements are analytic for L_0 we explain
|'Revue Internationale de Philosphie', vol. 4 (1950), pp. 20-40.
+
| "analytic-for-L_0" but not "analytic", not "analytic for".
| Reprinted in Leonard Linsky (ed.), 'Semantics and the Philosophy
+
| We do not begin to explain the idiom "S is analytic for L"
| of Language', University of Illinois Press, Urbana, IL, 1952.
+
| with variable "S" and "L", even if we are content to limit
 +
| the range of "L" to the realm of artificial languages.
 
|
 
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 45-46.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 33-34.
 
|
 
|
 
| W.V. Quine,
 
| W.V. Quine,
Line 7,279: Line 9,116:
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
  
==VOLS. Verities Of Likely Stories==
+
===TDOE. Note 19===
  
 
<pre>
 
<pre>
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
  
VOLSNote 1
+
| 4.  Semantical Rules (cont.)
 
+
|
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| Actually we do know enough about the intended significance of
 
+
| "analytic" to know that analytic statements are supposed to
| These are the forms of time,
+
| be true.  Let us then turn to a second form of semantical
| which imitates eternity and
+
| rule, which says not that such and such statements are
| revolves according to a law
+
| analytic but simply that such and such statements are
| of number.
+
| included among the truths.  Such a rule is not subject
 +
| to the criticism of containing the un-understood word
 +
| "analytic";  and we may grant for the sake of argument
 +
| that there is no difficulty over the broader term "true".
 +
| A semantical rule of this second type, a rule of truth,
 +
| is not supposed to specify all the truths of the language;
 +
| it merely stipulates, recursively or otherwise, a certain
 +
| multitude of statements which, along with others unspecified,
 +
| are to count as true.  Such a rule may be conceded to be quite
 +
| clear.  Derivatively, afterward, analyticity can be demarcated
 +
| thus:  a statement is analytic if it is (not merely true but)
 +
| true according to the semantical rule.
 +
|
 +
| Still there is really no progressInstead of appealing to an unexplained
 +
| word "analytic", we are now appealing to an unexplained phrase "semantical
 +
| rule".  Not every true statement which says that the statements of some
 +
| class are true can count as a semantical rule -- otherwise 'all' truths
 +
| would be "analytic" in the sense of being true according to semantical
 +
| rules.  Semantical rules are distinguishable, apparently, only by the
 +
| fact of appearing on a page under the heading "Semantical Rules";
 +
| and this heading is itself then meaningless.
 +
|
 +
| We can say indeed that a statement is 'analytic-for-L_0' if and
 +
| only if it is true according to such and such specifically appended
 +
| "semantical rules", but then we find ourselves back at essentially the
 +
| same case which was originally discussed:  "S is analytic-for-L_0" if and
 +
| only if ...".  Once we seek to explain "S is analytic for L" generally for
 +
| variable "L" (even allowing limitation of "L" to artificial languages),
 +
| the explanation "true according to the semantical rules of L" is
 +
| unavailing;  for the relative term "semantical rule of" is as
 +
| much in need of clarification, at least, as "analytic for".
 +
|
 +
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 34.
 
|
 
|
| Plato, "Timaeus", 38 A,
+
| W.V. Quine,
| Benjamin Jowett (trans.)
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
 +
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 +
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 2
+
===TDOE. Note 20===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| Now first of all we must, in my judgement, make the following distinction.
+
| 4Semantical Rules (cont.)
| What is that which is Existent always and has no Becoming? And what is
 
| that which is Becoming always and never is Existent?  Now the one of
 
| these is apprehensible by thought with the aid of reasoning, since
 
| it is ever uniformly existent;  whereas the other is an object of
 
| opinion with the aid of unreasoning sensation, since it becomes and
 
| perishes and is never really existent.  Again, everything which becomes
 
| must of necessity become owing to some Cause;  for without a cause it is
 
| impossible for anything to attain becoming. But when the artificer of any
 
| object, in forming its shape and quality, keeps his gaze fixed on that which
 
| is uniform, using a model of this kind, that object, executed in this way,
 
| must of necessity be beautiful;  but whenever he gazes at that which
 
| has come into existence and uses a created model, the object thus
 
| executed is not beautiful.  Now the whole Heaven, or Cosmos, or
 
| if there is any other name which it specially prefers, by that
 
| let us call it -- so, be its name what it may, we must first
 
| investigate concerning it that primary question which has to be
 
| investigated at the outset in every case -- namely, whether it has
 
| existed always, having no beginning of generation, or whether it has
 
| come into existence, having begun from some beginning.  It has come into
 
| existence;  for it is visible and tangible and possessed of a body;  and all
 
| such things are sensible, and things sensible, being apprehensible by opinion
 
| with the aid of sensation, come into existence, as we saw, and are generated.
 
| And that which has come into existence must necessarily, as we say, have
 
| come into existence by reason of some Cause.  Now to discover the
 
| Maker and Father of this Universe were a task indeed;  and
 
| having discovered Him, to declare Him unto all men were
 
| a thing impossible.  However, let us return and inquire
 
| further concerning the Cosmos -- after which of the Models
 
| ['paradeigmaton'] did its Architect construct it?  Was it after
 
| that which is self-identical and uniform, or after that which has
 
| come into existence?  Now if so be that this Cosmos is beautiful and
 
| its Constructor good, it is plain that he fixed his gaze on the Eternal;
 
| but if otherwise (which is an impious supposition), his gaze was on that
 
| which has come into existence.  But it is clear to everyone that his gaze
 
| was on the Eternal;  for the Cosmos is the fairest of all that has come
 
| into existence, and He is the best of all the Causes.  So having
 
| in this wise come into existence, it has been constructed
 
| after the pattern of that which is apprehensible by
 
| reason and thought and is self-identical.
 
 
|
 
|
| Plato, "Timaeus", 27D-29A.
+
| It may be instructive to compare the notion of semantical rule with that
|
+
| of postulate. Relative to a given set of postulates, it is easy to say
| Plato, "Timaeus", R.G. Bury (trans.),
+
| what a postulate is: it is a member of the set. Relative to a given
|'Plato, Volume 9', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| set of semantical rules, it is equally easy to say what a semantical
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1929.
+
| rule is.  But given simply a notation, mathematical or otherwise,
 
+
| and indeed as thoroughly understood a notation as you please in
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| point of the translations or truth conditions of its statements,
 
+
| who can say which of its true statements rank as postulates?
VOLSNote 3
+
| Obviously the question is meaningless -- as meaningless as
 
+
| asking which points in Ohio are starting pointsAny finite
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| (or effectively specifiable infinite) selection of statements
 
+
| (preferably true ones, perhaps) is as much 'a' set of postulates
| Again, if these premisses be granted, it is wholly necessary that this Cosmos
+
| as any otherThe word "postulate" is significant only relative
| should be a Copy ['eikona'] of somethingNow in regard to every matter it is
+
| to an act of inquiry;  we apply the word to a set of statements just
| most important to begin at the natural beginning.  Accordingly, in dealing with
+
| in so far as we happen, for the year or the moment, to be thinking of
| a copy and its model, we must affirm that the accounts given will themselves be
+
| those statements in relation to the statements which can be reached from
| akin to the diverse objects which they serve to explain;  those which deal with
+
| them by some set of transformations to which we have seen fit to direct our
| what is abiding and firm and discernible by the aid of thought will be abiding
+
| attention.  Now the notion of semantical rule is as sensible and meaningful as
| and unshakable;  and in so far as it is possible and fitting for statements to
+
| that of postulate, if conceived in a similarly relative spirit -- relative, this
| be irrefutable and invincible, they must in no wise fall short thereof;  whereas
+
| time, to one or another particular enterprise of schooling unconversant persons
| the accounts of that which is copied after the likeness of that Model, and is
+
| in sufficient conditions for truth of statements of some natural or artificial
| itself a likeness, will be analogous thereto and possess likelihood; for as
+
| language L.  But from this point of view no one signalization of a subclass
| Being is to Becoming, so is Truth to Belief.  Wherefore, Socrates, if in our
+
| of the truths of L is intrinsically more a semantical rule than another;
| treatment of a great host of matters regarding the Gods and the generation of
+
| and, if "analytic" means "true by semantical rules", no one truth of L
| the Universe we prove unable to give accounts that are always in all respects
+
| is analytic to the exclusion of another.*
| self-consistent and perfectly exact, be not thou surprised;  rather we should
+
|
| be content if we can furnish accounts that are inferior to none in likelihood,
+
|*The foregoing paragraph was not part of the present essay as
| remembering that both I who speak and you who judge are but human creatures,
+
| originally published.  It was prompted by Martin [R.M. Martin,
| so that it becomes us to accept the likely account of these matters and
+
| "On 'Analytic'", 'Philosophical Studies', vol. 3 (1952), 42-47],
| forbear to search beyond it.
+
| as was the end of Essay 7.
 
|
 
|
| Plato, "Timaeus", 29B-29D.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 35.
 
|
 
|
| Plato, "Timaeus", R.G. Bury (trans.),
+
| W.V. Quine,
|'Plato, Volume 9',  G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1929.
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 +
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 4
+
===TDOE. Note 21===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| Many likelihoods informed me of this before,
+
| 4. Semantical Rules (concl.)
| which hung so tott'ring in the balance that
 
| I could neither believe nor misdoubt.
 
 
|
 
|
| 'All's Well That Ends Well', 1.3.119-121
+
| It might conceivably be protested that an artificial language L
 
+
| (unlike a natural one) is a language in the ordinary sense 'plus'
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| a set of explicit semantical rules -- the whole constituting, let
 
+
| us say, an ordered pair;  and that the semantical rules of L then
VOLS.  Note 5
+
| are specifiable simply as the second component of the pair L.  But,
 
+
| by the same token and more simply, we might construe an artificial
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| language L outright as an ordered pair whose second component is the
 
+
| class of its analytic statementsand then the analytic statements of L
| We have Reduction [abduction, Greek 'apagoge'] (1) when it is obvious
+
| become specifiable simply as the statements in the second component of L.
| that the first term applies to the middle, but that the middle applies
+
| Or better still, we might just stop tugging at our bootstraps altogether.
| to the last term is not obvious, yet nevertheless is more probable or
 
| not less probable than the conclusionor (2) if there are not many
 
| intermediate terms between the last and the middle;  for in all such
 
| cases the effect is to bring us nearer to knowledge.
 
 
|
 
|
| (1) E.g., let A stand for "that which can be taught", B for "knowledge",
+
| Not all the explanations of analyticity known to Carnap
|     and C for "morality".  Then that knowledge can be taught is evident;
+
| and his readers have been covered explicitly in the above
|     but whether virtue is knowledge is not clearThen if BC is not less
+
| considerations, but the extension to other forms is not hard
|     probable or is more probable than AC, we have reduction; for we are
+
| to seeJust one additional factor should be mentioned which
|     nearer to knowledge for having introduced an additional term, whereas
+
| sometimes enters: sometimes the semantical rules are in effect
|     before we had no knowledge that AC is true.
+
| rules of translation into ordinary language, in which case the
 +
| analytic statements of the artificial language are in effect
 +
| recognized as such from the analyticity of their specified
 +
| translations in ordinary language.  Here certainly there
 +
| can be no thought of an illumination of the problem of
 +
| analyticity from the side of the artificial language.
 
|
 
|
| (2) Or again we have reduction if there are not many intermediate terms
+
| From the point of view of the problem of analyticity the notion of an
|    between B and C;  for in this case too we are brought nearer to knowledge.
+
| artificial language with semantical rules is a 'feu follet par excellence'.
|     E.g., suppose that D is "to square", E "rectilinear figure" and F "circle".
+
| Semantical rules determining the analytic statements of an artificial language
|     Assuming that between E and F there is only one intermediate term -- that the
+
| are of interest only in so far as we already understand the notion of analyticity;
|     circle becomes equal to a rectilinear figure by means of lunules -- we should
+
| they are of no help in gaining this understanding.
|    approximate to knowledge.  When, however, BC is not more probable than AC, or
 
|    there are several intermediate terms, I do not use the expression "reduction";
 
|     nor when the proposition BC is immediate;  for such a statement implies knowledge.
 
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics", 2.25.
+
| Appeal to hypothetical languages of an artificially simple
 +
| kind could conceivably be useful in clarifying analyticity,
 +
| if the mental or behavioral or cultural factors relevant to
 +
| analyticity -- whatever they may be -- were somehow sketched
 +
| into the simplified model. But a model which takes analyticity
 +
| merely as an irreducible character is unlikely to throw light on
 +
| the problem of explicating analyticity.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics",
+
| It is obvious that truth in general depends on both language and extralinguistic
| Hugh Tredennick (trans.), in:
+
| fact.  The statement "Brutus killed Caesar" would be false if the world had
|'Aristotle, Volume 1', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| been different in certain ways, but it would also be false if the word
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1938, 1983.
+
| "killed" happened rather to have the sense of "begat".  Thus one is
 +
| tempted to suppose in general that the truth of a statement is
 +
| somehow analyzable into a linguistic component and a factual
 +
| component.  Given this supposition, it next seems reasonable
 +
| that in some statements the factual component should be null;
 +
| and these are the analytic statements.  But, for all its
 +
| a priori reasonableness, a boundary between analytic
 +
| and synthetic statements simply has not been drawn.
 +
| That there is such a distinction to be drawn at
 +
| all is an unempirical dogma of empiricists,
 +
| a metaphysical article of faith.
 +
|
 +
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 35-37.
 +
|
 +
| W.V. Quine,
 +
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
 +
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 +
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 6
+
===TDOE. Note 22===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| A probability [Greek 'eikos'] is not the same as a sign ['semeion'].
+
| 5. The Verification Theory and Reductionism
| The former is a generally accepted premiss;  for that which people
 
| know to happen or not to happen, or to be or not to be, usually
 
| in a particular way, is a probability:  e.g., that the envious
 
| are malevolent or that those who are loved are affectionate.
 
| A sign, however, means a demonstrative premiss which
 
| is necessary or generally accepted.  That which
 
| coexists with something else, or before or
 
| after whose happening something else has
 
| happened, is a sign of that something's
 
| having happened or being.
 
 
|
 
|
| An enthymeme is a syllogism from probabilities or signs;
+
| In the course of these somber reflections we have taken a dim view first
| and a sign can be taken in three ways -- in just as many ways
+
| of the notion of meaning, then of the notion of cognitive synonymy, and
| as there are of taking the middle term in the several figures ...
+
| finally of the notion of analyticity.  But what, it may be asked, of
 +
| the verification theory of meaning?  This phrase has established
 +
| itself so firmly as a catchword of empiricism that we should be
 +
| very unscientific indeed not to look beneath it for a possible
 +
| key to the problem of meaning and the associated problems.
 
|
 
|
| We must either classify signs in this way, and regard their middle term as
+
| The verification theory of meaning, which has been conspicuous in the
| an index ['tekmerion'] (for the name "index" is given to that which causes
+
| literature from Peirce onward, is that the meaning of a statement is
| us to know, and the middle term is especially of this nature), or describe
+
| the method of empirically confirming or infirming itAn analytic
| the arguments drawn from the extremes as "signs", and that which is drawn
+
| statement is that limiting case which is confirmed no matter what.
| from the middle as an "index"For the conclusion which is reached through
 
| the first figure is most generally accepted and most true.
 
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics", 2.27.
+
| As urged in Section 1, we can as well pass over the question of
 +
| meanings as entities and move straight to sameness of meaning,
 +
| or synonymy.  Then what the verification theory says is that
 +
| statements are synonymous if and only if they are alike in
 +
| point of method of empirical confirmation or infirmation.
 +
|
 +
| This is an account of cognitive synonymy not of linguistic forms generally,
 +
| but of statements.*  However, from the concept of synonymy of statements
 +
| we could derive the concept of synonymy for other linguistic forms, by
 +
| considerations somewhat similar to those at the end of Section 3.
 +
| Assuming the notion of "word", indeed, we could explain any
 +
| two forms as synonymous when the putting of one form for
 +
| an occurrence of the other in any statement (apart from
 +
| occurrences within "words") yields a synonymous statement.
 +
| Finally, given the concept of synonymy thus for linguistic
 +
| forms generally, we could define analyticity in terms of
 +
| synonymy and logical truth as in Section 1.  For that
 +
| matter, we could define analyticity more simply in
 +
| terms of just synonymy of statements together with
 +
| logical truth;  it is not necessary to appeal to
 +
| synonymy of linguistic forms other than statements.
 +
| For a statement may be described as analytic simply
 +
| when it is synonymous with a logically true statement.
 +
|
 +
|*The doctrine can indeed be formulated with terms rather than statements as the
 +
| units.  Thus Lewis describes the meaning of a term as "'a criterion in mind',
 +
| by reference to which one is able to apply or refuse to apply the expression
 +
| in question in the case of presented, or imagined, things or situations"
 +
| [C.I. Lewis, 'An Analysis of Knowledge and Valuation', Open Court, LaSalle,
 +
| IL, 1946, p. 133]. -- For an instructive account of the vicissitudes of
 +
| the verification theory of meaning, centered however on the question
 +
| of meaning'fulness' rather than synonymy and analyticity, see Hempel.
 +
|
 +
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 37-38.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics",
+
| W.V. Quine,
| Hugh Tredennick (trans.), in:
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
|'Aristotle, Volume 1', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1938, 1983.
+
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 7
+
===TDOE. Note 23===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| Rhetoric is a counterpart [Greek 'antistrophos'] of Dialectic;
+
| 5The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
| for both have to do with matters that are in a manner within the
 
| cognizance of all men and not confined to any special science.
 
| Hence all men in a manner have a share of both; for all, up to
 
| a certain point, endeavour to criticize or uphold an argument,
 
| to defend themselves or to accuse.  Now, the majority of people
 
| do this either at random or with a familiarity arising from habit.
 
| But since both these ways are possible, it is clear that matters
 
| can be reduced to a system, for it is possible to examine the
 
| reason why some attain their end by familiarity and others by
 
| chance;  and such an examination all would at once admit to be
 
| the function of an art ['techne']. (1-2)
 
 
|
 
|
| Now, previous compilers of "Arts" of Rhetoric have provided us with
+
| So, if the verification theory can be accepted as an adequate account
| only a small portion of this art, for proofs are the only things in
+
| of statement synonymy, the notion of analyticity is saved after all.
| it that come within the province of art; everything else is merely
+
| However, let us reflect.  Statement synonymy is said to be likeness
| an accessoryAnd yet they say nothing about enthymemes which are
+
| of method of empirical confirmation or infirmation.  Just what are
| the body of proof, but chiefly devote their attention to matters
+
| these methods which are to be compared for likeness?  What, in
| outside the subject;  for the arousing of prejudice, compassion,
+
| other words, is the nature of the relation between a statement
| anger, and similar emotions has no connexion with the matter in
+
| and the experiences which contribute to or detract from its
| hand, but is directed only to the dicast. (3-4)
+
| confirmation?
 +
|
 +
| The most naive view of the relation is that it is one of direct report.
 +
| This is 'radical reductionism'.  Every meaningful statement is held to be
 +
| translatable into a statement (true or false) about immediate experience.
 +
| Radical reductionism, in one form or another, well antedates the verification
 +
| theory of meaning explicitly so called.  Thus Locke and Hume held that every
 +
| idea must either originate directly in sense experience or else be compounded
 +
| of ideas thus originating;  and taking a hint from Tooke we might rephrase
 +
| this doctrine in semantical jargon by saying that a term, to be significant
 +
| at all, must be either a name of a sense datum or a compound of such names or
 +
| an abbreviation of such a compound.  So stated, the doctrine remains ambiguous
 +
| as between sense data as sensory events and sense data as sensory qualities;
 +
| and it remains vague as to the admissible ways of compounding. Moreover, the
 +
| doctrine is unnecessarily and intolerably restrictive in the term-by-term
 +
| critique which it imposesMore reasonably, and without yet exceeding
 +
| the limits of what I have called radical reductionism, we may take full
 +
| statements as our significant units -- thus demanding that our statements
 +
| as wholes be translatable into sense-datum language, but not that they be
 +
| translatable term by term.
 +
|
 +
| This emendation would unquestionably have been welcome to Locke and Hume
 +
| and Tooke, but historically it had to await an important reorientation in
 +
| semantics -- the reorientation whereby the primary vehicle of meaning came
 +
| to be seen no longer in the term but in the statement.  This reorientation,
 +
| seen in Bentham and Frege, underlies Russell's concept of incomplete symbols
 +
| defined in use;  also it is implicit in the verification theory of meaning,
 +
| since the objects of verification are statements.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.1.1-4.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 38-39.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
+
| W.V. Quine,
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
+
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 8
+
===TDOE. Note 24===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| It is obvious, therefore, that a system arranged according to the rules of art
+
| 5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
| is only concerned with proofs; that proof ['pistis'] is a sort of demonstration
+
|
| ['apodeixis'], since we are most strongly convinced when we suppose anything to
+
| Radical reductionism, conceived now with statements as units,
| have been demonstrated;  that rhetorical demonstration is an enthymeme, which,
+
| set itself the task of specifying a sense-datum language and
| generally speaking, is the strongest of rhetorical proofs;  and lastly, that
+
| showing how to translate the rest of significant discourse,
| the enthymeme is a kind of syllogismNow, as it is the function of Dialectic
+
| statement by statement, into it. Carnap embarked on this
| as a whole, or one of its parts, to consider every kind of syllogism in a similar
+
| project in the 'Aufbau'.
| manner, it is clear that he who is most capable of examining the matter and forms
+
|
| of a syllogism will be in the highest degree a master of rhetorical argument, if
+
| The language which Carnap adopted as his starting point was not
| to this he adds a knowledge of the subjects with which enthymemes deal and the
+
| a sense-datum language in the narrowest conceivable sense, for
| differences between them and logical syllogisms.  For, in fact, the true and that
+
| it included also the notations of logic, up through higher set
| which resembles it come under the purview of the same faculty, and at the same time
+
| theory.  In effect it included the whole language of pure
| men have a sufficient natural capacity for the truth and indeed in most cases attain
+
| mathematicsThe ontology implicit in it (that is, the
| to it;  wherefore one who divines well ['stochastikos echein'] in regard to the truth
+
| range of values of its variables) embraced not only
| will also be able to divine well in regard to probabilities ['endoxa'].
+
| sensory events but classes, classes of classes, and
 +
| so on.  Empiricists there are who would boggle at
 +
| such prodigality.  Carnap's starting point is
 +
| very parsimonious, however, in its extralogical
 +
| or sensory part.  In a series of constructions in
 +
| which he exploits the resources of modern logic with
 +
| much ingenuity, Carnap succeeds in defining a wide array
 +
| of important additional sensory concepts which, but for his
 +
| constructions, one would not have dreamed were definable on
 +
| so slender a basis.  He was the first empiricist who, not
 +
| content with asserting the reducibility of science to
 +
| terms of immediate experience, took serious steps
 +
| toward carrying out the reduction.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.1.11.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 39.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
+
| W.V. Quine,
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
+
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 9
+
===TDOE. Note 25===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| It is thus evident that Rhetoric does not deal with any one definite class
+
| 5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
| of subjects, but, like Dialectic, [is of general application -- Trans.];
+
|
| also, that it is useful; and further, that its function is not so much
+
| If Carnap's starting point is satisfactory,
| to persuade, as to find out in each case the existing means of persuasion.
+
| still his constructions were, as he himself
| The same holds good in respect to all the other artsFor instance, it
+
| stressed, only a fragment of the full program.
| is not the function of medicine to restore a patient to health, but only
+
| The construction of even the simplest statements
| to promote this end as far as possible;  for even those whose recovery is
+
| about the physical world was left in a sketchy state.
| impossible may be properly treatedIt is further evident that it belongs
+
| Carnap's suggestions on this subject were, despite their
| to Rhetoric to discover the real and apparent means of persuasion, just
+
| sketchiness, very suggestive. He explained spatio-temporal
| as it belongs to Dialectic to discover the real and apparent syllogism.
+
| point-instants as quadruples of real numbers and envisaged
| For what makes the sophist is not the faculty but the moral purpose.
+
| assignment of sense qualities to point-instants according
| But there is a difference: in Rhetoric, one who acts in accordance with
+
| to certain canons.  Roughly summarized, the plan was that
| sound argument, and one who acts in accordance with moral purpose, are
+
| qualities should be assigned to point-instants in such a
| both called rhetoricians; but in Dialectic it is the moral purpose that
+
| way as to achieve the laziest world compatible with our
| makes the sophist, the dialectician being one whose arguments rest, not
+
| experience.  The principle of least action was to be
| on moral purpose but on the faculty.
+
| our guide in constructing a world from experience.
 +
|
 +
| Carnap did not seem to recognize, however, that his treatment
 +
| of physical objects fell short of reduction not merely through
 +
| sketchiness, but in principleStatements of the form "Quality
 +
| q is at point-instant x;y;z;t" were, according to his canons,
 +
| to be apportioned truth vakues in such a way as to maximize
 +
| and minimize certain over-all features, and with growth of
 +
| experience the truth values were to be progressively revised
 +
| in the same spiritI think that this is a good schematization
 +
| (deliberately oversimplified, to be sure) of what science really
 +
| does;  but it provides no indication, not even the sketchiest, of
 +
| how a statement of the form "Quality q is at x;y;z;t" could ever
 +
| be translated into Carnap's initial language of sense data and
 +
| logic. The connective "is at" remains an added undefined
 +
| connective; the canons counsel us in its use but not
 +
| in its elimination.
 +
|
 +
| Carnap seems to have appreciated this point afterward;
 +
| for in his later writings he abandoned all notion of
 +
| the translatability of statements about the physical
 +
| world into statements about immediate experience.
 +
| Reductionism in its radical form has long since
 +
| ceased to figure in Carnap's philosophy.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.1.14.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 39-40.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
+
| W.V. Quine,
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
+
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 10
+
===TDOE. Note 26===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| Rhetoric then may be defined as the faculty of discovering the possible means
+
| 5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
| of persuasion in reference to any subject whateverThis is the function of
+
|
| no other of the arts, each of which is able to instruct and persuade in its
+
| But the dogma of reductionism has, in a subtler and more tenuous form,
| own special subject;  thus, medicine deals with health and sickness, geometry
+
| continued to influence the thought of empiricistsThe notion lingers
| with the properties of magnitudes, arithmetic with number, and similarly with
+
| that to each statement, or each synthetic statement, there is associated
| all the other arts and sciences.  But Rhetoric, so to say, appears to be able
+
| a unique range of possible sensory events such that the occurrence of any
| to discover the means of persuasion in reference to any given subjectThat is
+
| of them would add to the likelihood of truth of the statement, and that
| why we say that as an art its rules are not applied to any particular definite
+
| there is associated also another unique range of possible sensory events
| class of things.
+
| whose occurrence would detract from that likelihoodThis notion is of
 +
| course implicit in the verification theory of meaning.
 
|
 
|
| As for proofs, some are inartificial, others artificial.  By the former
+
| The dogma of reductionism survives in the supposition that each statement,
| I understand all those which have not been furnished by ourselves but were
+
| taken in isolation from its fellows, can admit of confirmation or infirmation
| already in existence, such as witnesses, tortures, contracts, and the like;
+
| at all.  My countersuggestion, issuing essentially from Carnap's doctrine of
| by the latter, all that can be constructed by system and by our own efforts.
+
| the physical world in the 'Aufbau', is that our statements about the external
| Thus we have only to make use of the former, whereas we must invent the latter.
+
| world face the tribunal of sense experience not individually but only as a
 +
| corporate body.*
 
|
 
|
| Now the proofs furnished by the speech are of three kinds.
+
|*This doctrine was well argued by Duhem [Pierre Duhem, 'La Theorie Physique:
| The first depends upon the moral character of the speaker,
+
| Son Object et Sa Structure', Paris, 1906, pp. 303-328]. Or see Lowinger
| the second upon putting the hearer into a certain frame
+
| Armand Lowinger, 'The Methodology of Pierre Duhem', Columbia University
| of mind, the third upon the speech itself, in so far as
+
| Press, New York, NY, 1941, pp. 132-140].
| it proves or seems to prove.
 
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.1-3.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 40-41.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
+
| W.V. Quine,
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
+
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 11
+
===TDOE. Note 27===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| But for purposes of demonstration, real or apparent, just as Dialectic possesses
+
| 5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism (concl.)
| two modes of argument, induction and the syllogism, real or apparent, the same is
+
|
| the case in Rhetoric;  for the example is induction, and the enthymeme a syllogism,
+
| The dogma of reductionism, even in its attenuated form, is intimately
| and the apparent enthymeme an apparent syllogismAccordingly I call an enthymeme
+
| connected with the other dogma -- that there is a cleavage between
| a rhetorical syllogism, and an example rhetorical induction.  Now all orators produce
+
| the analytic and the syntheticWe have found ourselves led,
| belief by employing as proofs either examples or enthymemes and nothing else;  so that
+
| indeed, from the latter problem to the former through the
| if, generally speaking, it is necessary to prove any fact whatever either by syllogism
+
| verification theory of meaningMore directly, the one
| or by induction -- and that this is so is clear from the 'Analytics' -- each of the
+
| dogma clearly supports the other in this way:  as long
| two former must be identical with each of the two latterThe difference between
+
| as it is taken to be significant in general to speak
| example and enthymeme is evident from the 'Topics', where, in discussing syllogism
+
| of the confirmation and infirmation of a statement,
| and induction, it has previously been said that the proof from a number of particular
+
| it seems significant to speak also of a limiting
| cases that such is the rule, is called in Dialectic induction, in Rhetoric example;
+
| kind of statement which is vacuously confirmed,
| but when, certain things being posited, something different results by reason of
+
| 'ipso facto', come what may;  and such
| them, alongside of them, from their being true, either universally or in most
+
| a statement is analytic.
| cases, such a conclusion in Dialectic is called a syllogism, in Rhetoric an
 
| enthymeme.
 
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.8-9.
+
| The two dogmas are, indeed, at root identical.  We lately reflected
 +
| that in general the truth of statements does obviously depend both
 +
| upon language and upon extralinguistic fact;  and we noted that
 +
| this obvious circumstance carries in its train, not logically
 +
| but all too naturally, a feeling that the truth of a statement
 +
| is somehow analyzable into a linguistic component and a factual
 +
| component. The factual component must, if we are empiricists,
 +
| boil down to a range of confirmatory experiences. In the
 +
| extreme case where the linguistic component is all that
 +
| matters, a true statement is analytic.  But I hope we are
 +
| now impressed with how stubbornly the distinction between
 +
| analytic and synthetic has resisted any straightforward
 +
| drawing.  I am impressed also, apart from prefabricated
 +
| examples of black and white balls in an urn, with how
 +
| baffling the problem has always been of arriving at
 +
| any explicit theory of the empirical confirmation of
 +
| a synthetic statement.  My present suggestion is that
 +
| it is nonsense, and the root of much nonsense, to speak
 +
| of a linguistic component and a factual component in the
 +
| truth of any individual statement.  Taken collectively,
 +
| science has its double dependence upon language and
 +
| experience;  but this duality is not significantly
 +
| traceable into the statements of science taken
 +
| one by one.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
+
| The idea of defining a symbol in use was, as remarked, an advance
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
+
| over the impossible term-by-term empiricism of Locke and Hume.
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| The statement, rather than the term, came with Bentham to be
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
+
| recognized as the unit accountable to an empiricist critique.
 
+
| But what I am now urging is that even in taking the statement
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| as unit we have drawn our grid too finely.  The unit of empirical
 
+
| significance is the whole of science.
VOLS.  Note 12
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
 
 
| The function ['ergon'] of Rhetoric, then, is to deal with things about
 
| which we deliberate, but for which we have no systematic rules;  and in
 
| the presence of such hearers as are unable to take a general view of many
 
| stages, or to follow a lengthy chain of argument.  But we only deliberate
 
| about things which seem to admit of issuing in two ways;  as for those things
 
| which cannot in the past, present, or future be otherwise, no one deliberates
 
| about them, if he supposes that they are such;  for nothing would be gained
 
| by it. Now, it is possible to draw conclusions and inferences partly from
 
| what has been previously demonstrated syllogistically, partly from what
 
| has not, which however needs demonstration, because it is not probable.
 
| The first of these methods is necessarily difficult to follow owing to
 
| its length, for the judge is supposed to be a simple person;  the second
 
| will obtain little credence, because it does not depend upon what is either
 
| admitted of probable.  The necessary result then is that the enthymeme and
 
| the example are concerned with things which may, generally speaking, be other
 
| than they are, the example being a kind of induction and the enthymeme a kind
 
| of syllogism, and deduced from few premisses, often from fewer than the regular
 
| syllogism;  for if any one of these is well known, there is no need to mention it,
 
| for the hearer can add it himself.  For instance, to prove that Dorieus was the
 
| victor in a contest at which the prize was a crown, it is enough to say that
 
| he won a victory at the Olympic games;  there is no need to add that the
 
| prize at the Olympic games is a crown, for everybody knows it.
 
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.12-13.
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 41-42.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
+
| W.V. Quine,
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
+
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 13
+
===TDOE. Note 28===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| But since few of the propositions of the rhetorical syllogism
+
| 6.  Empiricism without the Dogmas
| are necessary ['anagkaion'], for most of the things which we
+
|
| judge and examine can be other than they are, human actions,
+
| The totality of our so-called knowledge or beliefs, from the most
| which are the subject of our deliberation and examination,
+
| casual matters of geography and history to the profoundest laws of
| being all of such a character and, generally speaking, none of
+
| atomic physics or even of pure mathematics and logic, is a man-made
| them necessary;  since, further, facts which only generally happen
+
| fabric which impinges on experience only along the edges.  Or, to
| or are merely possible can only be demonstrated by other facts of
+
| change the figure, total science is like a field of force whose
| the same kind, and necessary facts by necessary propositions (and
+
| boundary conditions are experience.  A conflict with experience at
| that this is so is clear from the 'Analytics'), it is evident that
+
| the periphery occasions readjustments in the interior of the field.
| the materials from which enthymemes are derived will be sometimes
+
| Truth values have to be redistributed over some of our statements.
| necessary, but for the most part only generally true;  and these
+
| Re-evaluation of some statements entails re-evaluation of others,
| materials being probabilities and signs, it follows that these
+
| because of their logical interconnections -- the logical laws
| two elements must correspond to these two kinds of propositions,
+
| being in turn simply certain further statements of the system,
| each to each. For that which is probable is that which generally
+
| certain further elements of the fieldHaving re-evaluated one
| happens, not however unreservedly, as some define it, but that
+
| statement we must re-evaluate some others, which may be statements
| which is concerned with things that may be other than they are,
+
| logically connected with the first or may be the statements of logical
| being so related to that in regard to which it is probable as
+
| connections themselvesBut the total field is so underdetermined by
| the universal to the particularAs to signs, some are related
+
| its boundary conditions, experience, that there is much latitude of
| as the particular to the universal, others as the universal to
+
| choice as to what statements to re-evaluate in the light of any
| the particular.  Necessary signs are called 'tekmeria';  those
+
| single contrary experience.  No particular experiences are
| which are not necessary have no distinguishing nameI call
+
| linked with any particular statements in the interior of
| those necessary signs from which a logical syllogism can be
+
| the field, except indirectly through considerations
| constructed, wherefore such a sign is called 'tekmerion';
+
| of equilibrium affecting the field as a whole.
| for when people think that their arguments are irrefutable,
+
|
| they think that they are bringing forward a 'tekmerion',
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 42-43.
| something as it were proved and concluded;  for in
 
| the old language 'tekmar' and 'peras' have the
 
| same meaning (limit, conclusion).
 
|  
 
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.14-17.
 
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
+
| W.V. Quine,
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
+
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 14
+
===TDOE. Note 29===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| Among signs, some are related as the particular to the universal;
+
| 6.  Empiricism without the Dogmas (cont.)
| for instance, if one were to say that all wise men are just, because
+
|
| Socrates was both wise and justNow this is a sign, but even though
+
| If this view is right, it is misleading to speak of the empirical content of
| the particular statement is true, it can be refuted, because it cannot
+
| an individual statement -- especially if it is a statement at all remote from
| be reduced to syllogistic formBut if one were to say that it is a sign
+
| the experiential periphery of the fieldFurthermore it becomes folly to seek
| that a man is ill, because he has a fever, or that a woman has had a child
+
| a boundary between synthetic statements, which hold contingently on experience,
| because she has milk, this is a necessary signThis alone among signs is
+
| and analytic statements, which hold come what may.  Any statement can be held
| a 'tekmerion'; for only in this case, if the fact is true, is the argument
+
| true come what may, if we make drastic enough adjustments elsewhere in the
| irrefutable.  Other signs are related as the universal to the particular,
+
| system.  Even a statement very close to the periphery can be held true in
| for instance, if one were to say that it is a sign that this man has a fever,
+
| the face of recalcitrant experience by pleading hallucination or by amending
| because he breathes hard; but even if the fact be true, this argument also
+
| certain statements of the kind called logical laws.  Conversely, by the same
| can be refuted, for it is possible for a man to breathe hard without having
+
| token, no statement is immune to revisionRevision even of the logical law
| a fever.  We have now explained the meaning of probable, sign, and necessary
+
| of the excluded middle has been proposed as a means of simplifying quantum
| sign, and the difference between them;  in the 'Analytics' we have defined
+
| mechanics;  and what difference is there in principle between such a shift
| them more clearly and stated why some of them can be converted into logical
+
| and the shift whereby Kepler superseded Ptolemy, or Einstein Newton, or
| syllogisms, while others cannot.
+
| Darwin Aristotle?
 +
|
 +
| For vividness I have been speaking in terms of varying distances
 +
| from a sensory peripheryLet me try now to clarify this notion
 +
| without metaphor.  Certain statements, though 'about' physical
 +
| objects and not sense experience, seem peculiarly germane to
 +
| sense experience -- and in a selective way: some statements to
 +
| some experiences, others to others.  Such statements, especially
 +
| germane to particular experiences, I picture as near the periphery.
 +
| But in this relation of "germaneness" I envisage nothing more than a
 +
| loose association reflecting the relative likelihood, in practice, of
 +
| our choosing one statement rather than another for revision in the event
 +
| of recalcitrant experience. For example, we can imagine recalcitrant
 +
| experiences to which we would surely be inclined to accommodate our
 +
| system by re-evaluating just the statement that there are brick
 +
| houses on Elm Street, together with related statements on the
 +
| same topic.  We can imagine other recalcitrant experiences
 +
| to which we would be inclined to accommodate our system by
 +
| re-evaluating just the statement that there are no centaurs,
 +
| along with kindred statemnts.  A recalcitrant experience can,
 +
| I have urged, be accommodated by any of various alternative
 +
| re-evaluations in various alternative quarters of the total
 +
| systembut, in the cases which we are now imagining, our
 +
| natural tendency to disturb the total system as little as
 +
| possible would lead us to focus our revisions upon these
 +
| specific statements concerning brick houses or centaurs.
 +
| These statements are felt, therefore, to have a sharper
 +
| empirical reference than highly theoretical statements
 +
| of physics or logic or ontology.  The latter statements
 +
| may be thought of as relatively centrally located within
 +
| the total network, meaning merely that little preferential
 +
| connection with any particular sense data obtrudes itself.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.18
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 43-44.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
+
| W.V. Quine,
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
+
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 15
+
===TDOE. Note 30===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| We have now stated the materials of proofs which are thought to be demonstrative.
+
| 6Empiricism without the Dogmas (cont.)
| But a very great difference between enthymemes has escaped the notice of nearly
 
| every one, although it also exists in the dialectical method of syllogisms.
 
| For some of them belong to Rhetoric, some syllogisms only to Dialectic,
 
| and others to other arts and faculties, some already existing and
 
| others not yet establishedHence its is that this escapes
 
| the notice of the speakers, and the more they specialize
 
| in a subject, the more they transgress the limits of
 
| Rhetoric and Dialectic.  But this will be clearer
 
| if stated at greater length.
 
 
|
 
|
| I mean by dialectical and rhetorical syllogisms those which are concerned with what
+
| As an empiricist I continue to think of the conceptual scheme of science as
| we call "topics", which may be applied alike to Law, Physics, Politics, and many
+
| a tool, ultimately, for predicting future experience in the light of past
| other sciences that differ in kind, such as the topic of the more or less, which
+
| experiencePhysical objects are conceptually imported into the situation
| will furnish syllogisms and enthymemes equally well for Law, Physics, or any
+
| as convenient intermediaries -- not by definition in terms of experience,
| other science whatever, although these subjects differ in kindSpecific
+
| but simply as irreducible posits comparable, epistemologically, to the
| topics on the other hand are derived from propositions which are peculiar
+
| gods of HomerFor my part I do, qua lay physicist, believe in physical
| to each species or genus of things;  there are, for example, propositions
+
| objects and not in Homer's godsand I consider it a scientific error
| about Physics which can furnish neither enthymemes nor syllogisms about
+
| to believe otherwise.  But in point of epistemological footing the
| Ethics, and there are propositions concerned with Ethics which will be
+
| physical objects and the gods differ only in degree and not in kind.
| useless for furnishing conclusions about Physics;  and the same holds
+
| Both sorts of entities enter our conception only as cultural posits.
| good in all casesThe first kind of topics will not make a man
+
| The myth of physical objects is epistemologically superior to most
| practically wise about any particular class of things, because
+
| in that it has proved more efficacious than other myths as a device
| they do not deal with any particular subject matterbut as
+
| for working a manageable structure into the flux of experience.
| to the specific topics, the happier a man is in his choice
 
| of propositions, the more he will unconsciously produce
 
| a science quite different from Dialectic and Rhetoric.
 
| For if once he hits upon first principles, it will
 
| no longer be Dialectic or Rhetoric, but that
 
| science whose principles he has arrived at.
 
| Most enthymemes are constructed from
 
| these special topics, which are
 
| called particular and special,
 
| fewer from those that are
 
| common or universal.
 
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.20-22
+
| Positing does not stop with macroscopic physical objects.
|
+
| Objects at the atomic level are posited to make the laws of
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
+
| macroscopic objects, and ultimately the laws of experience,
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
+
| simpler and more manageable;  and we need not expect or demand
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| full definition of atomic and subatomic entities in terms of
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
+
| macroscopic ones, any more than definition of macroscopic things
 
+
| in terms of sense data. Science is a continuation of common sense,
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| and it continues the common-sense expedient of swelling ontology to
 
+
| simplify theory.
VOLS. Note 16
+
|
 
+
| Physical objects, small and large, are not the only posits.
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| Forces are another exampleand indeed we are told nowadays that
 
+
| the boundary between energy and matter is obsoleteMoreover, the
| We have said that example ['paradeigma', analogy] is a kind of induction and with
+
| abstract entities which are the substance of mathematics -- ultimately
| what kind of material it deals by way of inductionIt is neither the relation
+
| classes and classes of classes and so on up -- are another posit in the
| of part to whole, nor of whole to part, nor of one whole to another whole, but
+
| same spirit.  Epistemologically these are myths on the same footing with
| of part to part, of like to like, when both come under the same genus, but one
+
| physical objects and gods, neither better nor worse except for differences
| of them is better known than the other. For example, to prove that Dionysius
+
| in the degree to which they expedite our dealings with sense experiences.
| is aiming at a tyranny, because he asks for a bodyguard, one might say that
+
|
| Pisistratus before him and Theagenes of Megara did the same, and when they
+
| The over-all algebra of rational and irrational numbers is
| obtained what they asked for made themselves tyrants. All the other
+
| underdetermined by the algebra of rational numbers, but is
| tyrants known may serve as an example of Dionysius, whose reason,
+
| smoother and more convenient; and it includes the algebra
| however, for asking for a bodyguard we do not yet knowAll these
+
| of rational numbers as a jagged or gerrymandered part.
| examples are contained under the same universal proposition, that
+
| Total science, mathematical and natural and human,
| one who is aiming at a tyranny asks for a bodyguard.
+
| is similarly but more extremely underdetermined
 +
| by experienceThe edge of the system must be
 +
| kept squared with experience;  the rest, with
 +
| all its elaborate myths or fictions, has as
 +
| its objective the simplicty of laws.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.19
+
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 44-45.
 
|
 
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
+
| W.V. Quine,
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
+
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
+
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
+
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
</pre>
  
VOLS. Note 17
+
===TDOE. Note 31===
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
The Likely Story:
+
| 6.  Empiricism without the Dogmas (concl.)
Its likely Moral.
+
|
 +
| Ontological questions, under this view, are on a par with questions
 +
| of natural science.  Consider the question whether to countenance
 +
| classes as entities.  This, as I have argued elsewhere, is the
 +
| question whether to quantify with respect to variables which
 +
| take classes as values.  Now Carnap [*] has maintained that
 +
| this is a question not of matters of fact but of choosing
 +
| a convenient language form, a convenient conceptual scheme
 +
| or framework for science.  With this I agree, but only on the
 +
| proviso that the same be conceded regarding scientific hypotheses
 +
| generally.  Carnap ([*], p. 32n) has recognized that he is able to
 +
| preserve a double standard for ontological questions and scientific
 +
| hypotheses only by assuming an absolute distinction between the
 +
| analytic and the synthetic;  and I need not say again that
 +
| this is a distinction which I reject.
 +
|
 +
| The issue over there being classes seems more a question of convenient
 +
| conceptual scheme;  the issue over there being centaurs, or brick houses
 +
| on Elm street, seems more a question of fact. But I have been urging that
 +
| this difference is only one of degree, and that it turns upon our vaguely
 +
| pragmatic inclination to adjust one strand of the fabric of science rather
 +
| than another in accommodating some particular recalcitrant experience.
 +
| Conservatism figures in such choices, and so does the quest for
 +
| simplicity.
 +
|
 +
| Carnap, Lewis, and others take a pragmatic stand on the question of choosing
 +
| between language forms, scientific frameworks;  but their pragmatism leaves
 +
| off at the imagined boundary between the analytic and the synthetic.  In
 +
| repudiating such a boundary I espouse a more thorough pragmatism.  Each
 +
| man is given a scientific heritage plus a continuing barrage of sensory
 +
| stimulation;  and the considerations which guide him in warping his
 +
| scientific heritage to fit his continuing sensory promptings are,
 +
| where rational, pragmatic.
 +
|
 +
|*Rudolf Carnap, "Empiricism, Semantics, and Ontology",
 +
|'Revue Internationale de Philosphie', vol. 4 (1950), pp. 20-40.
 +
| Reprinted in Leonard Linsky (ed.), 'Semantics and the Philosophy
 +
| of Language', University of Illinois Press, Urbana, IL, 1952.
 +
|
 +
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 45-46.
 +
|
 +
| W.V. Quine,
 +
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
 +
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 +
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
  
Those of you who stayed with the tour have been strolling with me
+
==VOLS. Verities Of Likely Stories==
through the Socratic and the Peripatetic wings of a gallery devoted
 
to the Classical background of Peirce's theory of signs and inquiry,
 
and the exhibits that I have collected there have been gathering dust
 
in that Museum of Incidental Musements for a score of Summers or more.
 
If I were to state the theme of the show it'd come out a bit like this:
 
  
| There is a continuity between approximate (likely, probable)
+
===VOLS. Note 1===
| and apodeictic (demonstrative, exact) patterns of reasoning,
 
| with the latter being the limiting ideal of the former type.
 
  
Having spent the lion's share of my waking and my dreaming life
+
<pre>
trying to put things together that others are busy taking apart,
 
I found that it often helps to return to the sources of streams,
 
where opposing banks of perspectives are a bit less riven apart.
 
  
For example, modus tollens is a pattern of inference
+
| These are the forms of time,
in deductive reasoning that takes the following form:
+
| which imitates eternity and
 +
| revolves according to a law
 +
| of number.
 +
|
 +
| Plato, "Timaeus", 38 A,
 +
| Benjamin Jowett (trans.)
  
A => B
+
</pre>
  ~B
 
--------
 
  ~A
 
  
Probably the most common pattern of inference
+
===VOLS. Note 2===
in empirical reasoning takes a form like this:
 
  
H_0 = the null hypothesis.  Typically, H_0 says
+
<pre>
that a couple of factors X and Y are independent,
 
in effect, that they have no lawlike relationship.
 
  
D_0 = the null distribution of outcomes.
+
| Now first of all we must, in my judgement, make the following distinction.
In part, D_0 says that particular types
+
| What is that which is Existent always and has no Becoming?  And what is
of possible outcomes have probabilities
+
| that which is Becoming always and never is Existent?  Now the one of
of happening that are very near to zero.
+
| these is apprehensible by thought with the aid of reasoning, since
 
+
| it is ever uniformly existent;  whereas the other is an object of
Let us assume that D_0 => G_0, with G_0
+
| opinion with the aid of unreasoning sensation, since it becomes and
being the proposition that an event E_0
+
| perishes and is never really existent. Again, everything which becomes
has a close to zero chance of happening.
+
| must of necessity become owing to some Cause;  for without a cause it is
 
+
| impossible for anything to attain becoming.  But when the artificer of any
We are given the theoretical propositions:
+
| object, in forming its shape and quality, keeps his gaze fixed on that which
(1) H_0 => D_0 and (2) D_0 => G_0, and so
+
| is uniform, using a model of this kind, that object, executed in this way,
we may assume that (3) H_0 => G_0.
+
| must of necessity be beautiful;  but whenever he gazes at that which
 
+
| has come into existence and uses a created model, the object thus
Let's say that we do the relevant experiment,
+
| executed is not beautiful. Now the whole Heaven, or Cosmos, or
and, lo and behold, we observe the event E_0,
+
| if there is any other name which it specially prefers, by that
that is supposed to be unlikely if H_0 holds.
+
| let us call it -- so, be its name what it may, we must first
Now it's not a logical contradiction, but we
+
| investigate concerning it that primary question which has to be
take E_0 as evidence against G_0 anyway, and
+
| investigated at the outset in every case -- namely, whether it has
by modus tollens as evidence contrary to H_0.
+
| existed always, having no beginning of generation, or whether it has
 +
| come into existence, having begun from some beginning.  It has come into
 +
| existence;  for it is visible and tangible and possessed of a body;  and all
 +
| such things are sensible, and things sensible, being apprehensible by opinion
 +
| with the aid of sensation, come into existence, as we saw, and are generated.
 +
| And that which has come into existence must necessarily, as we say, have
 +
| come into existence by reason of some Cause.  Now to discover the
 +
| Maker and Father of this Universe were a task indeed;  and
 +
| having discovered Him, to declare Him unto all men were
 +
| a thing impossible. However, let us return and inquire
 +
| further concerning the Cosmos -- after which of the Models
 +
| ['paradeigmaton'] did its Architect construct it?  Was it after
 +
| that which is self-identical and uniform, or after that which has
 +
| come into existence?  Now if so be that this Cosmos is beautiful and
 +
| its Constructor good, it is plain that he fixed his gaze on the Eternal;
 +
| but if otherwise (which is an impious supposition), his gaze was on that
 +
| which has come into existence. But it is clear to everyone that his gaze
 +
| was on the Eternal;  for the Cosmos is the fairest of all that has come
 +
| into existence, and He is the best of all the Causes.  So having
 +
| in this wise come into existence, it has been constructed
 +
| after the pattern of that which is apprehensible by
 +
| reason and thought and is self-identical.
 +
|
 +
| Plato, "Timaeus", 27D-29A.
 +
|
 +
| Plato, "Timaeus", R.G. Bury (trans.),
 +
|'Plato, Volume 9', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1929.
  
We may view this typical pattern of "significance testing"
+
</pre>
as a statistical generalization of the modus tollens rule.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===VOLS. Note 3===
  
VOLS.  Note 17 -- Dup or Correction?
+
<pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| Again, if these premisses be granted, it is wholly necessary that this Cosmos
 +
| should be a Copy ['eikona'] of something.  Now in regard to every matter it is
 +
| most important to begin at the natural beginning.  Accordingly, in dealing with
 +
| a copy and its model, we must affirm that the accounts given will themselves be
 +
| akin to the diverse objects which they serve to explain;  those which deal with
 +
| what is abiding and firm and discernible by the aid of thought will be abiding
 +
| and unshakable;  and in so far as it is possible and fitting for statements to
 +
| be irrefutable and invincible, they must in no wise fall short thereof;  whereas
 +
| the accounts of that which is copied after the likeness of that Model, and is
 +
| itself a likeness, will be analogous thereto and possess likelihood;  for as
 +
| Being is to Becoming, so is Truth to Belief.  Wherefore, Socrates, if in our
 +
| treatment of a great host of matters regarding the Gods and the generation of
 +
| the Universe we prove unable to give accounts that are always in all respects
 +
| self-consistent and perfectly exact, be not thou surprised;  rather we should
 +
| be content if we can furnish accounts that are inferior to none in likelihood,
 +
| remembering that both I who speak and you who judge are but human creatures,
 +
| so that it becomes us to accept the likely account of these matters and
 +
| forbear to search beyond it.
 +
|
 +
| Plato, "Timaeus", 29B-29D.
 +
|
 +
| Plato, "Timaeus", R.G. Bury (trans.),
 +
|'Plato, Volume 9',  G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1929.
  
The Likely Story:
+
</pre>
Its likely Moral.
 
  
Those of you who stayed with the tour have been strolling with me
+
===VOLS. Note 4===
through the Socratic and the Peripatetic wings of a gallery devoted
 
to the Classical background of Peirce's theory of signs and inquiry,
 
and the exhibits that I have collected there have been gathering dust
 
in that Museum of Incidental Musements for a score of Summers or more.
 
If I were to state the theme of the show it'd come out a bit like this:
 
  
| There is a continuity between approximate (likely, probable)
+
<pre>
| and apodeictic (demonstrative, exact) patterns of reasoning,
 
| with the latter being the limiting ideal of the former type.
 
  
Having spent the lion's share of my waking and my dreaming life
+
| Many likelihoods informed me of this before,
trying to put things together that others are busy taking apart,
+
| which hung so tott'ring in the balance that
I found that it often helps to return to the sources of streams,
+
| I could neither believe nor misdoubt.
where opposing banks of perspectives are a bit less riven apart.
+
|
 +
| 'All's Well That Ends Well', 1.3.119-121
  
For example, modus tollens is a pattern of inference
+
</pre>
in deductive reasoning that takes the following form:
 
  
A => B
+
===VOLS. Note 5===
  ~B
 
--------
 
  ~A
 
  
Probably the most common pattern of inference
+
<pre>
in empirical reasoning takes a form like this:
 
  
H_0 = the null hypothesis.  Typically, H_0 says
+
| We have Reduction [abduction, Greek 'apagoge'] (1) when it is obvious
that a couple of factors X and Y are independent,
+
| that the first term applies to the middle, but that the middle applies
in effect, that they have no lawlike relationship.
+
| to the last term is not obvious, yet nevertheless is more probable or
 
+
| not less probable than the conclusion;  or (2) if there are not many
D_0 = the null distribution of outcomes.
+
| intermediate terms between the last and the middle;  for in all such
In part, D_0 says that particular types
+
| cases the effect is to bring us nearer to knowledge.
of possible outcomes have probabilities
+
|
of happening that are very near to zero.
+
| (1) E.g., let A stand for "that which can be taught", B for "knowledge",
 
+
|    and C for "morality". Then that knowledge can be taught is evident;
Let us assume that D_0 => G_0, with G_0
+
|    but whether virtue is knowledge is not clear.  Then if BC is not less
being the proposition that an event E_0
+
|    probable or is more probable than AC, we have reduction;  for we are
has a close to zero chance of happening.
+
|    nearer to knowledge for having introduced an additional term, whereas
 
+
|    before we had no knowledge that AC is true.
We are given the theoretical propositions:
+
|
(1) H_0 => D_0 and (2) D_0 => G_0, and so
+
| (2) Or again we have reduction if there are not many intermediate terms
we may assume that (3) H_0 => G_0.
+
|    between B and C;  for in this case too we are brought nearer to knowledge.
 +
|    E.g., suppose that D is "to square", E "rectilinear figure" and F "circle".
 +
|    Assuming that between E and F there is only one intermediate term -- that the
 +
|    circle becomes equal to a rectilinear figure by means of lunules -- we should
 +
|    approximate to knowledge. When, however, BC is not more probable than AC, or
 +
|    there are several intermediate terms, I do not use the expression "reduction";
 +
|    nor when the proposition BC is immediate;  for such a statement implies knowledge.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics", 2.25.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics",
 +
| Hugh Tredennick (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 1', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1938, 1983.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
  
Let's say that we do the relevant experiment,
+
===VOLS. Note 6===
and, lo and behold, we observe the event E_0,
 
that is supposed to be unlikely if H_0 holds.
 
Now it's not a logical contradiction, but we
 
take E_0 as evidence against G_0 anyway, and
 
by modus tollens as evidence contrary to H_0.
 
  
We may view this typical pattern of "significance testing"
+
<pre>
as a statistical generalization of the modus tollens rule.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| A probability [Greek 'eikos'] is not the same as a sign ['semeion'].
 +
| The former is a generally accepted premiss;  for that which people
 +
| know to happen or not to happen, or to be or not to be, usually
 +
| in a particular way, is a probability:  e.g., that the envious
 +
| are malevolent or that those who are loved are affectionate.
 +
| A sign, however, means a demonstrative premiss which
 +
| is necessary or generally accepted.  That which
 +
| coexists with something else, or before or
 +
| after whose happening something else has
 +
| happened, is a sign of that something's
 +
| having happened or being.
 +
|
 +
| An enthymeme is a syllogism from probabilities or signs;
 +
| and a sign can be taken in three ways -- in just as many ways
 +
| as there are of taking the middle term in the several figures ...
 +
|
 +
| We must either classify signs in this way, and regard their middle term as
 +
| an index ['tekmerion'] (for the name "index" is given to that which causes
 +
| us to know, and the middle term is especially of this nature), or describe
 +
| the arguments drawn from the extremes as "signs", and that which is drawn
 +
| from the middle as an "index".  For the conclusion which is reached through
 +
| the first figure is most generally accepted and most true.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics", 2.27.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics",
 +
| Hugh Tredennick (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 1', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1938, 1983.
  
VOLS.  Note 18
+
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===VOLS. Note 7===
  
| The dull green time-stained panes
+
<pre>
| of the windows look upon each other
+
 
| with the cowardly glances of cheats.
+
| Rhetoric is a counterpart [Greek 'antistrophos'] of Dialectic;
 +
| for both have to do with matters that are in a manner within the
 +
| cognizance of all men and not confined to any special science.
 +
| Hence all men in a manner have a share of both;  for all, up to
 +
| a certain point, endeavour to criticize or uphold an argument,
 +
| to defend themselves or to accuse.  Now, the majority of people
 +
| do this either at random or with a familiarity arising from habit.
 +
| But since both these ways are possible, it is clear that matters
 +
| can be reduced to a system, for it is possible to examine the
 +
| reason why some attain their end by familiarity and others by
 +
| chance;  and such an examination all would at once admit to be
 +
| the function of an art ['techne'].  (1-2)
 +
|
 +
| Now, previous compilers of "Arts" of Rhetoric have provided us with
 +
| only a small portion of this art, for proofs are the only things in
 +
| it that come within the province of art;  everything else is merely
 +
| an accessory.  And yet they say nothing about enthymemes which are
 +
| the body of proof, but chiefly devote their attention to matters
 +
| outside the subject;  for the arousing of prejudice, compassion,
 +
| anger, and similar emotions has no connexion with the matter in
 +
| hand, but is directed only to the dicast.  (3-4)
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.1.1-4.
 
|
 
|
| Maxim Gorky, 'Creatures That Once Were Men'
+
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
 +
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
  
Peirce is a reflective practitioner of pragmatic thinking,
+
</pre>
which is to say that he puts the interpreter back into the
 
scene of observation, from whence he has, from time to time,
 
been elevated beyond implication, or exiled beyond redemption.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===VOLS. Note 8===
  
Seth,
+
<pre>
  
> P1. "we think each one of our beliefs to be true,
+
| It is obvious, therefore, that a system arranged according to the rules of art
>      and, indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375).
+
| is only concerned with proofs; that proof ['pistis'] is a sort of demonstration
>
+
| ['apodeixis'], since we are most strongly convinced when we suppose anything to
> And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua fallibilist,
+
| have been demonstrated;  that rhetorical demonstration is an enthymeme, which,
> which you regard as being paradoxical in importS1 is your restatement of P1,
+
| generally speaking, is the strongest of rhetorical proofs;  and lastly, that
> and S2 is what you believe to be the fallibilist view.
+
| the enthymeme is a kind of syllogism.  Now, as it is the function of Dialectic
>
+
| as a whole, or one of its parts, to consider every kind of syllogism in a similar
> S1. (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).
+
| manner, it is clear that he who is most capable of examining the matter and forms
 
+
| of a syllogism will be in the highest degree a master of rhetorical argument, if
This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
+
| to this he adds a knowledge of the subjects with which enthymemes deal and the
probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.
+
| differences between them and logical syllogismsFor, in fact, the true and that
 +
| which resembles it come under the purview of the same faculty, and at the same time
 +
| men have a sufficient natural capacity for the truth and indeed in most cases attain
 +
| to it;  wherefore one who divines well ['stochastikos echein'] in regard to the truth
 +
| will also be able to divine well in regard to probabilities ['endoxa'].
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.1.11.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
 +
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
  
A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,
+
</pre>
  
If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.
+
===VOLS. Note 9===
  
And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.
+
<pre>
  
This is aside from the fact that Peirce's semantics
+
| It is thus evident that Rhetoric does not deal with any one definite class
for "Q believes P" is not what you assume for it,
+
| of subjects, but, like Dialectic, [is of general application -- Trans.];
nor is his usage of quantifiers what you assume.
+
| also, that it is useful;  and further, that its function is not so much
 +
| to persuade, as to find out in each case the existing means of persuasion.
 +
| The same holds good in respect to all the other arts.  For instance, it
 +
| is not the function of medicine to restore a patient to health, but only
 +
| to promote this end as far as possible;  for even those whose recovery is
 +
| impossible may be properly treated.  It is further evident that it belongs
 +
| to Rhetoric to discover the real and apparent means of persuasion, just
 +
| as it belongs to Dialectic to discover the real and apparent syllogism.
 +
| For what makes the sophist is not the faculty but the moral purpose.
 +
| But there is a difference:  in Rhetoric, one who acts in accordance with
 +
| sound argument, and one who acts in accordance with moral purpose, are
 +
| both called rhetoricians;  but in Dialectic it is the moral purpose that
 +
| makes the sophist, the dialectician being one whose arguments rest, not
 +
| on moral purpose but on the faculty.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.1.14.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
 +
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
  
The first time I heard this one, it was posed as being about
+
</pre>
"referential opacity" or "non-substitutability of identicals"
 
in intentional contexts, which is a typical symptom of using
 
2-adic relations where 3-adic relations are called for, and
 
even Russell and Quine briefly consider this, though both
 
of them shy away on the usual out-Occaming Occam grounds.
 
  
If you were going to take a lesson from Quine,
+
===VOLS. Note 10===
I think you might well begin with his holism,
 
and quit parapharsing texts out of context.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
| Rhetoric then may be defined as the faculty of discovering the possible means
SS = Seth Sharpless
+
| of persuasion in reference to any subject whatever.  This is the function of
 +
| no other of the arts, each of which is able to instruct and persuade in its
 +
| own special subject;  thus, medicine deals with health and sickness, geometry
 +
| with the properties of magnitudes, arithmetic with number, and similarly with
 +
| all the other arts and sciences.  But Rhetoric, so to say, appears to be able
 +
| to discover the means of persuasion in reference to any given subject.  That is
 +
| why we say that as an art its rules are not applied to any particular definite
 +
| class of things.
 +
|
 +
| As for proofs, some are inartificial, others artificial.  By the former
 +
| I understand all those which have not been furnished by ourselves but were
 +
| already in existence, such as witnesses, tortures, contracts, and the like;
 +
| by the latter, all that can be constructed by system and by our own efforts.
 +
| Thus we have only to make use of the former, whereas we must invent the latter.
 +
|
 +
| Now the proofs furnished by the speech are of three kinds.
 +
| The first depends upon the moral character of the speaker,
 +
| the second upon putting the hearer into a certain frame
 +
| of mind, the third upon the speech itself, in so far as
 +
| it proves or seems to prove.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.1-3.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
 +
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
  
SS: Well at last you address the issue directly, saying what
+
</pre>
    Peter Skagestad already said, to which I have previously
 
    given my response for what it was worth.
 
  
SS: As for your comment,
+
===VOLS. Note 11===
  
    | If you were going to take a lesson from Quine,
+
<pre>
    | I think you might well begin with his holism,
 
    | and quit parapharsing texts out of context,
 
  
SS: the context of the P1 quote in the 1877 paper on "Fixation of Belief" is very familiar
+
| But for purposes of demonstration, real or apparent, just as Dialectic possesses
    to most contributors to this list, my S1 paraphrase was explicit and could be (and was)
+
| two modes of argument, induction and the syllogism, real or apparent, the same is
    judged for its fidelity to the original, and I have scrupulously given sources for other
+
| the case in Rhetoric;  for the example is induction, and the enthymeme a syllogism,
    passages to which I have referred, quoting the less familiar passages verbatim.
+
| and the apparent enthymeme an apparent syllogism.  Accordingly I call an enthymeme
 
+
| a rhetorical syllogism, and an example rhetorical induction. Now all orators produce
SS: Yes, holism, theories of belief revision, theories of the structure of propositions
+
| belief by employing as proofs either examples or enthymemes and nothing else;  so that
    and the logic of relations, intensional and situational logic, Gricean conversational
+
| if, generally speaking, it is necessary to prove any fact whatever either by syllogism
    maxims, theories of inquiry and the history of science, these and much else could be
+
| or by induction -- and that this is so is clear from the 'Analytics' -- each of the
    brought to bear on this little problem, which is one of the things that make it
+
| two former must be identical with each of the two latter.  The difference between
    interesting.
+
| example and enthymeme is evident from the 'Topics', where, in discussing syllogism
 
+
| and induction, it has previously been said that the proof from a number of particular
SS: I have taken note of your admonitions on how I ought to behave.
+
| cases that such is the rule, is called in Dialectic induction, in Rhetoric example;
    May I suggest that a little collegiality on your part would
+
| but when, certain things being posited, something different results by reason of
    not be out of place.
+
| them, alongside of them, from their being true, either universally or in most
 +
| cases, such a conclusion in Dialectic is called a syllogism, in Rhetoric an
 +
| enthymeme.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.8-9.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
 +
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
  
Seth,
+
</pre>
  
I will try to tell you where I am really coming from,
+
===VOLS. Note 12===
in this and all of the other matters of interest to
 
this Forum, as it appears that my epigraphic use of
 
quotations from Russell, Dewey, and Julius Caesar
 
may have confused you about the name of the camp
 
from which I presently look out.
 
  
I studied analytic, existential, oriental, phenomenological,
+
<pre>
and pragmatic philosophy, among several others, pretty much
 
in parallel, for many years as an undergraduate (1967-1976) --
 
yes, that long, for it was an "interesting time", after all --
 
then I pursued graduate studies in mathematics, then later
 
psychology, in the meantime working mostly as a consulting
 
statistician and computer jockey for a mix of academic and
 
professional school research units.
 
  
The more experience that I gained in applying formal sciences --
+
| The function ['ergon'] of Rhetoric, then, is to deal with things about
mathematical, computational, statistical, and logical methods --
+
| which we deliberate, but for which we have no systematic rules;  and in
to the problems that I continued to see coming up in research,
+
| the presence of such hearers as are unable to take a general view of many
the more that my philosophical reflections on my work led me
+
| stages, or to follow a lengthy chain of argument.  But we only deliberate
choose among those that "worked" and those that did not.
+
| about things which seem to admit of issuing in two ways;  as for those things
 
+
| which cannot in the past, present, or future be otherwise, no one deliberates
I can do no better than to report my observations from this experience.
+
| about them, if he supposes that they are such;  for nothing would be gained
The mix of ideas that I learned from analytic philosophy just never
+
| by it.  Now, it is possible to draw conclusions and inferences partly from
quite addresses the realities of phenomena and practices that are
+
| what has been previously demonstrated syllogistically, partly from what
involved in real-live inquiry, while the body of ideas contained
+
| has not, which however needs demonstration, because it is not probable.
in the work of Peirce and Dewey, and sometimes James and Mead,
+
| The first of these methods is necessarily difficult to follow owing to
continues to be a source of genuine insight into the actual
+
| its length, for the judge is supposed to be a simple person;  the second
problems of succeeding at science.
+
| will obtain little credence, because it does not depend upon what is either
 
+
| admitted of probable. The necessary result then is that the enthymeme and
From this perspective, the important thing is whether a philosophical outlook
+
| the example are concerned with things which may, generally speaking, be other
address the experiential phenomena that are present in the field, and whether
+
| than they are, the example being a kind of induction and the enthymeme a kind
it gives us some insight into why the methods that work there manage to do so,
+
| of syllogism, and deduced from few premisses, often from fewer than the regular
for the sake of improving how they manage to do so in the future.
+
| syllogism;  for if any one of these is well known, there is no need to mention it,
 +
| for the hearer can add it himself.  For instance, to prove that Dorieus was the
 +
| victor in a contest at which the prize was a crown, it is enough to say that
 +
| he won a victory at the Olympic games;  there is no need to add that the
 +
| prize at the Olympic games is a crown, for everybody knows it.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.12-13.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
 +
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
  
An approximate formulation that addresses the realities of phenomena,
+
</pre>
practices, and problems in inquiry is vastly preferable to an exact
 
formulation of some other subject, that has no relation to the job.
 
  
I directly addressed the material issues that raised from the very first.
+
===VOLS. Note 13===
That is, after all, a rather old joke.  But you have simply ignored all
 
of the alternate directions that I indicated, all of them arising from
 
the substance and the intent of Peirce's work.
 
  
The little puzzle that you have been worrying us over is typical of
+
<pre>
the sort of abject silliness that so-called analytic philosophy has
 
wasted the last hundred years of intellectual history with, and I,
 
for one, believe that it is time to move on.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| But since few of the propositions of the rhetorical syllogism
 
+
| are necessary ['anagkaion'], for most of the things which we
Seth,
+
| judge and examine can be other than they are, human actions,
 
+
| which are the subject of our deliberation and examination,
> P1.  "we think each one of our beliefs to be true,
+
| being all of such a character and, generally speaking, none of
>      and, indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375).
+
| them necessary;  since, further, facts which only generally happen
>
+
| or are merely possible can only be demonstrated by other facts of
> And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua fallibilist,
+
| the same kind, and necessary facts by necessary propositions (and
> which you regard as being paradoxical in importS1 is your restatement of P1,
+
| that this is so is clear from the 'Analytics'), it is evident that
> and S2 is what you believe to be the fallibilist view.
+
| the materials from which enthymemes are derived will be sometimes
>
+
| necessary, but for the most part only generally true;  and these
> S1. (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).
+
| materials being probabilities and signs, it follows that these
 
+
| two elements must correspond to these two kinds of propositions,
JA: This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
+
| each to each.  For that which is probable is that which generally
    probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.
+
| happens, not however unreservedly, as some define it, but that
 +
| which is concerned with things that may be other than they are,
 +
| being so related to that in regard to which it is probable as
 +
| the universal to the particularAs to signs, some are related
 +
| as the particular to the universal, others as the universal to
 +
| the particular. Necessary signs are called 'tekmeria';  those
 +
| which are not necessary have no distinguishing name.  I call
 +
| those necessary signs from which a logical syllogism can be
 +
| constructed, wherefore such a sign is called 'tekmerion';
 +
| for when people think that their arguments are irrefutable,
 +
| they think that they are bringing forward a 'tekmerion',
 +
| something as it were proved and concluded; for in
 +
| the old language 'tekmar' and 'peras' have the
 +
| same meaning (limit, conclusion).
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.14-17.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
 +
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
 +
 
 +
</pre>
  
JA: A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,
+
===VOLS. Note 14===
  
JA: If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.
+
<pre>
  
JA: And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.
+
| Among signs, some are related as the particular to the universal;
 +
| for instance, if one were to say that all wise men are just, because
 +
| Socrates was both wise and just.  Now this is a sign, but even though
 +
| the particular statement is true, it can be refuted, because it cannot
 +
| be reduced to syllogistic form.  But if one were to say that it is a sign
 +
| that a man is ill, because he has a fever, or that a woman has had a child
 +
| because she has milk, this is a necessary sign.  This alone among signs is
 +
| a 'tekmerion';  for only in this case, if the fact is true, is the argument
 +
| irrefutable.  Other signs are related as the universal to the particular,
 +
| for instance, if one were to say that it is a sign that this man has a fever,
 +
| because he breathes hard;  but even if the fact be true, this argument also
 +
| can be refuted, for it is possible for a man to breathe hard without having
 +
| a fever.  We have now explained the meaning of probable, sign, and necessary
 +
| sign, and the difference between them;  in the 'Analytics' we have defined
 +
| them more clearly and stated why some of them can be converted into logical
 +
| syllogisms, while others cannot.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.18
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
 +
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
  
JA: This is aside from the fact that Peirce's semantics
+
</pre>
    for "Q believes P" is not what you assume for it,
 
    nor is his usage of quantifiers what you assume.
 
  
JA: The first time I heard this one, it was posed as being about
+
===VOLS. Note 15===
    "referential opacity" or "non-substitutability of identicals"
 
    in intentional contexts, which is a typical symptom of using
 
    2-adic relations where 3-adic relations are called for, and
 
    even Russell and Quine briefly consider this, though both
 
    of them shy away on the usual out-Occaming Occam grounds.
 
  
JA: If you were going to take a lesson from Quine,
+
<pre>
    I think you might well begin with his holism,
+
 
    and quit parapharsing texts out of context.
+
| We have now stated the materials of proofs which are thought to be demonstrative.
 +
| But a very great difference between enthymemes has escaped the notice of nearly
 +
| every one, although it also exists in the dialectical method of syllogisms.
 +
| For some of them belong to Rhetoric, some syllogisms only to Dialectic,
 +
| and others to other arts and faculties, some already existing and
 +
| others not yet established.  Hence its is that this escapes
 +
| the notice of the speakers, and the more they specialize
 +
| in a subject, the more they transgress the limits of
 +
| Rhetoric and Dialectic.  But this will be clearer
 +
| if stated at greater length.
 +
|
 +
| I mean by dialectical and rhetorical syllogisms those which are concerned with what
 +
| we call "topics", which may be applied alike to Law, Physics, Politics, and many
 +
| other sciences that differ in kind, such as the topic of the more or less, which
 +
| will furnish syllogisms and enthymemes equally well for Law, Physics, or any
 +
| other science whatever, although these subjects differ in kind.  Specific
 +
| topics on the other hand are derived from propositions which are peculiar
 +
| to each species or genus of things;  there are, for example, propositions
 +
| about Physics which can furnish neither enthymemes nor syllogisms about
 +
| Ethics, and there are propositions concerned with Ethics which will be
 +
| useless for furnishing conclusions about Physics;  and the same holds
 +
| good in all cases.  The first kind of topics will not make a man
 +
| practically wise about any particular class of things, because
 +
| they do not deal with any particular subject matter;  but as
 +
| to the specific topics, the happier a man is in his choice
 +
| of propositions, the more he will unconsciously produce
 +
| a science quite different from Dialectic and Rhetoric.
 +
| For if once he hits upon first principles, it will
 +
| no longer be Dialectic or Rhetoric, but that
 +
| science whose principles he has arrived at.
 +
| Most enthymemes are constructed from
 +
| these special topics, which are
 +
| called particular and special,
 +
| fewer from those that are
 +
| common or universal.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.20-22
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
 +
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
  
What Peirce says here is simply the common sense truism
+
</pre>
that what a person believes is what that person believes
 
to be true, and therefore the appendix "to be true" is
 
veriformly redundant.  This has no special bearing on
 
fallibility except that when a person changes a belief
 
then that person ipso facto changes a belief as to what
 
is true.
 
  
When one changes a belief
+
===VOLS. Note 16===
from something of the form A
 
to something of the form ~A,
 
then 1 of 3 things can occur:
 
  
1.  A is true, in which case one is now wrong to believe ~A.
+
<pre>
2.  A is not true, in which case one was wrong to believe A.
 
3.  The distinction between A and ~A is ill-formed, in which
 
    case one was wrong in believing that it was well-formed.
 
  
In either case, one has has actualized one's fallibility.
+
| We have said that example ['paradeigma', analogy] is a kind of induction and with
 +
| what kind of material it deals by way of induction.  It is neither the relation
 +
| of part to whole, nor of whole to part, nor of one whole to another whole, but
 +
| of part to part, of like to like, when both come under the same genus, but one
 +
| of them is better known than the other.  For example, to prove that Dionysius
 +
| is aiming at a tyranny, because he asks for a bodyguard, one might say that
 +
| Pisistratus before him and Theagenes of Megara did the same, and when they
 +
| obtained what they asked for made themselves tyrants.  All the other
 +
| tyrants known may serve as an example of Dionysius, whose reason,
 +
| however, for asking for a bodyguard we do not yet know.  All these
 +
| examples are contained under the same universal proposition, that
 +
| one who is aiming at a tyranny asks for a bodyguard.
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.19
 +
|
 +
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
 +
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
 +
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
 +
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.
  
As I explained in my first remarks on this issue, the proper context for understanding
+
</pre>
Peirce's statements about belief -- for anyone who really wishes to do that -- since
 
belief is a state that he calls the end of inquiry, is Peirce's theory of inquiry,
 
which process he analyzes in terms of the three principal types of inference that
 
he recognizes, placing that study within the study of logic, which he treats
 
as more or less equivalent to semiotics, or the theory of sign relations.
 
Since Peirce holds that all of our thoughts and beliefs and so on are
 
signs, and since sign relations are 3-adic relations, the ultimate
 
context for understanding what Peirce says about belief and error
 
and so on -- for anyone who really wishes to do that -- is the
 
context of 3-adic sign relations and the semiotic processes
 
that take place in these frames.  Quine's holism, as best
 
I can remember from my studies of 30 years ago, says that
 
we cannot translate single statements, but only whole
 
theories, and I find that an admirable sentiment,
 
independently of how consistent Quine may have
 
been in his application of it.  Your attempt
 
at a paraphrase, which I can only suspect
 
began with the punchline and tried to
 
attach Peirce as the fall guy, fails
 
already on syntactic grounds, since
 
it does not preserve even the form
 
of what Peirce said, and although
 
you provide no explicit semantics
 
for the concept of belief you are
 
attempting to attach to Peirce's
 
statement, whereas Peirce's gave
 
us many further statements of
 
what he meant, fails on the
 
minimal semantic grounds
 
that no false statement
 
can be the paraphrase
 
of a true sentence.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===VOLS. Note 17===
  
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
<pre>
JR = Joe Ransdell
+
 
SS = Seth Sharpless
+
The Likely Story:
 +
Its likely Moral.
  
SS: I shall try to address your objection to my argument with the kind
+
Those of you who stayed with the tour have been strolling with me
    of civility that I wish you could show for me.  You were apparently
+
through the Socratic and the Peripatetic wings of a gallery devoted
    not satisfied with my reply to Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox when
+
to the Classical background of Peirce's theory of signs and inquiry,
    they made the same objection you are now making, so I will try to
+
and the exhibits that I have collected there have been gathering dust
    make my argument clearer.
+
in that Museum of Incidental Musements for a score of Summers or more.
 +
If I were to state the theme of the show it'd come out a bit like this:
  
I only have a moment, and so I will save this note for a more careful review later.
+
| There is a continuity between approximate (likely, probable)
I can see that you are in earnest, but my general impression is that you are moving
+
| and apodeictic (demonstrative, exact) patterns of reasoning,
at a high rate of speed down a no outlet alley, and perhaps a bit too focussed on the
+
| with the latter being the limiting ideal of the former type.
syntactic peculiarities of one particular fragment, when Peirce himself has provided us
 
with ample paraphrases and amplifications of his intended sense on this very same point.
 
  
I wish I could convince you that the quantifiers and their interlacings
+
Having spent the lion's share of my waking and my dreaming life
are irrelevant to the actual sense of what Peirce is saying here, as he
+
trying to put things together that others are busy taking apart,
is merely observing a pragmatic equivalence between two situations that
+
I found that it often helps to return to the sources of streams,
may be expressed in relational predicates of yet to be determined arity.
+
where opposing banks of perspectives are a bit less riven apart.
Failing that, we will have to examine what Peirce in 1877 might have
 
meant by what you are assuming is the implicit quantifier signalled
 
by "each".  This is an issue that I have studied long and hard, but
 
have avoided raising it so far, mostly out of a prospective despair
 
at my present capacity to render it clear.  Maybe it is time.
 
But really, it is not necesssary to get what Peirce is
 
saying here, which is a fairly simple, common sense
 
point, idiomatically expressed, and, most likely,
 
irreducibly so.  It would be a far better thing
 
we do if we adopt the hermeneutic principle of
 
looking for the author's own paraphrases and
 
approximations, even if not exact from
 
a purely syntactic point of view.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
For example, modus tollens is a pattern of inference
 +
in deductive reasoning that takes the following form:
  
SS, quoting JA, citing JR, paraphrasing SS, interpreting CSP:
+
A => B
 +
  ~B
 +
--------
 +
  ~A
  
    | And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua
+
Probably the most common pattern of inference
    | fallibilist, which you regard as being paradoxical in import.
+
in empirical reasoning takes a form like this:
    |
 
    | P1. "we think each one of our beliefs to be true, and,
 
    |      indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375)
 
    |
 
    | S1 is your restatement of P1 ...
 
    |
 
    | S1. (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).
 
  
SS, quoting JA:
+
H_0 = the null hypothesis.  Typically, H_0 says
 +
that a couple of factors X and Y are independent,
 +
in effect, that they have no lawlike relationship.
  
    | This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
+
D_0 = the null distribution of outcomes.
    | probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.
+
In part, D_0 says that particular types
    |
+
of possible outcomes have probabilities
    | A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,
+
of happening that are very near to zero.
    |
 
    | If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.
 
    |
 
    | And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.
 
  
SS: No, Jon, you have not got it quite right.  S1 was not my restatement of P1;
+
Let us assume that D_0 => G_0, with G_0
    I gave S1 as a paraphrase of what a believer must believe, given that P1 is true.
+
being the proposition that an event E_0
    That is not quite the same (though in later passages, I did sometimes carelessly
+
has a close to zero chance of happening.
    refer to S1 as a "paraphrase of P1").
 
  
SS: In response to the objection of Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox,
+
We are given the theoretical propositions:
    which is the same as that which you are now making, I conceded that:
+
(1) H_0 => D_0 and (2) D_0 => G_0, and so
 +
we may assume that (3) H_0 => G_0.
  
SS: (1) (For every x)I believe(I believe x -> x is true)
+
Let's say that we do the relevant experiment,
 +
and, lo and behold, we observe the event E_0,
 +
that is supposed to be unlikely if H_0 holds.
 +
Now it's not a logical contradiction, but we
 +
take E_0 as evidence against G_0 anyway, and
 +
by modus tollens as evidence contrary to H_0.
  
SS: is not the same as:
+
We may view this typical pattern of "significance testing"
 +
as a statistical generalization of the modus tollens rule.
  
SS: (2) I believe(For every x)(I believe x-> x is true).
+
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
  
SS: But on the assumption that the believer is intelligent,
+
VOLS.  Note 17 -- Dup or Correction?
    and that he sees the conditional in (1) as a necessary
 
    ("tautologous") truth, he should be able to make an
 
    inference like the following:
 
  
SS: "Any arbitrarily chosen belief of mine must be believed by me to be true"
+
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
  
SS: Therefore,
+
The Likely Story:
 +
Its likely Moral.
  
SS: "All my beliefs are believed by me to be true"
+
Those of you who stayed with the tour have been strolling with me
 
+
through the Socratic and the Peripatetic wings of a gallery devoted
SS: which is a valid universal generalization of the same kind as:
+
to the Classical background of Peirce's theory of signs and inquiry,
 +
and the exhibits that I have collected there have been gathering dust
 +
in that Museum of Incidental Musements for a score of Summers or more.
 +
If I were to state the theme of the show it'd come out a bit like this:
  
SS: Any arbitrarily chosen natural number must be a product of primes;
+
| There is a continuity between approximate (likely, probable)
    therefore, all natural numbers are products of primes.
+
| and apodeictic (demonstrative, exact) patterns of reasoning,
 +
| with the latter being the limiting ideal of the former type.
  
SS: Any arbitrarily chosen cat must be a mammal;
+
Having spent the lion's share of my waking and my dreaming life
    therefore, all cats are mammals.
+
trying to put things together that others are busy taking apart,
 +
I found that it often helps to return to the sources of streams,
 +
where opposing banks of perspectives are a bit less riven apart.
  
SS: It is true that this is an inference that calls for some logical skill on the part of
+
For example, modus tollens is a pattern of inference
    the believer, so that someone could believe P1 without believing S1, but we are talking
+
in deductive reasoning that takes the following form:
    about Peirce, and whether HIS belief in fallibilism is consistent with HIS belief in P1.
 
    I think there can be no doubt about his belief in P1.  As to what it is exactly that he
 
    believes, when he believes in fallibilism, that is a more difficult question.  I am now
 
    having doubts that "Some of my beliefs are false," or
 
  
SS: (S2) (For some x)(I believe x & x is not true)
+
A => B
 +
  ~B
 +
--------
 +
  ~A
  
SS: fairly expresses Peirce's Fallibilism. I discussed that possibility in my
+
Probably the most common pattern of inference
    summary letter, under the heading "First Solution."  More needs to be said
+
in empirical reasoning takes a form like this:
    about it, but I'll keep it for another communication, possibly in response
 
    to Joseph's forthcoming letter.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
H_0 = the null hypothesis.  Typically, H_0 says
 +
that a couple of factors X and Y are independent,
 +
in effect, that they have no lawlike relationship.
  
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
D_0 = the null distribution of outcomes.
JR = Joe Ransdell
+
In part, D_0 says that particular types
SS = Seth Sharpless
+
of possible outcomes have probabilities
 +
of happening that are very near to zero.
  
SS: I shall try to address your objection to my argument with the kind
+
Let us assume that D_0 => G_0, with G_0
    of civility that I wish you could show for me.  You were apparently
+
being the proposition that an event E_0
    not satisfied with my reply to Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox when
+
has a close to zero chance of happening.
    they made the same objection you are now making, so I will try to
 
    make my argument clearer.
 
  
I would try to address the issue of civility,
+
We are given the theoretical propositions:
but my defense would have to take the form,
+
(1) H_0 => D_0 and (2) D_0 => G_0, and so
"But Ma, he hit me first!", and I long ago
+
we may assume that (3) H_0 => G_0.
learned the recursive futility of setting
 
foot on such a path.
 
  
JA: I only have a moment, and so I will save this note for
+
Let's say that we do the relevant experiment,
    a more careful review later.  I can see that you are in
+
and, lo and behold, we observe the event E_0,
    earnest, but my general impression is that you are moving
+
that is supposed to be unlikely if H_0 holds.
    at a high rate of speed down a no outlet alley, and perhaps
+
Now it's not a logical contradiction, but we
    a bit too focussed on the syntactic peculiarities of one
+
take E_0 as evidence against G_0 anyway, and
    particular fragment, when Peirce himself has provided
+
by modus tollens as evidence contrary to H_0.
    us with ample paraphrases and amplifications of his
 
    intended sense on this very same point.
 
  
I have already mentioned another locus where Peirce adverts to this issue,
+
We may view this typical pattern of "significance testing"
but this time with all of the requisite qualifiers and all of the nuanced
+
as a statistical generalization of the modus tollens rule.
indicators of relative significance intact, and that is in this passage:
 
  
| Two things here are all-important to assure oneself of
+
</pre>
| and to remember.  The first is that a person is not
 
| absolutely an individual.  His thoughts are what
 
| he is "saying to himself", that is, is saying
 
| to that other self that is just coming into
 
| life in the flow of time.  When one reasons,
 
| it is that critical self that one is trying
 
| to persuade;  and all thought whatsoever is a
 
| sign, and is mostly of the nature of language.
 
| The second thing to remember is that the man's
 
| circle of society (however widely or narrowly
 
| this phrase may be understood), is a sort of
 
| loosely compacted person, in some respects of
 
| higher rank than the person of an individual
 
| organism.  It is these two things alone that
 
| render it possible for you -- but only in
 
| the abstract, and in a Pickwickian sense --
 
| to distinguish between absolute truth
 
| and what you do not doubt.
 
|
 
| CSP, CP 5.421.
 
|
 
| Charles Sanders Peirce, "What Pragmatism Is",
 
|'The Monist', Volume 15, 1905, pages 161-181,
 
| Also in the 'Collected Papers', CP 5.411-437.
 
  
If we wanted a bone to pick,
+
===VOLS. Note 18===
this one promises more beef.
 
  
Another approach that might be more productive,
+
<pre>
if no less controversial, would be through the
 
examination of the distinction between what we
 
frequently call "belief" and "knowledge", and
 
why the distinction collapses or degenerates
 
for the fictively isolated individual agent.
 
  
JA, amending JA:
+
| The dull green time-stained panes
 +
| of the windows look upon each other
 +
| with the cowardly glances of cheats.
 +
|
 +
| Maxim Gorky, 'Creatures That Once Were Men'
  
I wish I could convince you that the quantifiers and their interlacings
+
Peirce is a reflective practitioner of pragmatic thinking,
are irrelevant to the actual sense of what Peirce is saying here, as he
+
which is to say that he puts the interpreter back into the
is merely observing a pragmatic equivalence between two situations that
+
scene of observation, from whence he has, from time to time,
may be expressed in relational predicates of yet to be determined arity.
+
been elevated beyond implication, or exiled beyond redemption.
Failing that, we will have to examine what Peirce in 1877 might have
+
 
meant by what you are assuming is the implicit quantifier signalled
+
</pre>
by "each".  This is an issue that I have studied long and hard, but
 
have avoided raising so far, mostly out of a prospective despair
 
at my present capacity to render it clear.  Maybe it is time.
 
But really, it is not necesssary to do this just in order to
 
get what Peirce is saying here, which is a fairly simple,
 
common sense point, idiomatically expressed, and, most
 
likely, irreducibly so. It would be a far better
 
thing we do if we adopt the hermeneutic principle
 
of looking for the author's own paraphrases and
 
approximations, even if not exactly identical
 
from a purely syntactic point of view.
 
  
A minimal caution about this point would require us to recognize
+
==VOLS. Verities Of Likely Stories &bull; Discussion==
two distinct dimensions of variation in the usage of quantifiers:
 
  
1.  The difference in usage between Peirce 1877 and the
+
<pre>
    post-Fregean scene of our contemporary discussions.
+
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
  
2.  The difference in usage between most mathematicians, then and now,
+
Seth,
    and people who identify themselves as "logicists" or "linguists".
 
  
We probably cannot help ourselves from translating Peirce 1877
+
> P1.  "we think each one of our beliefs to be true,
into our own frame of reference, but we should be aware of the
+
>      and, indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375).
potential for distortion that arises from the anachronisms and
+
>
the dialectic disluxations that will as a consequence result.
+
> And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua fallibilist,
 +
> which you regard as being paradoxical in import.  S1 is your restatement of P1,
 +
> and S2 is what you believe to be the fallibilist view.
 +
>
 +
> S1.  (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).
  
SS, quoting JA, citing JR, paraphrasing SS, interpreting CSP:
+
This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
 +
probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.
  
    | And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua
+
A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,
    | fallibilist, which you regard as being paradoxical in import.
 
    |
 
    | P1. "we think each one of our beliefs to be true, and,
 
    |      indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375)
 
    |
 
    | S1 is your restatement of P1 ...
 
    |
 
    | S1. (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).
 
  
SS, quoting JA:
+
If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.
  
    | This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
+
And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.
    | probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.
 
    |
 
    | A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,
 
    |
 
    | If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.
 
    |
 
    | And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.
 
  
SS: No, Jon, you have not got it quite right.  S1 was not my restatement of P1;
+
This is aside from the fact that Peirce's semantics
    I gave S1 as a paraphrase of what a believer must believe, given that P1 is true.
+
for "Q believes P" is not what you assume for it,
    That is not quite the same (though in later passages, I did sometimes carelessly
+
nor is his usage of quantifiers what you assume.
    refer to S1 as a "paraphrase of P1").
 
  
I have no probleme with the idea that interpretation is inescapably abductive:
+
The first time I heard this one, it was posed as being about
 +
"referential opacity" or "non-substitutability of identicals"
 +
in intentional contexts, which is a typical symptom of using
 +
2-adic relations where 3-adic relations are called for, and
 +
even Russell and Quine briefly consider this, though both
 +
of them shy away on the usual out-Occaming Occam grounds.
  
http://www.chss.montclair.edu/inquiry/fall95/awbrey.html
+
If you were going to take a lesson from Quine,
 +
I think you might well begin with his holism,
 +
and quit parapharsing texts out of context.
  
The question is whether the interpretant preserves a semblance of the meaning.
+
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
  
SS: In response to the objection of Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox,
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
    which is the same as that which you are now making, I conceded that:
+
SS = Seth Sharpless
  
SS: (1) (For every x)I believe(I believe x -> x is true)
+
SS: Well at last you address the issue directly, saying what
 +
    Peter Skagestad already said, to which I have previously
 +
    given my response for what it was worth.
  
Peirce did not say this.
+
SS: As for your comment,
  
SS: is not the same as:
+
    | If you were going to take a lesson from Quine,
 +
    | I think you might well begin with his holism,
 +
    | and quit parapharsing texts out of context,
  
SS: (2) I believe(For every x)(I believe x-> x is true).
+
SS: the context of the P1 quote in the 1877 paper on "Fixation of Belief" is very familiar
 +
    to most contributors to this list, my S1 paraphrase was explicit and could be (and was)
 +
    judged for its fidelity to the original, and I have scrupulously given sources for other
 +
    passages to which I have referred, quoting the less familiar passages verbatim.
  
Peirce did not say this.
+
SS: Yes, holism, theories of belief revision, theories of the structure of propositions
 +
    and the logic of relations, intensional and situational logic, Gricean conversational
 +
    maxims, theories of inquiry and the history of science, these and much else could be
 +
    brought to bear on this little problem, which is one of the things that make it
 +
    interesting.
  
SS: But on the assumption that the believer is intelligent,
+
SS: I have taken note of your admonitions on how I ought to behave.
     and that he sees the conditional in (1) as a necessary
+
     May I suggest that a little collegiality on your part would
     ("tautologous") truth, he should be able to make an
+
     not be out of place.
    inference like the following:
 
  
The conditional in (1) is not necessary.
+
Seth,
I don't know anybody who would say this.
 
  
SS: "Any arbitrarily chosen belief of mine must be believed by me to be true"
+
I will try to tell you where I am really coming from,
 +
in this and all of the other matters of interest to
 +
this Forum, as it appears that my epigraphic use of
 +
quotations from Russell, Dewey, and Julius Caesar
 +
may have confused you about the name of the camp
 +
from which I presently look out.
  
This is a non-sequitur.  Oh wait.
+
I studied analytic, existential, oriental, phenomenological,
 +
and pragmatic philosophy, among several others, pretty much
 +
in parallel, for many years as an undergraduate (1967-1976) --
 +
yes, that long, for it was an "interesting time", after all --
 +
then I pursued graduate studies in mathematics, then later
 +
psychology, in the meantime working mostly as a consulting
 +
statistician and computer jockey for a mix of academic and
 +
professional school research units.
  
Any arbitrarily chosen belief of mine must be believed-by-me-to-be-true.
+
The more experience that I gained in applying formal sciences --
 +
mathematical, computational, statistical, and logical methods --
 +
to the problems that I continued to see coming up in research,
 +
the more that my philosophical reflections on my work led me
 +
choose among those that "worked" and those that did not.
  
Okay. But that's what he said in the first place.
+
I can do no better than to report my observations from this experience.
And this statement does not confict with believing
+
The mix of ideas that I learned from analytic philosophy just never
that some belief of mine may turn-out-to-be-false.
+
quite addresses the realities of phenomena and practices that are
 +
involved in real-live inquiry, while the body of ideas contained
 +
in the work of Peirce and Dewey, and sometimes James and Mead,
 +
continues to be a source of genuine insight into the actual
 +
problems of succeeding at science.
  
A statement can be believed-by-me-to-be-true and turn-out-to-be-false.
+
From this perspective, the important thing is whether a philosophical outlook
 +
address the experiential phenomena that are present in the field, and whether
 +
it gives us some insight into why the methods that work there manage to do so,
 +
for the sake of improving how they manage to do so in the future.
  
Peirce's statement again:
+
An approximate formulation that addresses the realities of phenomena,
 +
practices, and problems in inquiry is vastly preferable to an exact
 +
formulation of some other subject, that has no relation to the job.
  
| But we think each one of our beliefs to be true,
+
I directly addressed the material issues that raised from the very first.
| and, indeed, it is mere tautology to say so.
+
That is, after all, a rather old joke. But you have simply ignored all
|
+
of the alternate directions that I indicated, all of them arising from
| CSP, 'Collected Papers', CP 5.375
+
the substance and the intent of Peirce's work.
  
This has the form of:
+
The little puzzle that you have been worrying us over is typical of
 +
the sort of abject silliness that so-called analytic philosophy has
 +
wasted the last hundred years of intellectual history with, and I,
 +
for one, believe that it is time to move on.
  
| But we can cover any distance we can run at a pace faster than a walk.
+
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
  
Straightened out a bit:
+
Seth,
  
| Any distance we can run is a distance we can cover faster than a walk.
+
> P1.  "we think each one of our beliefs to be true,
 +
>      and, indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375).
 +
>
 +
> And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua fallibilist,
 +
> which you regard as being paradoxical in import.  S1 is your restatement of P1,
 +
> and S2 is what you believe to be the fallibilist view.
 +
>
 +
> S1.  (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).
  
The tautology is one that occurs at the level of the two predicates:
+
JA: This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
"runnable" and "coverable at a pace faster than a walk".  It would
+
    probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.
be better to avoid worrying about the quantifiers in this reading.
 
  
SS: Therefore,
+
JA: A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,
  
SS: "All my beliefs are believed by me to be true"
+
JA: If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.
  
SS: which is a valid universal generalization of the same kind as:
+
JA: And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.
  
SS: Any arbitrarily chosen natural number must be a product of primes;
+
JA: This is aside from the fact that Peirce's semantics
     therefore, all natural numbers are products of primes.
+
     for "Q believes P" is not what you assume for it,
 +
    nor is his usage of quantifiers what you assume.
  
SS: Any arbitrarily chosen cat must be a mammal;
+
JA: The first time I heard this one, it was posed as being about
     therefore, all cats are mammals.
+
    "referential opacity" or "non-substitutability of identicals"
 +
    in intentional contexts, which is a typical symptom of using
 +
     2-adic relations where 3-adic relations are called for, and
 +
    even Russell and Quine briefly consider this, though both
 +
    of them shy away on the usual out-Occaming Occam grounds.
  
SS: It is true that this is an inference that calls for some logical skill on the
+
JA: If you were going to take a lesson from Quine,
    part of the believer, so that someone could believe P1 without believing S1,
+
     I think you might well begin with his holism,
     but we are talking about Peirce, and whether HIS belief in fallibilism is
+
     and quit parapharsing texts out of context.
    consistent with HIS belief in P1.  I think there can be no doubt about
 
    his belief in P1.  As to what it is exactly that he believes, when he
 
     believes in fallibilism, that is a more difficult question. I am now
 
    having doubts that "Some of my beliefs are false," or
 
  
SS: (S2) (For some x)(I believe x & x is not true)
+
What Peirce says here is simply the common sense truism
 +
that what a person believes is what that person believes
 +
to be true, and therefore the appendix "to be true" is
 +
veriformly redundant.  This has no special bearing on
 +
fallibility except that when a person changes a belief
 +
then that person ipso facto changes a belief as to what
 +
is true.
  
SS: fairly expresses Peirce's Fallibilism.  I discussed that possibility in my
+
When one changes a belief
    summary letter, under the heading "First Solution".  More needs to be said
+
from something of the form A
    about it, but I'll keep it for another communication, possibly in response
+
to something of the form ~A,
    to Joseph's forthcoming letter.
+
then 1 of 3 things can occur:
  
I believe that the generic problem here is a "poverty of syntax".
+
1A is true, in which case one is now wrong to believe ~A.
Syntax, expecially isolated syntax fragments of natural language
+
2. A is not true, in which case one was wrong to believe A.
idioms, may constrain but it cannot utterly determine the models.
+
3The distinction between A and ~A is ill-formed, in which
You have to gather independent evidence as to what the intended
+
    case one was wrong in believing that it was well-formed.
models may beIn Peirce's case, his use of the word "belief",
 
as in "state of belief" as in "The irritation of doubt causes a
 
struggle to attain a state of belief", simply points to a whole
 
different order of models (universes + predicates) than the ones
 
that you are presently taking for granted as the only possible
 
models, most likely importing them from the discussions with
 
which you have become familiar on the contemporary scene.
 
One of the most significant aspects of Peirce's whole
 
approach is that he is talking about a process, one
 
in which signs, in particular, beliefs and concepts,
 
can enter and exit the pool of accepted, acted on,
 
adopted, trusted, utilized resourcesYour use
 
of quantifiers is assuming a static situation,
 
as if the population of beliefs were fixed,
 
no pun, for once, intended.  This is why
 
you appear to be repeating Parmenidean
 
paradoxes in the mental realm, as if
 
to show that changing one's mind is
 
impossible.  It is not necessary
 
to invent modal or tensed logic
 
to deal with this, as change
 
can be modeled in the ways
 
that mathematics has been
 
doing it for a long time.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
In either case, one has has actualized one's fallibility.
  
Note 13
+
As I explained in my first remarks on this issue, the proper context for understanding
 
+
Peirce's statements about belief -- for anyone who really wishes to do that -- since
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
belief is a state that he calls the end of inquiry, is Peirce's theory of inquiry,
 
+
which process he analyzes in terms of the three principal types of inference that
I believe that one should always steer into a skid, but I doubt it.
+
he recognizes, placing that study within the study of logic, which he treats
That expresses the swerve of my learned dispositions, in cars with
+
as more or less equivalent to semiotics, or the theory of sign relations.
rear-wheel drives on icy roads, and its corrective waylaying by my
+
Since Peirce holds that all of our thoughts and beliefs and so on are
first trip in a rental car, with front-wheel drive, on an icy road,
+
signs, and since sign relations are 3-adic relations, the ultimate
about as well as any collection of mere linguistic mechanisms will.
+
context for understanding what Peirce says about belief and error
The circumstunts that mere words will not convey what I learned by
+
and so on -- for anyone who really wishes to do that -- is the
way of this adventition and all of my other near-death experiences
+
context of 3-adic sign relations and the semiotic processes
in this life is merely the insufficiency of words and their author.
+
that take place in these framesQuine's holism, as best
 
+
I can remember from my studies of 30 years ago, says that
Phenomena come first, theories come later,
+
we cannot translate single statements, but only whole
on the evolutionary scale of time, anyway.
+
theories, and I find that an admirable sentiment,
The circumstance that theories are always
+
independently of how consistent Quine may have
falling short of phenomena in some degree,
+
been in his application of itYour attempt
does not stay the phenomenon in its orbit.
+
at a paraphrase, which I can only suspect
 
+
began with the punchline and tried to
Animate creatures capable of inquiry, people like us, acted on dispositions
+
attach Peirce as the fall guy, fails
that we call "belief" and experienced experiences that we call "doubt" long
+
already on syntactic grounds, since
before they had the concepts, much less the words, "belief" and "doubt", or
+
it does not preserve even the form
universal quantifiers "all" and "each", with or without existential import,
+
of what Peirce said, and although
with or without hypostatic general import, with or without game-theoretic
+
you provide no explicit semantics
import, with or without predesignated domains of quantification, with or
+
for the concept of belief you are
without you name what comes nextConcepts, mental symbols to pragmatic
+
attempting to attach to Peirce's
thinkers, are instrumental goods that we import through the customs of
+
statement, whereas Peirce's gave
biology and culture.  They come and go.  I love the game of etymology
+
us many further statements of
and enjoy an apt bit of ordinary language analysis as much as anyone
+
what he meant, fails on the
has a right to, but the theory that you can wring all your theories
+
minimal semantic grounds
of phenomena, no matter how complex, out of commonsense word usage
+
that no false statement
is a notion whose time has come and goneIt just ain't science.
+
can be the paraphrase
 
+
of a true sentence.
| Belief and doubt may be conceived to be distinguished only in degree.
 
|
 
| CSP, CE 3, pages 21.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, MS 182, 1872, "Chapter 1 (Enlarged Abstract)", pages 20-21 in:
 
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
 
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
 
  
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
</pre>
 
  
==VOOP. Varieties Of Ontology Projects==
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
 +
JR = Joe Ransdell
 +
SS = Seth Sharpless
  
<pre>
+
SS: I shall try to address your objection to my argument with the kind
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
    of civility that I wish you could show for me.  You were apparently
 +
    not satisfied with my reply to Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox when
 +
    they made the same objection you are now making, so I will try to
 +
    make my argument clearer.
  
VOOP. Note 1
+
I only have a moment, and so I will save this note for a more careful review later.
 
+
I can see that you are in earnest, but my general impression is that you are moving
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
at a high rate of speed down a no outlet alley, and perhaps a bit too focussed on the
 +
syntactic peculiarities of one particular fragment, when Peirce himself has provided us
 +
with ample paraphrases and amplifications of his intended sense on this very same point.
  
Problem Statement.
+
I wish I could convince you that the quantifiers and their interlacings
 +
are irrelevant to the actual sense of what Peirce is saying here, as he
 +
is merely observing a pragmatic equivalence between two situations that
 +
may be expressed in relational predicates of yet to be determined arity.
 +
Failing that, we will have to examine what Peirce in 1877 might have
 +
meant by what you are assuming is the implicit quantifier signalled
 +
by "each".  This is an issue that I have studied long and hard, but
 +
have avoided raising it so far, mostly out of a prospective despair
 +
at my present capacity to render it clear.  Maybe it is time.
 +
But really, it is not necesssary to get what Peirce is
 +
saying here, which is a fairly simple, common sense
 +
point, idiomatically expressed, and, most likely,
 +
irreducibly so.  It would be a far better thing
 +
we do if we adopt the hermeneutic principle of
 +
looking for the author's own paraphrases and
 +
approximations, even if not exact from
 +
a purely syntactic point of view.
  
A.  What are the different types of ontology projects
+
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
    that are covered by our current scope and purpose?
 
  
B.  What are the criteria that are appropriate
+
SS, quoting JA, citing JR, paraphrasing SS, interpreting CSP:
    to each of the different ontology projects?
 
  
Given, then, that different types of ontology projects
+
    | And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua
will have different criteria for the acceptability and
+
    | fallibilist, which you regard as being paradoxical in import.
the adequacy of proposals at each stage of development,
+
    |
let us see if we can formulate the respective criteria
+
    | P1. "we think each one of our beliefs to be true, and,
for a number of ontology projects that fall within the
+
    |      indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375)
charge, scope and purpose of a standard upper ontology.
+
    |
 +
    | S1 is your restatement of P1 ...
 +
    |
 +
    | S1. (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).
  
A variety of ontology projects come to mind.
+
SS, quoting JA:
I will give them these working designations:
 
  
1. ROSO
+
    | This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
 +
    | probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.
 +
    |
 +
    | A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,
 +
    |
 +
    | If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.
 +
    |
 +
    | And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.
  
     What are the minimal criteria of acceptability of
+
SS: No, Jon, you have not got it quite right.  S1 was not my restatement of P1;
     a "research oriented scientific ontology" (ROSO)?
+
    I gave S1 as a paraphrase of what a believer must believe, given that P1 is true.
 +
     That is not quite the same (though in later passages, I did sometimes carelessly
 +
     refer to S1 as a "paraphrase of P1").
  
2.  ULTO
+
SS: In response to the objection of Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox,
 +
    which is the same as that which you are now making, I conceded that:
  
    What are the minimal criteria of acceptability for
+
SS: (1) (For every x)I believe(I believe x -> x is true)
    an "upper level technical ontology" (ULTO)?
 
  
3.  URFO
+
SS: is not the same as:
  
    What are the minimal criteria of acceptability for
+
SS: (2) I believe(For every x)(I believe x-> x is true).
    an "un-reflective folk ontology" (URFO)?
 
  
We've all concurred, or at least relented, that there's
+
SS: But on the assumption that the believer is intelligent,
room enough under the Standard Umbrella Ontology for the
+
    and that he sees the conditional in (1) as a necessary
type of "un-reflective folk ontology" (URFO) that concerns
+
    ("tautologous") truth, he should be able to make an
itself mostly with "shoes, ships, sealing wax", and so on,
+
    inference like the following:
but the question remains, on less rainy days, whether the
 
principles and the parameters that suit the garden variety
 
URFO are adaptable to the rigors of the ROSO and the ULTO.
 
  
After we have settled on the minimal criteria of acceptability,
+
SS: "Any arbitrarily chosen belief of mine must be believed by me to be true"
we might then venture into establishing the ideal criteria of
 
adequacy for the respective types of ontologies.
 
  
Defining, or at least characterizing these types
+
SS: Therefore,
of ontology projects would of course be a major
 
part of the task of developing the respective
 
criteria for acceptability and adequacy.
 
  
Notes from previous exchanges:
+
SS: "All my beliefs are believed by me to be true"
  
JA = Jon Awbrey
+
SS: which is a valid universal generalization of the same kind as:
JH = Jay Halcomb
 
PG = Pierre Grenon
 
  
PG: Never the less, it seems to me that this group would be
+
SS: Any arbitrarily chosen natural number must be a product of primes;
    better off if proposed material was judged on criteria
+
     therefore, all natural numbers are products of primes.
    similar to those by which the final product shall be
 
     evaluated, rather than dependent upon pleasant
 
    email exchanges.
 
  
JH: I agree with this view, which was the essential point
+
SS: Any arbitrarily chosen cat must be a mammal;
     of my last e-mail -- getting more specific about such
+
     therefore, all cats are mammals.
    criteria for working documents.
 
  
JA: Many people, present writer included, have observed that the criteria
+
SS: It is true that this is an inference that calls for some logical skill on the part of
     appropriate to different kinds of ontology applications and projects,
+
    the believer, so that someone could believe P1 without believing S1, but we are talking
     all of them nonetheless falling under the rather large tent of our
+
     about Peirce, and whether HIS belief in fallibilism is consistent with HIS belief in P1.
     scope and purpose document, may be radically different.
+
     I think there can be no doubt about his belief in P1.  As to what it is exactly that he
 +
     believes, when he believes in fallibilism, that is a more difficult question. I am now
 +
    having doubts that "Some of my beliefs are false," or
  
JA: In particular, I have pointed to the differences in working methodology
+
SS: (S2) (For some x)(I believe x & x is not true)
    and goals of research oriented ontologies and, for the lack of a better
 
    name, so-called commonsense ontologies.
 
  
JH: Precisely so. I think that we've many of us said these similar
+
SS: fairly expresses Peirce's Fallibilism. I discussed that possibility in my
     things at one time or another, and we always return to them when
+
     summary letter, under the heading "First Solution." More needs to be said
    a proposal is made (recall the discussion about the CycL language
+
     about it, but I'll keep it for another communication, possibly in response
    when that proposal was made)That is why I think that developing
+
     to Joseph's forthcoming letter.
     clearer acceptance criteria, upfront, for specifying these various
 
    targets is important, when it comes to working documents for the
 
    group.  Specifically, developing  specification criteria for
 
     terminologies, languages, and logic(s).  I would  hope the
 
    IFF folks should have some specific thoughts about this.
 
  
JA: Until a better term comes along, I'm using the word "project"
+
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
    somewhat in the way that people speak of cultural projects or
 
    existential projects -- broad, compelling, if slightly vague
 
    intimations of something that needs to be done.
 
  
JA: Here is a narrative about one sort of ontology project,
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
    the aims, criteria, and working assumptions of which
+
JR = Joe Ransdell
    I am acquainted with, and feel like I understand:
+
SS = Seth Sharpless
  
JA: I once got sold on the project of building software bridges between
+
SS: I shall try to address your objection to my argument with the kind
     qualitative and quantitative researchFor example, in many areas
+
     of civility that I wish you could show for meYou were apparently
     of clinical practice, medical anthropology, and public health one
+
     not satisfied with my reply to Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox when
     has "practitioner-scientist models" where people accumulate lots
+
     they made the same objection you are now making, so I will try to
    of free-floating informal hunches and qualitative impressions in
+
     make my argument clearer.
    their on-the-job settings, that they then need to follow up with
 
     hard data gathering, quantitatively measurable constructs, and
 
    the usual battery of statistical methods.  A lot of practical
 
    savvy never gets widely distributed, and a lot of benighted
 
    mythology never gets tested, all for the lack of good ways
 
    to refine this "personal knowledge" into scientific truth.
 
  
JA: It still seems to me that properly designed lexical and logical resources
+
I would try to address the issue of civility,
    ought to provide us with some of the plancks we need to build this bridge.
+
but my defense would have to take the form,
 +
"But Ma, he hit me first!", and I long ago
 +
learned the recursive futility of setting
 +
foot on such a path.
  
JA: At first strike, it sounds like this ought to involve an integration of
+
JA: I only have a moment, and so I will save this note for
     research oriented and common sense ontologiesBut there has seemed to
+
     a more careful review laterI can see that you are in
     arise one insurmountable obstacle after another in trying to do this.
+
     earnest, but my general impression is that you are moving
 
+
    at a high rate of speed down a no outlet alley, and perhaps
JA: Just by way of focusing on a concrete illustration, take the word "event".
+
     a bit too focussed on the syntactic peculiarities of one
     Formalizing the concept of "event" for a research oriented ontology does
+
     particular fragment, when Peirce himself has provided
     not require any discusssion on our part.  Those discussions were carried
+
     us with ample paraphrases and amplifications of his
     out somewhere between the days of powdered-wig-wearing-high-rollers and
+
     intended sense on this very same point.
     the days of manurial comparisons. To get the standard axioms, one goes
 
    to a standard reference book and copies them into one's knowledge base:
 
  
    | PAS.  Probability And Statistics -- Ontology List
+
I have already mentioned another locus where Peirce adverts to this issue,
    |
+
but this time with all of the requisite qualifiers and all of the nuanced
    | 01.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04885.html
+
indicators of relative significance intact, and that is in this passage:
    | 02.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04886.html
 
    | 03.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04887.html
 
    | 04.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04888.html
 
    |
 
    | et sic deinceps ...
 
  
JA: The only question is whether one's favorite ontology prover is up to
+
| Two things here are all-important to assure oneself of
    the snuff of proving whatever theorems need to be proved thereon.
+
| and to remember.  The first is that a person is not
 +
| absolutely an individual.  His thoughts are what
 +
| he is "saying to himself", that is, is saying
 +
| to that other self that is just coming into
 +
| life in the flow of time.  When one reasons,
 +
| it is that critical self that one is trying
 +
| to persuade;  and all thought whatsoever is a
 +
| sign, and is mostly of the nature of language.
 +
| The second thing to remember is that the man's
 +
| circle of society (however widely or narrowly
 +
| this phrase may be understood), is a sort of
 +
| loosely compacted person, in some respects of
 +
| higher rank than the person of an individual
 +
| organism.  It is these two things alone that
 +
| render it possible for you -- but only in
 +
| the abstract, and in a Pickwickian sense --
 +
| to distinguish between absolute truth
 +
| and what you do not doubt.
 +
|
 +
| CSP, CP 5.421.
 +
|
 +
| Charles Sanders Peirce, "What Pragmatism Is",
 +
|'The Monist', Volume 15, 1905, pages 161-181,
 +
| Also in the 'Collected Papers', CP 5.411-437.
  
JA: There can be no compromise with these criteria.
+
If we wanted a bone to pick,
    The research market simply will not bear it.
+
this one promises more beef.
    So if there is to be an integration with
 
    nontechnical language and methodology,
 
    it must be an augmentation of these
 
    basics and not their overwriting.
 
  
JA: I have gotten used to the idea that there is another sort of ontology project,
+
Another approach that might be more productive,
    but since I do not get the cogency of it, it seems like its definition and its
+
if no less controversial, would be through the
    criteria of validity would have to come from the critical self-examination of
+
examination of the distinction between what we
    those whose project it is.  All I know at present is that the obvious course
+
frequently call "belief" and "knowledge", and
    that I suggested above for formalizing the concept "event" is probably the
+
why the distinction collapses or degenerates
    course of last resort from the standpoint of this alternative project.
+
for the fictively isolated individual agent.
  
JA: That is what I mean by radical differences in working criteria for acceptance.
+
JA, amending JA:
  
JA: Similar disjunctions of approach and acceptability could be observed
+
I wish I could convince you that the quantifiers and their interlacings
    for several other dimensions of diversity among ontological projects,
+
are irrelevant to the actual sense of what Peirce is saying here, as he
    for example, the "already been chewed" vs. the "knowledge soup" brands,
+
is merely observing a pragmatic equivalence between two situations that
    that is, those who expect full-fledged axiom systems from the outset
+
may be expressed in relational predicates of yet to be determined arity.
    vs. those who would gel their knowledge chunks out of a semiotic sol.
+
Failing that, we will have to examine what Peirce in 1877 might have
 +
meant by what you are assuming is the implicit quantifier signalled
 +
by "each". This is an issue that I have studied long and hard, but
 +
have avoided raising so far, mostly out of a prospective despair
 +
at my present capacity to render it clear.  Maybe it is time.
 +
But really, it is not necesssary to do this just in order to
 +
get what Peirce is saying here, which is a fairly simple,
 +
common sense point, idiomatically expressed, and, most
 +
likely, irreducibly so. It would be a far better
 +
thing we do if we adopt the hermeneutic principle
 +
of looking for the author's own paraphrases and
 +
approximations, even if not exactly identical
 +
from a purely syntactic point of view.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
A minimal caution about this point would require us to recognize
</pre>
+
two distinct dimensions of variation in the usage of quantifiers:
  
==VOREVarieties Of Recalcitrant Experience==
+
1The difference in usage between Peirce 1877 and the
 +
    post-Fregean scene of our contemporary discussions.
  
<pre>
+
2.  The difference in usage between most mathematicians, then and now,
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
    and people who identify themselves as "logicists" or "linguists".
  
VORE. Note 1
+
We probably cannot help ourselves from translating Peirce 1877
 +
into our own frame of reference, but we should be aware of the
 +
potential for distortion that arises from the anachronisms and
 +
the dialectic disluxations that will as a consequence result.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
SS, quoting JA, citing JR, paraphrasing SS, interpreting CSP:
  
| Once upon a time and a very good time it was there was
+
    | And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua
| a moocow coming down along the road and this moocow that
+
    | fallibilist, which you regard as being paradoxical in import.
| was down along the road met a nicens little boy named
+
    |
| baby tuckoo ....
+
    | P1. "we think each one of our beliefs to be true, and,
|
+
    |     indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375)
| His father told him that story:  his father looked at him
+
    |
| through a glass:  he had a hairy face.
+
    | S1 is your restatement of P1 ...
|
+
    |
| He was baby tuckoo. The moocow came down the road where
+
    | S1. (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).
| Betty Byrne lived: she sold lemon platt.
+
 
|
+
SS, quoting JA:
|   O, the wild rose blossoms
+
 
|   On the little green place.
+
    | This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
|
+
    | probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.
| He sang that song.  That was his song.
+
    |
|
+
    | A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,
|   O, the green wothe botheth.
+
    |
|
+
    | If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.
| Joyce, 'Portrait', p. 1.
+
    |
|
+
    | And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
+
 
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992. Originally published 1916.
+
SS: No, Jon, you have not got it quite right.  S1 was not my restatement of P1;
 +
    I gave S1 as a paraphrase of what a believer must believe, given that P1 is true.
 +
    That is not quite the same (though in later passages, I did sometimes carelessly
 +
    refer to S1 as a "paraphrase of P1").
 +
 
 +
I have no probleme with the idea that interpretation is inescapably abductive:
 +
 
 +
http://www.chss.montclair.edu/inquiry/fall95/awbrey.html
 +
 
 +
The question is whether the interpretant preserves a semblance of the meaning.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
SS: In response to the objection of Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox,
 +
    which is the same as that which you are now making, I conceded that:
  
VORE.  Note 2
+
SS: (1) (For every x)I believe(I believe x -> x is true)
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Peirce did not say this.
  
| It was the hour for sums.  Father Arnall wrote a hard sum on the
+
SS: is not the same as:
| board and then said:
 
|
 
| -- Now then, who will win?  Go ahead, York!  Go ahead, Lancaster!
 
|
 
| Stephen tried his best but the sum was too hard and he felt confused.
 
| The little silk badge with the white rose on it that was pinned on the
 
| breast of his jacket began to flutter.  He was no good at sums but he
 
| tried his best so that York might not lose.  Father Arnall's face looked
 
| very black but he was not in a wax:  he was laughing.  Then Jack Lawton
 
| cracked his fingers and Father Arnall looked at his copybook and said:
 
|
 
| -- Right.  Bravo Lancaster!  The red rose wins.  Come on now, York!
 
| Forge ahead!
 
|
 
| Jack Lawton looked over from his side.  The little silk badge with
 
| the red rose on it looked very rich because he had a blue sailor top
 
| on.  Stephen felt his own face red too, thinking of all the bets about
 
| who would get first place in Elements, Jack Lawton or he.  Some weeks
 
| Jack Lawton got the card for first and some weeks he got the card for
 
| first.  His white silk badge fluttered and fluttered as he worked at
 
| the next sum and heard Father Arnall's voice.  Then all his eagerness
 
| passed away and he felt his face quite cool.  He thought his face must
 
| be white because it felt so cool.  He could not get out the answer for
 
| the sum but it did not matter.  White roses and red roses:  those were
 
| beautiful colours to think of.  And the cards for first place and third
 
| place were beautiful colours too: pink and cream and lavender.  Lavender
 
| and cream and pink roses were beautiful to think of.  Perhaps a wild rose
 
| might be like those colours and he remembered the song about the wild rose
 
| blossoms on the little green place.  But you could not have a green rose.
 
| But perhaps somewhere in the world you could.
 
|
 
| Joyce, 'Portrait', pp. 6-7.
 
|
 
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
 
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
SS: (2) I believe(For every x)(I believe x-> x is true).
  
VORE. Note 3
+
Peirce did not say this.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
SS: But on the assumption that the believer is intelligent,
 +
    and that he sees the conditional in (1) as a necessary
 +
    ("tautologous") truth, he should be able to make an
 +
    inference like the following:
  
| The equation on the page of his scribbler began to spread out a widening tail,
+
The conditional in (1) is not necessary.
| eyed and starred like a peacock's;  and, when the eyes and stars of its indices
+
I don't know anybody who would say this.
| had been eliminated, began slowly to fold itself together again.  The indices
 
| appearing and disappearing were eyes opening and closing;  the eyes opening
 
| and closing were stars being born and being quenched.  The vast cycle
 
| of starry life bore his weary mind outward to its verge and inward
 
| to its centre, a distant music accompanying him outward and inward.
 
| What music?  The music came nearer and he recalled the words, the
 
| words of Shelley's fragment upon the moon wandering companionless,
 
| pale for weariness.  The stars began to crumble and a cloud of
 
| fine star-dust fell through space.
 
|
 
| The dull light fell more faintly upon the page whereon another equation
 
| began to unfold itself slowly and to spread abroad its widening tail.
 
| It was his own soul going forth to experience, unfolding itself
 
| sin by sin, spreading abroad the balefire of its burning stars
 
| and folding back upon itself, fading slowly, quenching its
 
| own lights and fires.  They were quenched:  and the
 
| cold darkness filled chaos.
 
|
 
| Joyce, 'Portrait', p. 97.
 
|
 
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
 
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
SS: "Any arbitrarily chosen belief of mine must be believed by me to be true"
  
VORENote 4
+
This is a non-sequiturOh wait.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Any arbitrarily chosen belief of mine must be believed-by-me-to-be-true.
  
| The formula which he wrote obediently on the sheet of paper, the coiling and
+
OkayBut that's what he said in the first place.
| uncoiling calculations of the professor, the spectrelike symbols of force and
+
And this statement does not confict with believing
| velocity fascinated and jaded Stephen's mindHe had heard some say that the
+
that some belief of mine may turn-out-to-be-false.
| old professor was an atheist freemason. Oh, the grey dull day!  It seemed a
 
| limbo of painless patient consciousness through which souls of mathematicians
 
| might wander, projecting long slender fabrics from plane to plane of ever rarer
 
| and paler twilight, radiating swift eddies to the last verges of a universe ever
 
| vaster, farther and more impalpable.
 
|
 
| -- So we must distinguish between elliptical and ellipsoidal.
 
| Perhaps some of you gentlemen may be familiar with the works
 
| of Mr W.S. Gilbert.  In one of his songs he speaks of the
 
| billiard sharp who is condemned to play:
 
|
 
|    On a cloth untrue
 
|    With a twisted cue
 
|    And elliptical billiard balls.
 
|
 
| -- He means a ball having the form of the ellipsoid
 
| of the principal axes of which I spoke a moment ago. --
 
|
 
| Joyce, 'Portrait', pp. 185-186.
 
|
 
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
 
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
A statement can be believed-by-me-to-be-true and turn-out-to-be-false.
  
VORE.  Note 5
+
Peirce's statement again:
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| But we think each one of our beliefs to be true,
 
+
| and, indeed, it is mere tautology to say so.
| I was, at that time, in Germany, whither the wars,
 
| which have not yet finished there, had called me,
 
| and as I was returning from the coronation of the
 
| Emperor to join the army, the onset of winter held
 
| me up in quarters in which, finding no company to
 
| distract me, and having, fortunately, no cares or
 
| passions to disturb me, I spent the whole day shut
 
| up in a room heated by an enclosed stove, where I
 
| had complete leisure to meditate on my own thoughts.
 
 
|
 
|
| Descartes, DOM, p. 35.
+
| CSP, 'Collected Papers', CP 5.375
|
 
| Rene Descartes, "Discourse on the Method
 
| of Properly Conducting One's Reason and
 
| of Seeking the Truth in the Sciences",
 
| pp. 25-91 in 'Discourse on Method and
 
| the Meditations', translated with an
 
| introduction by F.E. Sutcliffe,
 
| Penguin, London, UK, 1968.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
This has the form of:
  
VORE. Note 6
+
| But we can cover any distance we can run at a pace faster than a walk.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Straightened out a bit:
 +
 
 +
| Any distance we can run is a distance we can cover faster than a walk.
  
| A very young child may always be observed to watch its own
+
The tautology is one that occurs at the level of the two predicates:
| body with great attention.  There is every reason why this
+
"runnable" and "coverable at a pace faster than a walk".  It would
| should be so, for from the child's point of view this body
+
be better to avoid worrying about the quantifiers in this reading.
| is the most important thing in the universe.  Only what it
 
| touches has any actual and present feeling;  only what it
 
| faces has any actual color;  only what is on its tongue
 
| has any actual taste.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.229.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 
| Cambridge, MA, 1960First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
SS: Therefore,
  
VORE.  Note 7
+
SS: "All my beliefs are believed by me to be true"
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
SS: which is a valid universal generalization of the same kind as:
  
| No one questions that, when a sound is heard by a child, he thinks,
+
SS: Any arbitrarily chosen natural number must be a product of primes;
| not of himself as hearing, but of the bell or other object as sounding.
+
    therefore, all natural numbers are products of primes.
| How when he wills to move a table?  Does he then think of himself as
 
| desiring, or only of the table as fit to be moved?  That he has the
 
| latter thought, is beyond question; that he has the former, must,
 
| until the existence of an intuitive self-consciousness is proved,
 
| remain an arbitrary and baseless supposition.  There is no good
 
| reason for thinking that he is less ignorant of his own peculiar
 
| condition than the angry adult who denies that he is in a passion.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.230.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
SS: Any arbitrarily chosen cat must be a mammal;
 +
    therefore, all cats are mammals.
  
VORENote 8
+
SS: It is true that this is an inference that calls for some logical skill on the
 +
    part of the believer, so that someone could believe P1 without believing S1,
 +
    but we are talking about Peirce, and whether HIS belief in fallibilism is
 +
    consistent with HIS belief in P1I think there can be no doubt about
 +
    his belief in P1.  As to what it is exactly that he believes, when he
 +
    believes in fallibilism, that is a more difficult question.  I am now
 +
    having doubts that "Some of my beliefs are false," or
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
SS: (S2) (For some x)(I believe x & x is not true)
  
| The child, however, must soon discover by observation
+
SS: fairly expresses Peirce's Fallibilism.  I discussed that possibility in my
| that things which are thus fit to be changed are apt
+
    summary letter, under the heading "First Solution".  More needs to be said
| actually to undergo this change, after a contact with
+
    about it, but I'll keep it for another communication, possibly in response
| that peculiarly important body called Willy or Johnny.
+
    to Joseph's forthcoming letter.
| This consideration makes this body still more important
+
 
| and central, since it establishes a connection between
+
I believe that the generic problem here is a "poverty of syntax".
| the fitness of a thing to be changed and a tendency in
+
Syntax, expecially isolated syntax fragments of natural language
| this body to touch it before it is changed.
+
idioms, may constrain but it cannot utterly determine the models.
|
+
You have to gather independent evidence as to what the intended
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.231.
+
models may be. In Peirce's case, his use of the word "belief",
|
+
as in "state of belief" as in "The irritation of doubt causes a
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
+
struggle to attain a state of belief", simply points to a whole
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
+
different order of models (universes + predicates) than the ones
| Cambridge, MA, 1960First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
+
that you are presently taking for granted as the only possible
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
+
models, most likely importing them from the discussions with
 +
which you have become familiar on the contemporary scene.
 +
One of the most significant aspects of Peirce's whole
 +
approach is that he is talking about a process, one
 +
in which signs, in particular, beliefs and concepts,
 +
can enter and exit the pool of accepted, acted on,
 +
adopted, trusted, utilized resourcesYour use
 +
of quantifiers is assuming a static situation,
 +
as if the population of beliefs were fixed,
 +
no pun, for once, intended. This is why
 +
you appear to be repeating Parmenidean
 +
paradoxes in the mental realm, as if
 +
to show that changing one's mind is
 +
impossible. It is not necessary
 +
to invent modal or tensed logic
 +
to deal with this, as change
 +
can be modeled in the ways
 +
that mathematics has been
 +
doing it for a long time.
  
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
  
VORE.  Note 9
+
Note 13
  
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
  
| The child learns to understand the language;  that is to say, a connection
+
I believe that one should always steer into a skid, but I doubt it.
| between certain sounds and certain facts becomes established in his mind.
+
That expresses the swerve of my learned dispositions, in cars with
| He has previously noticed the connection between these sounds and the
+
rear-wheel drives on icy roads, and its corrective waylaying by my
| motions of the lips of bodies somewhat similar to the central one,
+
first trip in a rental car, with front-wheel drive, on an icy road,
| and has tried the experiment of putting his hand on those lips
+
about as well as any collection of mere linguistic mechanisms will.
| and has found the sound in that case to be smothered.  He thus
+
The circumstunts that mere words will not convey what I learned by
| connects that language with bodies somewhat similar to the
+
way of this adventition and all of my other near-death experiences
| central one.  By efforts, so unenergetic that they should
+
in this life is merely the insufficiency of words and their author.
| be called rather instinctive, perhaps, than tentative, he
 
| learns to produce those sounds.  So he begins to converse.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.232.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Phenomena come first, theories come later,
 +
on the evolutionary scale of time, anyway.
 +
The circumstance that theories are always
 +
falling short of phenomena in some degree,
 +
does not stay the phenomenon in its orbit.
  
VORENote 10
+
Animate creatures capable of inquiry, people like us, acted on dispositions
 +
that we call "belief" and experienced experiences that we call "doubt" long
 +
before they had the concepts, much less the words, "belief" and "doubt", or
 +
universal quantifiers "all" and "each", with or without existential import,
 +
with or without hypostatic general import, with or without game-theoretic
 +
import, with or without predesignated domains of quantification, with or
 +
without you name what comes nextConcepts, mental symbols to pragmatic
 +
thinkers, are instrumental goods that we import through the customs of
 +
biology and culture.  They come and go.  I love the game of etymology
 +
and enjoy an apt bit of ordinary language analysis as much as anyone
 +
has a right to, but the theory that you can wring all your theories
 +
of phenomena, no matter how complex, out of commonsense word usage
 +
is a notion whose time has come and gone.  It just ain't science.
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
| Belief and doubt may be conceived to be distinguished only in degree.
 
 
| It must be about this time that he begins to find that what
 
| these people about him say is the very best evidence of fact.
 
| So much so, that testimony is even a stronger mark of fact than
 
| 'the facts themselves', or rather than what must now be thought
 
| of as the 'appearances' themselves.  (I may remark, by the way,
 
| that this remains so through life;  testimony will convince a
 
| man that he himself is mad.)
 
 
|
 
|
| A child hears it said that the stove is hot.  But it is not, he says;
+
| CSP, CE 3, pages 21.
| and, indeed, that central body is not touching it, and only what that
 
| touches is hot or cold.  But he touches it, and finds the testimony
 
| confirmed in a striking way.  Thus, he becomes aware of ignorance,
 
| and it is necessary to suppose a 'self' in which this ignorance can
 
| inhere.  So testimony gives the first dawning of self-consciousness.
 
 
|
 
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.233.
+
| C.S. Peirce, MS 182, 1872, "Chapter 1 (Enlarged Abstract)", pages 20-21 in:
|
+
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
+
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 
  
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
  
VORE. Note 11
+
</pre>
 +
 
 +
==VOOP. Varieties Of Ontology Project==
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
<pre>
  
| But, further, although usually appearances are either
+
Problem Statement.
| only confirmed or merely supplemented by testimony, yet
+
 
| there is a certain remarkable class of appearances which
+
A.  What are the different types of ontology projects
| are continually contradicted by testimonyThese are those
+
    that are covered by our current scope and purpose?
| predicates which 'we' know to be emotional, but which 'he'
+
 
| distinguishes by their connection with the movements of that
+
BWhat are the criteria that are appropriate
| central person, himself (that the table wants moving, etc.)
+
    to each of the different ontology projects?
| These judgments are generally denied by others.  Moreover, he
+
 
| has reason to think that others, also, have such judgments which
+
Given, then, that different types of ontology projects
| are quite denied by all the rest.  Thus, he adds to the conception
+
will have different criteria for the acceptability and
| of appearance as the actualization of fact, the conception of it as
+
the adequacy of proposals at each stage of development,
| something 'private' and valid only for one body.  In short, 'error'
+
let us see if we can formulate the respective criteria
| appears, and it can be explained only by supposing a 'self' which
+
for a number of ontology projects that fall within the
| is fallible.
+
charge, scope and purpose of a standard upper ontology.
|
+
 
| Ignorance and error are all that
+
A variety of ontology projects come to mind.
| distinguish our private selves
+
I will give them these working designations:
| from the absolute 'ego' of
 
| pure apperception.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.234-235.
 
|
 
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
1.  ROSO
  
VORE.  Note 12
+
    What are the minimal criteria of acceptability of
 +
    a "research oriented scientific ontology" (ROSO)?
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
2.  ULTO
  
| Now, the theory which, for the sake of perspicuity, has thus
+
    What are the minimal criteria of acceptability for
| been stated in a specific form, may be summed up as follows:
+
    an "upper level technical ontology" (ULTO)?
|
+
 
| At the age at which we know children to be self-conscious, we know that
+
3.  URFO
| they have been made aware of ignorance and error;  and we know them to
+
 
| possess at that age powers of understanding sufficient to enable them
+
    What are the minimal criteria of acceptability for
| to infer from ignorance and error their own existence.
+
    an "un-reflective folk ontology" (URFO)?
|
+
 
| Thus we find that known faculties, acting under conditions known
+
We've all concurred, or at least relented, that there's
| to exist, would rise to self-consciousness.  The only essential
+
room enough under the Standard Umbrella Ontology for the
| defect in this account of the matter is, that while we know that
+
type of "un-reflective folk ontology" (URFO) that concerns
| children exercise 'as much' understanding as is here supposed,
+
itself mostly with "shoes, ships, sealing wax", and so on,
| we do not know that they exercise it in precisely this way.
+
but the question remains, on less rainy days, whether the
| Still the supposition that they do so is infinitely more
+
principles and the parameters that suit the garden variety
| supported by facts, than the supposition of a wholly
+
URFO are adaptable to the rigors of the ROSO and the ULTO.
| peculiar faculty of the mind.
+
 
|
+
After we have settled on the minimal criteria of acceptability,
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.236.
+
we might then venture into establishing the ideal criteria of
|
+
adequacy for the respective types of ontologies.
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
Defining, or at least characterizing these types
 +
of ontology projects would of course be a major
 +
part of the task of developing the respective
 +
criteria for acceptability and adequacy.
  
VORE.  Note 13
+
Notes from previous exchanges:
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JA = Jon Awbrey
 +
JH = Jay Halcomb
 +
PG = Pierre Grenon
  
| The only argument worth noticing
+
PG: Never the less, it seems to me that this group would be
| for the existence of an intuitive
+
    better off if proposed material was judged on criteria
| self-consciousness is this:
+
    similar to those by which the final product shall be
|
+
    evaluated, rather than dependent upon pleasant
| We are more certain of our own existence than of any other fact;
+
    email exchanges.
| a premiss cannot determine a conclusion to be more certain than
+
 
| it is itself;  hence, our own existence cannot have been inferred
+
JH: I agree with this view, which was the essential point
| from any other fact.
+
    of my last e-mail -- getting more specific about such
|
+
    criteria for working documents.
| The first premiss must be admitted, but the second premiss is founded
+
 
| on an exploded theory of logic.  A conclusion cannot be more certain
+
JA: Many people, present writer included, have observed that the criteria
| than that some one of the facts which support it is true, but it may
+
    appropriate to different kinds of ontology applications and projects,
| easily be more certain than any one of those facts.
+
    all of them nonetheless falling under the rather large tent of our
|
+
    scope and purpose document, may be radically different.
| Let us suppose, for example, that a dozen witnesses testify to an occurrence.
+
 
| Then my belief in that occurrence rests on the belief that each of those men
+
JA: In particular, I have pointed to the differences in working methodology
| is generally to be believed upon oath.  Yet the fact testified to is made
+
    and goals of research oriented ontologies and, for the lack of a better
| more certain than that any one of those men is generally to be believed.
+
    name, so-called commonsense ontologies.
|
+
 
| In the same way, to the developed mind of man, his own existence is supported
+
JH: Precisely so.  I think that we've many of us said these similar
| by 'every other fact', and is, therefore, incomparably more certain than any
+
    things at one time or another, and we always return to them when
| one of these facts.  But it cannot be said to be more certain than that there
+
    a proposal is made (recall the discussion about the CycL language
| is another fact, since there is no doubt perceptible in either case.
+
    when that proposal was made).  That is why I think that developing
|
+
    clearer acceptance criteria, upfront, for specifying these various
| It is to be concluded, then, that there is no necessity of supposing an intuitive
+
    targets is important, when it comes to working documents for the
| self-consciousness, since self-consciousness may easily be the result of inference.
+
    group.  Specifically, developing  specification criteria for
|
+
    terminologies, languages, and logic(s).  I would  hope the
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.237.
+
    IFF folks should have some specific thoughts about this.
|
+
 
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
+
JA: Until a better term comes along, I'm using the word "project"
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
+
    somewhat in the way that people speak of cultural projects or
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
+
    existential projects -- broad, compelling, if slightly vague
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
+
    intimations of something that needs to be done.
 
+
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JA: Here is a narrative about one sort of ontology project,
 
+
    the aims, criteria, and working assumptions of which
VORE. Note 14
+
    I am acquainted with, and feel like I understand:
 
+
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JA: I once got sold on the project of building software bridges between
 
+
    qualitative and quantitative research.  For example, in many areas
| His soul had arisen from the grave of boyhood, spurning her graveclothes.
+
    of clinical practice, medical anthropology, and public health one
| Yes! Yes! Yes!  He would create proudly out of the freedom and power of
+
    has "practitioner-scientist models" where people accumulate lots
| his soul, as the great artificer whose name he bore, a living thing,
+
    of free-floating informal hunches and qualitative impressions in
| new and soaring and beautiful, impalpable, imperishable.
+
    their on-the-job settings, that they then need to follow up with
|
+
    hard data gathering, quantitatively measurable constructs, and
| Joyce, 'Portrait', pp. 163-164.
+
    the usual battery of statistical methods.  A lot of practical
|
+
    savvy never gets widely distributed, and a lot of benighted
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
+
    mythology never gets tested, all for the lack of good ways
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.
+
    to refine this "personal knowledge" into scientific truth.
 
+
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JA: It still seems to me that properly designed lexical and logical resources
 
+
    ought to provide us with some of the plancks we need to build this bridge.
VORE. Note 15
+
 
 
+
JA: At first strike, it sounds like this ought to involve an integration of
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
    research oriented and common sense ontologies.  But there has seemed to
 
+
    arise one insurmountable obstacle after another in trying to do this.
| On another occasion I heard one of the grown-ups saying to
+
 
| another "When is that young Lyon coming?"  I pricked up my
+
JA: Just by way of focusing on a concrete illustration, take the word "event".
| ears and said "Is there a lion coming?"  "Yes," they said,
+
    Formalizing the concept of "event" for a research oriented ontology does
| "he's coming on Sunday.  He'll be quite tame and you shall
+
    not require any discusssion on our part.  Those discussions were carried
| see him in the drawing-room."  I counted the days till Sunday
+
    out somewhere between the days of powdered-wig-wearing-high-rollers and
| and the hours through Sunday morning.  At last I was told the
+
    the days of manurial comparisons.  To get the standard axioms, one goes
| young lion was in the drawing-room and I could come and see him.
+
    to a standard reference book and copies them into one's knowledge base:
| I came.  And he was an ordinary young man named Lyon.  I was
+
 
| utterly overwhelmed by the disenchantment and still remember
+
    | PAS.  Probability And Statistics -- Ontology List
| with anguish the depths of my despair.
+
    |
|
+
    | 01.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04885.html
| Russell, 'Autobiography', p. 18.
+
    | 02.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04886.html
|
+
    | 03.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04887.html
| Bertrand Russell, 'Autobiography', with an introduction by
+
    | 04.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04888.html
| Michael Foot, Routledge, London, UK, 1998.  First published
+
    |
| in 3 volumes by George Allen & Unwin, 1967-1969.
+
    | et sic deinceps ...
 
+
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
JA: The only question is whether one's favorite ontology prover is up to
 
+
    the snuff of proving whatever theorems need to be proved thereon.
VORE. Application Note 1
+
 
 
+
JA: There can be no compromise with these criteria.
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
    The research market simply will not bear it.
 
+
    So if there is to be an integration with
Most of the year I spend my time wondering when logicians will begin
+
    nontechnical language and methodology,
to take the phenomena and the problems of Truth In Science seriously --
+
    it must be an augmentation of these
but for a brief time in summer my fancy turns to wondering when they
+
    basics and not their overwriting.
will get around to taking Truth In Literature seriously.  Now, there
+
 
is a market for this -- I especially remember an editorial or letter
+
JA: I have gotten used to the idea that there is another sort of ontology project,
in the 'Chronicle of Higher Education' a few years back, the gist of
+
    but since I do not get the cogency of it, it seems like its definition and its
which was a literature teacher's half plaintive half wistful wishing
+
    criteria of validity would have to come from the critical self-examination of
for software that would help researchers and students with the truly
+
    those whose project it is.  All I know at present is that the obvious course
insightful analysis of literary texts, tools that would be sensitive
+
    that I suggested above for formalizing the concept "event" is probably the
to something more than simple-minded syntactic similarities and help
+
    course of last resort from the standpoint of this alternative project.
us to deal with the full complexity of meanings that folks pack into
+
 
narratives, novels, poems, and other expressions of human experience.
+
JA: That is what I mean by radical differences in working criteria for acceptance.
 
+
 
To sharpen the point a bit, we might well ask ourselves:
+
JA: Similar disjunctions of approach and acceptability could be observed
 
+
    for several other dimensions of diversity among ontological projects,
Just how far do the customary categories of first order
+
    for example, the "already been chewed" vs. the "knowledge soup" brands,
logic take us in approaching this realm of applications?
+
    that is, those who expect full-fledged axiom systems from the outset
 
+
    vs. those who would gel their knowledge chunks out of a semiotic sol.
For instance, take the term "Stephen Dedulus", in any of its variant spellings,
+
 
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
==VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience==
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 1===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| Once upon a time and a very good time it was there was
 +
| a moocow coming down along the road and this moocow that
 +
| was down along the road met a nicens little boy named
 +
| baby tuckoo ....
 +
|
 +
| His father told him that story:  his father looked at him
 +
| through a glass:  he had a hairy face.
 +
|
 +
| He was baby tuckoo.  The moocow came down the road where
 +
| Betty Byrne lived:  she sold lemon platt.
 +
|
 +
|    O, the wild rose blossoms
 +
|    On the little green place.
 +
|
 +
| He sang that song.  That was his song.
 +
|
 +
|    O, the green wothe botheth.
 +
|
 +
| Joyce, 'Portrait', p. 1.
 +
|
 +
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
 +
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 2===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| It was the hour for sums.  Father Arnall wrote a hard sum on the
 +
| board and then said:
 +
|
 +
| -- Now then, who will win?  Go ahead, York!  Go ahead, Lancaster!
 +
|
 +
| Stephen tried his best but the sum was too hard and he felt confused.
 +
| The little silk badge with the white rose on it that was pinned on the
 +
| breast of his jacket began to flutter.  He was no good at sums but he
 +
| tried his best so that York might not lose.  Father Arnall's face looked
 +
| very black but he was not in a wax:  he was laughing.  Then Jack Lawton
 +
| cracked his fingers and Father Arnall looked at his copybook and said:
 +
|
 +
| -- Right.  Bravo Lancaster!  The red rose wins.  Come on now, York!
 +
| Forge ahead!
 +
|
 +
| Jack Lawton looked over from his side.  The little silk badge with
 +
| the red rose on it looked very rich because he had a blue sailor top
 +
| on.  Stephen felt his own face red too, thinking of all the bets about
 +
| who would get first place in Elements, Jack Lawton or he.  Some weeks
 +
| Jack Lawton got the card for first and some weeks he got the card for
 +
| first.  His white silk badge fluttered and fluttered as he worked at
 +
| the next sum and heard Father Arnall's voice.  Then all his eagerness
 +
| passed away and he felt his face quite cool.  He thought his face must
 +
| be white because it felt so cool.  He could not get out the answer for
 +
| the sum but it did not matter.  White roses and red roses:  those were
 +
| beautiful colours to think of.  And the cards for first place and third
 +
| place were beautiful colours too:  pink and cream and lavender.  Lavender
 +
| and cream and pink roses were beautiful to think of.  Perhaps a wild rose
 +
| might be like those colours and he remembered the song about the wild rose
 +
| blossoms on the little green place.  But you could not have a green rose.
 +
| But perhaps somewhere in the world you could.
 +
|
 +
| Joyce, 'Portrait', pp. 6-7.
 +
|
 +
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
 +
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 3===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| The equation on the page of his scribbler began to spread out a widening tail,
 +
| eyed and starred like a peacock's;  and, when the eyes and stars of its indices
 +
| had been eliminated, began slowly to fold itself together again.  The indices
 +
| appearing and disappearing were eyes opening and closing;  the eyes opening
 +
| and closing were stars being born and being quenched.  The vast cycle
 +
| of starry life bore his weary mind outward to its verge and inward
 +
| to its centre, a distant music accompanying him outward and inward.
 +
| What music?  The music came nearer and he recalled the words, the
 +
| words of Shelley's fragment upon the moon wandering companionless,
 +
| pale for weariness.  The stars began to crumble and a cloud of
 +
| fine star-dust fell through space.
 +
|
 +
| The dull light fell more faintly upon the page whereon another equation
 +
| began to unfold itself slowly and to spread abroad its widening tail.
 +
| It was his own soul going forth to experience, unfolding itself
 +
| sin by sin, spreading abroad the balefire of its burning stars
 +
| and folding back upon itself, fading slowly, quenching its
 +
| own lights and fires.  They were quenched:  and the
 +
| cold darkness filled chaos.
 +
|
 +
| Joyce, 'Portrait', p. 97.
 +
|
 +
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
 +
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 4===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| The formula which he wrote obediently on the sheet of paper, the coiling and
 +
| uncoiling calculations of the professor, the spectrelike symbols of force and
 +
| velocity fascinated and jaded Stephen's mind.  He had heard some say that the
 +
| old professor was an atheist freemason.  Oh, the grey dull day!  It seemed a
 +
| limbo of painless patient consciousness through which souls of mathematicians
 +
| might wander, projecting long slender fabrics from plane to plane of ever rarer
 +
| and paler twilight, radiating swift eddies to the last verges of a universe ever
 +
| vaster, farther and more impalpable.
 +
|
 +
| -- So we must distinguish between elliptical and ellipsoidal.
 +
| Perhaps some of you gentlemen may be familiar with the works
 +
| of Mr W.S. Gilbert.  In one of his songs he speaks of the
 +
| billiard sharp who is condemned to play:
 +
|
 +
|    On a cloth untrue
 +
|    With a twisted cue
 +
|    And elliptical billiard balls.
 +
|
 +
| -- He means a ball having the form of the ellipsoid
 +
| of the principal axes of which I spoke a moment ago. --
 +
|
 +
| Joyce, 'Portrait', pp. 185-186.
 +
|
 +
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
 +
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 5===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| I was, at that time, in Germany, whither the wars,
 +
| which have not yet finished there, had called me,
 +
| and as I was returning from the coronation of the
 +
| Emperor to join the army, the onset of winter held
 +
| me up in quarters in which, finding no company to
 +
| distract me, and having, fortunately, no cares or
 +
| passions to disturb me, I spent the whole day shut
 +
| up in a room heated by an enclosed stove, where I
 +
| had complete leisure to meditate on my own thoughts.
 +
|
 +
| Descartes, DOM, p. 35.
 +
|
 +
| Rene Descartes, "Discourse on the Method
 +
| of Properly Conducting One's Reason and
 +
| of Seeking the Truth in the Sciences",
 +
| pp. 25-91 in 'Discourse on Method and
 +
| the Meditations', translated with an
 +
| introduction by F.E. Sutcliffe,
 +
| Penguin, London, UK, 1968.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 6===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| A very young child may always be observed to watch its own
 +
| body with great attention.  There is every reason why this
 +
| should be so, for from the child's point of view this body
 +
| is the most important thing in the universe.  Only what it
 +
| touches has any actual and present feeling;  only what it
 +
| faces has any actual color;  only what is on its tongue
 +
| has any actual taste.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.229.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 +
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 +
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 +
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 7===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| No one questions that, when a sound is heard by a child, he thinks,
 +
| not of himself as hearing, but of the bell or other object as sounding.
 +
| How when he wills to move a table?  Does he then think of himself as
 +
| desiring, or only of the table as fit to be moved?  That he has the
 +
| latter thought, is beyond question;  that he has the former, must,
 +
| until the existence of an intuitive self-consciousness is proved,
 +
| remain an arbitrary and baseless supposition.  There is no good
 +
| reason for thinking that he is less ignorant of his own peculiar
 +
| condition than the angry adult who denies that he is in a passion.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.230.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 +
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 +
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 +
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 8===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| The child, however, must soon discover by observation
 +
| that things which are thus fit to be changed are apt
 +
| actually to undergo this change, after a contact with
 +
| that peculiarly important body called Willy or Johnny.
 +
| This consideration makes this body still more important
 +
| and central, since it establishes a connection between
 +
| the fitness of a thing to be changed and a tendency in
 +
| this body to touch it before it is changed.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.231.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 +
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 +
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 +
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 9===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| The child learns to understand the language;  that is to say, a connection
 +
| between certain sounds and certain facts becomes established in his mind.
 +
| He has previously noticed the connection between these sounds and the
 +
| motions of the lips of bodies somewhat similar to the central one,
 +
| and has tried the experiment of putting his hand on those lips
 +
| and has found the sound in that case to be smothered.  He thus
 +
| connects that language with bodies somewhat similar to the
 +
| central one.  By efforts, so unenergetic that they should
 +
| be called rather instinctive, perhaps, than tentative, he
 +
| learns to produce those sounds.  So he begins to converse.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.232.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 +
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 +
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 +
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 10===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| It must be about this time that he begins to find that what
 +
| these people about him say is the very best evidence of fact.
 +
| So much so, that testimony is even a stronger mark of fact than
 +
| 'the facts themselves', or rather than what must now be thought
 +
| of as the 'appearances' themselves.  (I may remark, by the way,
 +
| that this remains so through life;  testimony will convince a
 +
| man that he himself is mad.)
 +
|
 +
| A child hears it said that the stove is hot.  But it is not, he says;
 +
| and, indeed, that central body is not touching it, and only what that
 +
| touches is hot or cold.  But he touches it, and finds the testimony
 +
| confirmed in a striking way.  Thus, he becomes aware of ignorance,
 +
| and it is necessary to suppose a 'self' in which this ignorance can
 +
| inhere.  So testimony gives the first dawning of self-consciousness.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.233.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 +
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 +
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 +
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 11===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| But, further, although usually appearances are either
 +
| only confirmed or merely supplemented by testimony, yet
 +
| there is a certain remarkable class of appearances which
 +
| are continually contradicted by testimony.  These are those
 +
| predicates which 'we' know to be emotional, but which 'he'
 +
| distinguishes by their connection with the movements of that
 +
| central person, himself (that the table wants moving, etc.)
 +
| These judgments are generally denied by others.  Moreover, he
 +
| has reason to think that others, also, have such judgments which
 +
| are quite denied by all the rest.  Thus, he adds to the conception
 +
| of appearance as the actualization of fact, the conception of it as
 +
| something 'private' and valid only for one body.  In short, 'error'
 +
| appears, and it can be explained only by supposing a 'self' which
 +
| is fallible.
 +
|
 +
| Ignorance and error are all that
 +
| distinguish our private selves
 +
| from the absolute 'ego' of
 +
| pure apperception.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.234-235.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 +
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 +
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 +
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 12===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| Now, the theory which, for the sake of perspicuity, has thus
 +
| been stated in a specific form, may be summed up as follows:
 +
|
 +
| At the age at which we know children to be self-conscious, we know that
 +
| they have been made aware of ignorance and error;  and we know them to
 +
| possess at that age powers of understanding sufficient to enable them
 +
| to infer from ignorance and error their own existence.
 +
|
 +
| Thus we find that known faculties, acting under conditions known
 +
| to exist, would rise to self-consciousness.  The only essential
 +
| defect in this account of the matter is, that while we know that
 +
| children exercise 'as much' understanding as is here supposed,
 +
| we do not know that they exercise it in precisely this way.
 +
| Still the supposition that they do so is infinitely more
 +
| supported by facts, than the supposition of a wholly
 +
| peculiar faculty of the mind.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.236.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 +
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 +
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 +
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 13===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| The only argument worth noticing
 +
| for the existence of an intuitive
 +
| self-consciousness is this:
 +
|
 +
| We are more certain of our own existence than of any other fact;
 +
| a premiss cannot determine a conclusion to be more certain than
 +
| it is itself;  hence, our own existence cannot have been inferred
 +
| from any other fact.
 +
|
 +
| The first premiss must be admitted, but the second premiss is founded
 +
| on an exploded theory of logic.  A conclusion cannot be more certain
 +
| than that some one of the facts which support it is true, but it may
 +
| easily be more certain than any one of those facts.
 +
|
 +
| Let us suppose, for example, that a dozen witnesses testify to an occurrence.
 +
| Then my belief in that occurrence rests on the belief that each of those men
 +
| is generally to be believed upon oath.  Yet the fact testified to is made
 +
| more certain than that any one of those men is generally to be believed.
 +
|
 +
| In the same way, to the developed mind of man, his own existence is supported
 +
| by 'every other fact', and is, therefore, incomparably more certain than any
 +
| one of these facts.  But it cannot be said to be more certain than that there
 +
| is another fact, since there is no doubt perceptible in either case.
 +
|
 +
| It is to be concluded, then, that there is no necessity of supposing an intuitive
 +
| self-consciousness, since self-consciousness may easily be the result of inference.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.237.
 +
|
 +
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
 +
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
 +
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
 +
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 14===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| His soul had arisen from the grave of boyhood, spurning her graveclothes.
 +
| Yes! Yes! Yes!  He would create proudly out of the freedom and power of
 +
| his soul, as the great artificer whose name he bore, a living thing,
 +
| new and soaring and beautiful, impalpable, imperishable.
 +
|
 +
| Joyce, 'Portrait', pp. 163-164.
 +
|
 +
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
 +
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Note 15===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
| On another occasion I heard one of the grown-ups saying to
 +
| another "When is that young Lyon coming?"  I pricked up my
 +
| ears and said "Is there a lion coming?"  "Yes," they said,
 +
| "he's coming on Sunday.  He'll be quite tame and you shall
 +
| see him in the drawing-room."  I counted the days till Sunday
 +
| and the hours through Sunday morning.  At last I was told the
 +
| young lion was in the drawing-room and I could come and see him.
 +
| I came.  And he was an ordinary young man named Lyon.  I was
 +
| utterly overwhelmed by the disenchantment and still remember
 +
| with anguish the depths of my despair.
 +
|
 +
| Russell, 'Autobiography', p. 18.
 +
|
 +
| Bertrand Russell, 'Autobiography', with an introduction by
 +
| Michael Foot, Routledge, London, UK, 1998.  First published
 +
| in 3 volumes by George Allen & Unwin, 1967-1969.
 +
</pre>
 +
 
 +
==VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience &bull; Application==
 +
 
 +
===VORE. Application Note 1===
 +
 
 +
<pre>
 +
Most of the year I spend my time wondering when logicians will begin
 +
to take the phenomena and the problems of Truth In Science seriously --
 +
but for a brief time in summer my fancy turns to wondering when they
 +
will get around to taking Truth In Literature seriously.  Now, there
 +
is a market for this -- I especially remember an editorial or letter
 +
in the 'Chronicle of Higher Education' a few years back, the gist of
 +
which was a literature teacher's half plaintive half wistful wishing
 +
for software that would help researchers and students with the truly
 +
insightful analysis of literary texts, tools that would be sensitive
 +
to something more than simple-minded syntactic similarities and help
 +
us to deal with the full complexity of meanings that folks pack into
 +
narratives, novels, poems, and other expressions of human experience.
 +
 
 +
To sharpen the point a bit, we might well ask ourselves:
 +
 
 +
Just how far do the customary categories of first order
 +
logic take us in approaching this realm of applications?
 +
 
 +
For instance, take the term "Stephen Dedulus", in any of its variant spellings,
 
as it is used by James Joyce in his various works.  Just for starters, is this
 
as it is used by James Joyce in his various works.  Just for starters, is this
 
term a constant or a variable?  Is this term individual or general?  Are these
 
term a constant or a variable?  Is this term individual or general?  Are these
Line 9,178: Line 11,657:
 
whole point of the text -- not that I would try to be more holistic than Quine --
 
whole point of the text -- not that I would try to be more holistic than Quine --
 
in approaching it from this direction?
 
in approaching it from this direction?
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===VORE. Application Note 2===
 
 
VORE. Application Note 2
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
  
 +
<pre>
 
Sometimes a typo is just a typo -- among the variant spellings
 
Sometimes a typo is just a typo -- among the variant spellings
 
of "Stephen Dedalus" that James Joyce actually uses, I mostly
 
of "Stephen Dedalus" that James Joyce actually uses, I mostly
Line 9,234: Line 11,711:
 
but I find myself constitutionally incapable of taking these orders
 
but I find myself constitutionally incapable of taking these orders
 
of answers seriously.
 
of answers seriously.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===VORE. Application Note 3===
 
 
VORE. Application Note 3
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
  
 +
<pre>
 
Many currents have brought us to the current juncture.
 
Many currents have brought us to the current juncture.
 
I will not endeavor to untangle their viscosities and
 
I will not endeavor to untangle their viscosities and
Line 9,251: Line 11,726:
  
 
Logic should not make us stupid.
 
Logic should not make us stupid.
 +
</pre>
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===VORE. Application Note 4===
 
 
VORE. Application Note 4
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
  
 +
<pre>
 
What I really want to understand is the What, the How, and the Why of stories,
 
What I really want to understand is the What, the How, and the Why of stories,
 
what stories are, their "quiddity", how stories work and why people tell them.
 
what stories are, their "quiddity", how stories work and why people tell them.
Line 9,288: Line 11,761:
  
 
Other information on this score must come from a study of Peirce's work.
 
Other information on this score must come from a study of Peirce's work.
Personally, I always find that it helps to return to the source, in two
+
Personally, I always find that it helps to return to the source, in two
senses, at least, the precursory authors and their earliest expressions.
+
senses, at least, the precursory authors and their earliest expressions.
 
+
 
Two investigations along these lines have been initiated here:
+
Two investigations along these lines have been initiated here:
 
+
 
JITL.  Just In Time Logic -- Ontology List 01-04
+
JITL.  Just In Time Logic -- Ontology List 01-04
 
+
 
VOLS.  Verities Of Likely Stories -- Ontology List 01-03
+
VOLS.  Verities Of Likely Stories -- Ontology List 01-03
 
+
 
The "Just In Time Logic" thread, to express it in contemporary terms --
+
The "Just In Time Logic" thread, to express it in contemporary terms --
that's one way to make it sound smarter, I guess -- will contemplate
+
that's one way to make it sound smarter, I guess -- will contemplate
Peirce's early ideas about the "temporal dynamics of belief revision",
+
Peirce's early ideas about the "temporal dynamics of belief revision",
taking a view of the inquiry process as the time-evolution of thought.
+
taking a view of the inquiry process as the time-evolution of thought.
 
+
 
The "Verities Of Likely Stories" theme will return to the sources of our
+
The "Verities Of Likely Stories" theme will return to the sources of our
contemporary ideas about analogies, homologies, icons, metaphors, models,
+
contemporary ideas about analogies, homologies, icons, metaphors, models,
morphisms, ..., to mention just a few kin of a Proteus-resembling family.
+
morphisms, ..., to mention just a few kin of a Proteus-resembling family.
 +
 
 +
This is not the bottom line,
 +
but it will have to suffice
 +
for a middling one, since I
 +
and you and we and ontology
 +
are as always in medias res.
 +
</pre>
  
This is not the bottom line,
+
==Document Histories==
but it will have to suffice
 
for a middling one, since I
 
and you and we and ontology
 
are as always in medias res.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===CROM. Critical Reflection On Method &bull; Document History===
</pre>
 
  
==Document History==
+
'''Inquiry List (Oct 2003)'''
  
===Critical Reflection On Method===
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20150111162004/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/thread.html#905
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140627181001/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000905.html
  
====SUO List====
+
'''Ontology List (Oct 2003)'''
  
# http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11279.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070302144332/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd8.html#05124
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070218070420/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05124.html
  
====Ontology List====
+
'''SUO List (Oct 2003)'''
  
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05124.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070304181206/http://suo.ieee.org/email/thrd42.html#11279
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070313224500/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11279.html
  
====Inquiry List====
+
===CROM. Critical Reflection On Method &bull; Discussion History===
  
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000905.html
+
'''Inquiry List (Oct 2003)'''
  
===Critical Reflection On Method : Discussion===
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20150111162004/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/thread.html#904
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010117/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000904.html
  
====SUO List====
+
'''Ontology List (Oct 2003)'''
  
# http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11278.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070302144332/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd8.html#05123
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20060918001845/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05123.html
  
====Ontology List====
+
'''SUO List (Oct 2003)'''
  
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05123.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070307071405/http://suo.ieee.org/email/thrd43.html#11278
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070316000416/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11278.html
  
====Inquiry List====
+
===DIEP. De In Esse Predication &bull; Document History===
  
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000904.html
+
'''Inquiry List (Sep 2003)'''
  
===DIEP. De In Esse Predication===
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120505135759/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/thread.html#780
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001359/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000780.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001009/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000781.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000944/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000782.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001114/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000783.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000941/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000784.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001104/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000785.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001241/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000787.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000909/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000788.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000902/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000789.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001131/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000792.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001200/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000793.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001215/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000794.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001218/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000795.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001332/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000800.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001154/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000801.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001226/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000802.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001402/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000804.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001001/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000805.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001347/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000834.html
  
====Ontology List====
+
'''Ontology List (Sep 2003)'''
  
* http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd10.html#05026
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070305021905/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd10.html#05026
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05026.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070313230956/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05026.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05027.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070316003847/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05027.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05028.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070317131614/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05028.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05029.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070320020154/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05029.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05030.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070323144756/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05030.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05031.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070328013010/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05031.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05033.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050826220928/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05033.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05034.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070316003856/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05034.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05035.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231006/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05035.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05038.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231017/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05038.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05039.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231027/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05039.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05040.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231037/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05040.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05041.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231048/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05041.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05048.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231058/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05048.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05049.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070310113354/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05049.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05050.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231108/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05050.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05052.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070310113519/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05052.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05053.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070222033549/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05053.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05082.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035929/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05082.html
  
====Inquiry List====
+
===DIEP. De In Esse Predication &bull; Discussion History===
  
* http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/thread.html#780
+
'''Inquiry List (Sep 2003)'''
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000780.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000781.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000782.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000783.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000784.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000785.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000787.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000788.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000789.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000792.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000793.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000794.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000795.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000800.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000801.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000802.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000804.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000805.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000834.html
 
  
===DIEP. De In Esse Predication : Discussion===
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120505135759/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/thread.html#786
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001032/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000786.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001019/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000790.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000906/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000796.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001045/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000797.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000930/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000799.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001253/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000803.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001212/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000806.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000859/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000798.html
  
====Ontology List====
+
'''Ontology List (Sep 2003)'''
  
* http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd10.html#05032
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070305021905/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd10.html#05032
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05032.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070317221422/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05032.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05036.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070316003906/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05036.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05043.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20121010204912/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05043.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05045.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070222033717/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05045.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05047.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070222033504/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05047.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05051.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070222033848/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05051.html
# http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05054.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070219072137/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05054.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070222033828/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05046.html
  
====Inquiry List====
+
===HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction &bull; Document History 1===
  
* http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/thread.html#786
+
'''Inquiry List (Sep&ndash;Oct 2003)'''
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000786.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000790.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000796.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000797.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000799.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000803.html
 
# http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000806.html
 
  
==Work Area==
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120505135759/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/thread.html#841
 +
* http://web.archive.org/web/20150111162004/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/thread.html#899
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001256/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000841.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001328/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000842.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000958/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000843.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001026/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000851.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001036/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000858.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000913/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000859.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001029/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000863.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001138/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000866.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010325/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000899.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010230/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000902.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010349/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000903.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010042/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000906.html
  
<pre>
+
'''Ontology List (Sep&ndash;Oct 2003)'''
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
  
HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070302144332/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd8.html#05089
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070214054035/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05089.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070216005823/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05090.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070214054045/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070216005832/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05093.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070218070102/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05100.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050523211120/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05101.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041512/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05105.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070216102336/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05108.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070216102358/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05118.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041305/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05121.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20060912171726/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05122.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041325/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05125.html
  
SUO List
+
'''SUO List (Sep&ndash;Oct 2003)'''
  
01. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10964.html -- Continuous Predicate
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20060517022017/http://suo.ieee.org/email/thrd45.html#10964
02. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10965.html -- Dormitive Virtue
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035737/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10964.html
03. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10966.html -- Dulcitive Virtue
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075158/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10965.html
04. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10991.html -- Math Abstraction
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075208/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10966.html
05. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11022.html -- Reading Runes
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075228/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10991.html
06. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11025.html -- Hypostatization
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075239/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11022.html
07. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11028.html -- Abstract Objects
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075248/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11025.html
08. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11079.html -- Subjectal Abstraction
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075258/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11028.html
09. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11239.html -- Definition of Predicate
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075309/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11079.html
10. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11271.html -- Second Intentions
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041235/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11239.html
11. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11277.html -- Logical Reflexion
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035816/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11271.html
12. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11290.html -- Epea Apteroenta
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070222005616/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11277.html
13.
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075432/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11290.html
  
Ontology List
+
===HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction &bull; Discussion History 1===
 
 
01. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05089.html -- Continuous Predicate
 
02.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05090.html -- Dormitive Virtue
 
03.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html -- Dulcitive Virtue
 
04.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05093.html -- Math Abstraction
 
05.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05100.html -- Reading Runes
 
06.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05101.html -- Hypostatization
 
07.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05105.html -- Abstract Objects
 
08.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05108.html -- Subjectal Abstraction
 
09.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05118.html -- Definition of Predicate
 
10.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05121.html -- Second Intentions
 
11.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05122.html -- Logical Reflexion
 
12.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05125.html -- Epea Apteroenta
 
13.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
'''Inquiry List (Sep&ndash;Oct 2003)'''
  
HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction -- Discussion
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120505135759/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/thread.html#844
 +
* http://web.archive.org/web/20150111162004/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/thread.html#891
 +
* http://web.archive.org/web/20150111162004/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/thread.html#900
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001237/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000844.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010057/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000891.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010111/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000892.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010204/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000893.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010247/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000894.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010258/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000895.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010308/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000896.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010054/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000897.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010342/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000898.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010141/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000900.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010339/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000901.html
  
SUO List
+
'''Ontology List (Sep&ndash;Oct 2003)'''
  
01. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10967.html -- Metaphormazes
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070302144332/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd8.html#05092
02. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11227.html -- Deciduation Problems
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070214054025/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05092.html
03. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11228.html -- Thematic Recapitulation
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070214053809/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05110.html
04. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11229.html -- Field Key, Kitchen Recipe
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070211023423/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05111.html
05. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11231.html -- Indirect Self Reference
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070214053920/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05112.html
06. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11232.html -- Genealogy & Paraphrasis
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070219040057/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05113.html
07. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11234.html -- Intention & Reflection
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20060720162947/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05114.html
08. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11236.html -- Rhematic Saturation
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20060720163027/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05115.html
09. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11237.html -- Relational Turn
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20060720163042/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05116.html
10. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11240.html -- Tabula Erasa
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041225/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05117.html
11. http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11267.html -- Directions
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070216102345/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05119.html
12.
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041014/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05120.html
  
Ontology List
+
'''SUO List (Sep&ndash;Oct 2003)'''
  
01. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05092.html -- Metaphormazes
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20060517022017/http://suo.ieee.org/email/thrd45.html#10967
02. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05110.html -- Deciduation Problems
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070128135114/http://suo.ieee.org/email/thrd53.html#11227
03. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05111.html -- Thematic Recapitulation
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075218/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10967.html
04. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05112.html -- Field Key, Kitchen Recipe
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075320/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11227.html
05. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05113.html -- Indirect Self Reference
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075331/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11228.html
06. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05114.html -- Genealogy & Paraphrasis
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075342/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11229.html
07. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05115.html -- Intention & Reflection
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070222144959/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11231.html
08. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05116.html -- Rhematic Saturation
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20060721222834/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11232.html
09. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05117.html -- Relational Turn
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075351/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11234.html
10. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05119.html -- Tabula Erasa
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075401/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11236.html
11. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05120.html -- Directions
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075411/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11237.html
12.
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035806/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11240.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075421/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11267.html
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction &bull; Document History 2===
  
HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction
+
'''[http://web.archive.org/web/20070302144332/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd8.html#05089 Ontology List (Sep&ndash;Oct 2003)]'''
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070214054035/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05089.html Continuous Predicate]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070216005823/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05090.html Dormitive Virtue]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070214054045/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html Dulcitive Virtue]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070216005832/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05093.html Math Abstraction]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070218070102/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05100.html Reading Runes]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20050523211120/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05101.html Hypostatization]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041512/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05105.html Abstract Objects]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070216102336/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05108.html Subjectal Abstraction]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070216102358/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05118.html Definition of Predicate]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041305/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05121.html Second Intentions]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20060912171726/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05122.html Logical Reflexion]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041325/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05125.html Epea Apteroenta]
  
SUO List
+
'''[http://web.archive.org/web/20060517022017/http://suo.ieee.org/email/thrd45.html#10964 SUO List (Sep&ndash;Oct 2003)]'''
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035737/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10964.html Continuous Predicate]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075158/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10965.html Dormitive Virtue]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075208/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10966.html Dulcitive Virtue]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075228/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10991.html Math Abstraction]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075239/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11022.html Reading Runes]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075248/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11025.html Hypostatization]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075258/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11028.html Abstract Objects]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075309/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11079.html Subjectal Abstraction]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041235/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11239.html Definition of Predicate]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035816/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11271.html Second Intentions]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070222005616/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11277.html Logical Reflexion]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075432/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11290.html Epea Apteroenta]
  
01.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10964.html
+
===HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction &bull; Discussion History 2===
02.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10965.html
 
03.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10966.html
 
04.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10991.html
 
05.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11022.html
 
06.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11025.html
 
07.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11028.html
 
08.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11079.html
 
09.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11239.html
 
10.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11271.html
 
11.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11277.html
 
12.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11290.html
 
13.
 
  
Ontology List
+
'''[http://web.archive.org/web/20070302144332/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd8.html#05092 Ontology List (Sep&ndash;Oct 2003)]'''
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070214054025/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05092.html Metaphormazes]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070214053809/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05110.html Deciduation Problems]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070211023423/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05111.html Thematic Recapitulation]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070214053920/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05112.html Field Key, Kitchen Recipe]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070219040057/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05113.html Indirect Self Reference]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20060720162947/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05114.html Genealogy & Paraphrasis]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20060720163027/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05115.html Intention & Reflection]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20060720163042/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05116.html Rhematic Saturation]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041225/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05117.html Relational Turn]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070216102345/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05119.html Tabula Erasa]
 +
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041014/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05120.html Directions]
  
01. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05089.html
+
'''SUO List (Sep&ndash;Oct 2003) &bull; [http://web.archive.org/web/20060517022017/http://suo.ieee.org/email/thrd45.html#10967 (1)] &bull; [http://web.archive.org/web/20070128135114/http://suo.ieee.org/email/thrd53.html#11227 (2)]'''
02. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05090.html
+
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075218/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10967.html Metaphormazes]
03. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html
+
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075320/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11227.html Deciduation Problems]
04. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05093.html
+
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075331/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11228.html Thematic Recapitulation]
05. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05100.html
+
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075342/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11229.html Field Key, Kitchen Recipe]
06. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05101.html
+
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070222144959/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11231.html Indirect Self Reference]
07. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05105.html
+
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20060721222834/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11232.html Genealogy & Paraphrasis]
08. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05108.html
+
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075351/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11234.html Intention & Reflection]
09. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05118.html
+
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075401/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11236.html Rhematic Saturation]
10. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05121.html
+
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075411/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11237.html Relational Turn]
11. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05122.html
+
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035806/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11240.html Tabula Erasa]
12. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05125.html
+
# [http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075421/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11267.html Directions]
13.
 
  
Inquiry List
+
===JITL. Just In Time Logic &bull; Document History===
  
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000829.html
+
'''Inquiry List (Aug 2003 &ndash; Apr 2005)'''
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000830.html
 
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000831.html
 
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000839.html
 
05.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000846.html
 
06.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000847.html
 
07.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000851.html
 
08.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000854.html
 
09.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000883.html
 
10.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000886.html
 
11.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000887.html
 
12.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000890.html
 
13.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120518012303/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#712
 +
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120601160642/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-April/thread.html#2542
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084824/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000712.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084832/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000714.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084845/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000717.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084852/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000719.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084904/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000722.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084816/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000723.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084908/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000724.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084912/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000725.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084916/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000726.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084921/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000727.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084925/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000728.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084929/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000729.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084933/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000730.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051247/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000731.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051252/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000732.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20121113152840/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-April/002542.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20081120222140/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-April/002543.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20121113152903/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-April/002544.html
  
HAPA.  Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction -- Discussion
+
'''Ontology List (Aug 2003)'''
  
SUO List
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20140405160400/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd11.html#04961
 +
* http://web.archive.org/web/20140405160400/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd11.html#04965
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140405161017/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04961.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306133915/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04962.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140405160005/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04965.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134016/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04967.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134046/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04970.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134056/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04971.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134107/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04972.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134117/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04973.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134128/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04974.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134138/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04975.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134155/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04976.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134206/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04977.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134220/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04978.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134231/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04979.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134241/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04980.html
  
01.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10967.html
+
===NEKS. New Elements &bull; Kaina Stoicheia &bull; Document History===
02.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11227.html
 
03.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11228.html
 
04.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11229.html
 
05.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11231.html
 
06.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11232.html
 
07.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11234.html
 
08.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11236.html
 
09.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11237.html
 
10.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11240.html
 
11.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11267.html
 
12.
 
  
Ontology List
+
'''Inquiry List (Sep&ndash;Dec 2005)'''
  
01.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05092.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20140927032017/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3063
02.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05110.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20150224133200/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/thread.html#3075
03.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05111.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152003/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/thread.html#3183
04.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05112.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120512004315/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3274
05.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05113.html
 
06.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05114.html
 
07.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05115.html
 
08.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05116.html
 
09.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05117.html
 
10.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05119.html
 
11.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05120.html
 
12.
 
  
Inquiry List
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140927031226/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003063.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140927032400/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003065.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20150221163001/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003075.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20150221163001/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003090.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140927152409/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003183.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140930151632/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003186.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140927031019/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003187.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152056/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003189.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140927145521/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003190.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140927152552/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003207.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152201/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003208.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152230/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003222.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152251/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003253.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152400/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003261.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152424/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003264.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152454/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003265.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233820/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003274.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233713/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003277.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233746/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003278.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233637/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003279.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234032/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003283.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234059/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003359.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234103/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003360.html
  
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000832.html
+
===NEKS. New Elements &bull; Kaina Stoicheia &bull; Commentary History===
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000875.html
 
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000876.html
 
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000877.html
 
05.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000878.html
 
06.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000879.html
 
07.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000880.html
 
08.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000881.html
 
09.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000882.html
 
10.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000884.html
 
11.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000885.html
 
12.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
'''Inquiry List (Sep 2005 &ndash; Feb 2006)'''
  
OLOD. On the Limits of Decision
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20140927032017/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3066
 +
* http://web.archive.org/web/20150224132601/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/thread.html#3070
 +
* http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152003/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/thread.html#3263
 +
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120512004315/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3276
 +
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120428203612/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2006-February/thread.html#3366
  
Ontology List
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140927032227/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003066.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140927032200/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003067.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20150224132513/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003070.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140930212839/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003071.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20120204201416/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003073.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20120206122908/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003074.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20120204201721/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003087.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20150224132436/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003091.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20150224132419/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003117.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152611/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003263.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152637/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003269.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233936/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003276.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232908/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2006-February/003366.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232911/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2006-February/003367.html
  
01.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05037.html
+
===NEKS. New Elements &bull; Kaina Stoicheia &bull; Discussion History===
02.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05095.html
 
03.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05096.html
 
04.
 
  
Inquiry List
+
'''Inquiry List (Dec 2005)'''
  
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/thread.html#791
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120512004315/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272
01. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000791.html
 
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000853.html
 
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000854.html
 
04.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234010/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003272.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234040/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003282.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233753/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003296.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234050/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003297.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233848/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003298.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233659/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003299.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233721/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003300.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234152/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003301.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233802/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003302.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234055/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003303.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233903/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003304.html
  
JITL. Just In Time Logic
+
===OLOD. Quine On The Limits Of Decision &bull; Document History===
  
Ontology List
+
'''Inquiry List (Sep 2003)'''
  
01.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04961.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120505135759/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/thread.html#791
02.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04962.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001340/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000791.html
03.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04965.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000951/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000853.html
04.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04967.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001355/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000854.html
05.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04970.html
 
06.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04971.html
 
07.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04972.html
 
08.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04973.html
 
09.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04974.html
 
10.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04975.html
 
11.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04976.html
 
12.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04977.html
 
13.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04978.html
 
14.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04979.html
 
15.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04980.html
 
  
Inquiry List
+
'''Ontology List (Sep 2003)'''
  
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#712
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070304201252/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd9.html#05037
00. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-April/thread.html#2542
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035906/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05037.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035951/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05095.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070219040008/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05096.html
  
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000712.html
+
===POLA. Philosophy Of Logical Atomism &bull; Document History===
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000714.html
 
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000717.html
 
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000719.html
 
05.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000722.html
 
06.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000723.html
 
07.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000724.html
 
08.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000725.html
 
09.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000726.html
 
10.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000727.html
 
11.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000728.html
 
12.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000729.html
 
13.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000730.html
 
14.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000731.html
 
15.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000732.html
 
16.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-April/002542.html
 
17.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-April/002543.html
 
18.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-April/002544.html
 
19.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
'''Inquiry List (Aug 2003)'''
  
POLA. Philosophy Of Logical Atomism
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120518012303/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#674
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182153/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000674.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182157/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000675.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182137/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000679.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182233/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000685.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182238/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000686.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182245/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000688.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182249/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000689.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182253/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000690.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203820/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000691.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203828/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000693.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203833/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000694.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203836/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000695.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203844/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000697.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203848/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000698.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203852/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000699.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203856/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000700.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203900/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000701.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203928/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000709.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203932/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000710.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051339/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000745.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051343/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000746.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051347/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000747.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051351/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000748.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051355/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000749.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20051215123628/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000750.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141737/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000751.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141709/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000752.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141717/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000756.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141837/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000757.html
  
Ontology List
+
'''Ontology List (Aug 2003)'''
  
01. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04939.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20080907150744/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd11.html#04939
02. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04940.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20080502102247/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04939.html
03. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04944.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20080502073506/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04940.html
04. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04945.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20080621104338/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04944.html
05. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04946.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115257/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04945.html
06. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04947.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115309/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04946.html
07. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04948.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115323/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04947.html
08. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04949.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115333/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04948.html
09. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04950.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115343/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04949.html
10. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04951.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115353/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04950.html
11. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04952.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115404/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04951.html
12. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04953.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115413/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04952.html
13. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04954.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003408/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04953.html
14. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04955.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20080409021341/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04954.html
15. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04956.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20080622160902/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04955.html
16. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04957.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20080409021347/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04956.html
17. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04958.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003451/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04957.html
18. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04959.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003503/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04958.html
19. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04960.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003513/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04959.html
20. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04995.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003523/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04960.html
21. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04996.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003535/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04995.html
22. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04997.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003545/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04996.html
23. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04998.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003557/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04997.html
24. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04999.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003605/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04998.html
25. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05000.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003616/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04999.html
26. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05001.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003626/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05000.html
27. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05002.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003636/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05001.html
28. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05006.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003700/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05002.html
29. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05007.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003710/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05006.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003719/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05007.html
  
Inquiry List
+
===POLA. Philosophy Of Logical Atomism &bull; Discussion History===
  
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#674
+
'''Ontology List (Aug 2003)'''
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000674.html
 
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000675.html
 
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000679.html
 
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000685.html
 
05.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000686.html
 
06.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000688.html
 
07.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000689.html
 
08.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000690.html
 
09.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000691.html
 
10.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000693.html
 
11.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000694.html
 
12.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000695.html
 
13.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000697.html
 
14.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000698.html
 
15.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000699.html
 
16.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000700.html
 
17.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000701.html
 
18.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000709.html
 
19.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000710.html
 
20.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000745.html
 
21.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000746.html
 
22.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000747.html
 
23.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000748.html
 
24.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000749.html
 
25.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000750.html
 
26.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000751.html
 
27.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000752.html
 
28.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000756.html
 
29.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000757.html
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20140405160400/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd11.html#04941
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20080621104325/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04941.html
  
RTOK. Russell's Theory Of Knowledge
+
===RTOK. Russell's Theory Of Knowledge &bull; Document History===
  
Ontology List
+
'''Inquiry List (Aug 2003)'''
  
01. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05008.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120518012303/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#758
02. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05009.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141725/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000758.html
03. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05010.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141628/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000759.html
04.
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141729/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000760.html
  
Inquiry List
+
'''Ontology List (Aug 2003)'''
  
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#758
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070305021905/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd10.html#05008
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000758.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070306151622/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05008.html
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000759.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070324073231/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05009.html
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000760.html
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070324073241/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05010.html
04.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===RTOP. Russell's Treatise On Propositions &bull; Document History===
  
RTOP.  Russell's Treatise On Propositions
+
'''Inquiry List (Aug 2003)'''
  
Ontology List
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120518012303/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#761
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141603/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000761.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141807/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000762.html
  
01.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05011.html
+
'''Ontology List (Aug 2003)'''
02.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05012.html
 
03.
 
  
Inquiry List
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070305021905/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd10.html#05011
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070328165409/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05011.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070316003836/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05012.html
  
00. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#761
+
===SABI. Synthetic/Analytic &#8799; Boundary/Interior &bull; Document History===
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000761.html
 
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000762.html
 
03.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
'''Inquiry List (Aug 2003)'''
  
SABI. Synthetic/Analytic = Boundary/Interior?
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120518012303/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#773
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20040907185623/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000773.html
  
Ontology List
+
'''Ontology List (Aug 2003)'''
  
01. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05024.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070305021905/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd10.html#05024
02.
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050824071512/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05024.html
  
Inquiry List
+
===SYNF. Syntactic Fallacy &bull; Document History===
  
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000761.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20050508214427/http://suo.ieee.org/email/thrd53.html#10471
02.
+
# http://web.archive.org/web/20070302141236/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10471.html
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===TDOE. Two Dogmas Of Empiricism &bull; Document History===
  
TDOE.  Two Dogmas Of Empiricism -- Ontology List
+
'''Inquiry List (Jul 2003)'''
  
01. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04902.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120518012822/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/thread.html#631
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233112/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000631.html
  
1.  Background for Analyticity
+
* Background for Analyticity
  
02. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04909.html
+
<ol>
03. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04910.html
+
<li value="2">http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233132/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000638.html</li>
04. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04911.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233212/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000639.html</li>
05. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04912.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233048/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000640.html</li>
06. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04913.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233020/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000641.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232930/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000642.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
2.  Definition
+
* Definition
  
07. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04914.html
+
<ol>
08. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04915.html
+
<li value="7">http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232959/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000643.html</li>
09. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04916.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233215/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000644.html</li>
10. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04917.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233054/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000645.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232914/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000646.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
3.  Interchangeability
+
* Interchangeability
  
11http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04918.html
+
<ol>
12. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04919.html
+
<li value="11">http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232955/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000647.html</li>
13. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04920.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233149/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000648.html</li>
14. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04921.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233139/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000649.html</li>
15. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04922.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233115/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000650.html</li>
16. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04923.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233119/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000651.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233219/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000652.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
4.  Semantical Rules
+
* Semantical Rules
  
17. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04924.html
+
<ol>
18. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04925.html
+
<li value="17">http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233129/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000653.html</li>
19. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04926.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232943/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000654.html</li>
20. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04927.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233201/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000655.html</li>
21. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04928.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232947/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000656.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233013/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000657.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism
+
* The Verification Theory and Reductionism
  
22http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04929.html
+
<ol>
23. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04930.html
+
<li value="22">http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233009/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000658.html</li>
24. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04931.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232933/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000659.html</li>
25. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04932.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233005/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000660.html</li>
26. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04933.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233233/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000661.html</li>
27. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04934.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233034/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000662.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233122/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000663.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
6.  Empiricism without the Dogmas
+
* Empiricism without the Dogmas
  
28. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04935.html
+
<ol>
29. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04936.html
+
<li value="28">http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232923/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000664.html</li>
30. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04937.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233146/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000665.html</li>
31. http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04938.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233136/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000666.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233104/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000667.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
 
The above material is excerpted from:
 
The above material is excerpted from:
  
| W.V. Quine,
+
* W.V. Quine, &ldquo;Two Dogmas of Empiricism&rdquo;, ''Philosophical Review'', January 1951.<br>Reprinted, W.V. Quine, ''From a Logical Point of View'', 2nd edition, pp. 20&ndash;46,<br>Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
 
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
 
 
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
 
  
TDOE.  Two Dogmas Of Empiricism -- Inquiry List
+
'''Ontology List (Jul 2003)'''
  
01. http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000619.html
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20070302144432/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd12.html#04902
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20080411140946/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04902.html
  
1.  Background for Analyticity
+
* Background for Analyticity
  
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000626.html
+
<ol>
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000627.html
+
<li value="2">http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210042/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04909.html</li>
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000628.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210052/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04910.html</li>
05.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000629.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210102/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04911.html</li>
06.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000630.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210112/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04912.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210122/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04913.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
2.  Definition
+
* Definition
  
07.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000631.html
+
<ol>
08.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000632.html
+
<li value="7">http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210132/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04914.html</li>
09.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000633.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210143/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04915.html</li>
10.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000634.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210153/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04916.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210203/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04917.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
3.  Interchangeability
+
* Interchangeability
  
11http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000635.html
+
<ol>
12.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000636.html
+
<li value="11">http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210214/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04918.html</li>
13.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000637.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210223/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04919.html</li>
14.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000638.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210234/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04920.html</li>
15.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000639.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304181104/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04921.html</li>
16.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000640.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210244/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04922.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210310/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04923.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
4.  Semantical Rules
+
* Semantical Rules
  
17http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000641.html
+
<ol>
18.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000642.html
+
<li value="17">http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210321/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04924.html</li>
19.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000643.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210332/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04925.html</li>
20.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000644.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210350/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04926.html</li>
21.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000645.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210401/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04927.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210411/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04928.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism
+
* The Verification Theory and Reductionism
  
22http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000646.html
+
<ol>
23.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000647.html
+
<li value="22">http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210423/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04929.html</li>
24.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000648.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210431/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04930.html</li>
25.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000649.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070305022135/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04931.html</li>
26.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000650.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210441/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04932.html</li>
27.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000651.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210451/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04933.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20080419061751/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04934.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
6.  Empiricism without the Dogmas
+
* Empiricism without the Dogmas
  
28http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000652.html
+
<ol>
29.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000653.html
+
<li value="28">http://web.archive.org/web/20080411152023/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04935.html</li>
30.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000654.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20080411152028/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04936.html</li>
31.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000655.html
+
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20080411152033/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04937.html</li>
 +
<li>http://web.archive.org/web/20080622160852/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04938.html</li>
 +
</ol>
  
 
The above material is excerpted from:
 
The above material is excerpted from:
  
| W.V. Quine,
+
* W.V. Quine, &ldquo;Two Dogmas of Empiricism&rdquo;, ''Philosophical Review'', January 1951.<br>Reprinted, W.V. Quine, ''From a Logical Point of View'', 2nd edition, pp. 20&ndash;46,<br>Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
 
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
 
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
 
  
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o
+
===VOLS. Verities Of Likely Stories &bull; Document History===
  
VOLS.  Verities Of Likely Stories
+
'''Inquiry List (Aug 2003)'''
  
Ontology List
+
* http://web.archive.org/web/20120518012303/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#713
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084828/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000713.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084836/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000715.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084849/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000718.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084900/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000721.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051255/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000733.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051259/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000734.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051303/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000735.html
 +
# http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051307/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000736.html
 +
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===VOOP. Varieties Of Ontology Project &bull; Document History===
  
VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience
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VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience -- Application Notes
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===VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience &bull; Application History===
  
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</pre>
 

Latest revision as of 17:36, 14 July 2017

Philosophical Notes
CROM. Critical Reflection On Method
DIEP. De In Esse Predication
HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction
JITL. Just In Time Logic
NEKS. New Elements • Kaina Stoicheia
OLOD. Quine On The Limits Of Decision
POLA. Philosophy Of Logical Atomism
RTOK. Russell's Theory Of Knowledge
RTOP. Russell's Treatise On Propositions
SABI. Synthetic/Analytic ≟ Boundary/Interior
SYNF. Syntactic Fallacy
TDOE. Quine's Two Dogmas Of Empiricism
VOLS. Verities Of Likely Stories
VOOP. Varieties Of Ontology Project
VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience
Document Histories

CROM. Critical Reflection On Method

Two things here are all-important to assure oneself of and to remember. The first is that a person is not absolutely an individual. His thoughts are what he is “saying to himself”, that is, is saying to that other self that is just coming into life in the flow of time. When one reasons, it is that critical self that one is trying to persuade; and all thought whatsoever is a sign, and is mostly of the nature of language. The second thing to remember is that the man's circle of society (however widely or narrowly this phrase may be understood), is a sort of loosely compacted person, in some respects of higher rank than the person of an individual organism. It is these two things alone that render it possible for you — but only in the abstract, and in a Pickwickian sense — to distinguish between absolute truth and what you do not doubt. (Peirce, CP 5.421).

Charles Sanders Peirce (1905), “What Pragmatism Is”, The Monist 15, 161–181. Reprinted, Collected Papers, CP 5.411–437.

DIEP. De In Esse Predication

DIEP. Note 1

| [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant]
|
| Every logical notation hitherto proposed has an unnecessary number of signs.
| Is is by means of this excess that the calculus is rendered easy to use and
| that a symmetrical development of the subject is rendered possible;  at the
| same time, the number of primary formulae is thus greatly multiplied, those
| signifying facts of logic being very few in comparison with those which
| merely define the notation.  I have thought that it might be curious to
| see the notation in which the number of signs should be reduced to a
| minimum;  and with this view I have constructed the following.  The
| apparatus of the Boolian calculus consists of the signs, =, > (not
| used by Boole, but necessary to express particular propositions),
| +, -, x [·], 1, 0.  In place of these seven signs, I propose to
| use a single one.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.12, untitled paper circa 1880.

DIEP. Note 2

| [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant] (cont.)
|
| I begin with the description of the notation for conditional
| or "secondary" propositions.  The different letters signify
| propositions.  Any one proposition written down by itself
| is considered to be asserted.  Thus,
|
|    A
|
| means that the proposition A is true.
| Two propositions written in a pair are
| considered to be both denied.  Thus,
|
|    A B
|
| means that the propositions A and B
| are both false;  and
|
|    A A
|
| means that A is false.  We may have pairs of pairs of propositions
| and higher complications.  In this case we shall make use of commas,
| semicolons, colons, periods, and parentheses, just as [in] chemical
| notation, to separate pairs which are themselves paired.  These
| punctuation marks can no more count for distinct signs of
| algebra, than the parentheses of the ordinary notation.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.13, untitled paper circa 1880.

DIEP. Note 3

| [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant] (cont.)
|
| To express the proposition:  "If S then P",
| first write:
|
|    A
|
| for this proposition.  But the proposition
| is that a certain conceivable state of things
| is absent from the universe of possibility.
| Hence instead of A we write:
|
|    B B
|
| Then B expresses the possibility of S being true and
| P false.  Since, therefore, SS denies S, it follows
| that (SS, P) expresses B.  Hence we write:
|
|    SS, P;  SS, P.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.14, untitled paper circa 1880.

DIEP. Note 4

| I have maintained since 1867 that there is but one primary and fundamental
| logical relation, that of illation, expressed by 'ergo'.  A proposition,
| for me, is but an argumentation divested of the assertoriness of its
| premiss and conclusion.  This makes every proposition a conditional
| proposition at bottom.  In like manner a "term", or class-name, is
| for me nothing but a proposition with its indices or subjects left
| blank, or indefinite.  The common noun happens to have a very
| distinctive character in the Indo-European languages.  In most
| other tongues it is not sharply discriminated from a verb or
| participle.  "Man", if it can be said to mean anything by
| itself, means "what I am thinking of is a man".  This
| doctrine, which is in harmony with the above theory
| of signs, gives a great unity to logic.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.440,
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| pp. 19-40, 1896.

DIEP. Note 5

| Cicero and other ancient writers mention a great dispute between
| two logicians, Diodorus and Philo, in regard to the significance
| of conditional propositions.  This dispute has continued to our
| own day.  The Diodoran view seems to be the one which is natural
| to the minds of those, at least, who speak the European languages.
| How it may be with other languages has not been reported.  The
| difficulty with this view is that nobody seems to have succeeded
| in making any clear statement of it that is not open to doubt as
| to its justice, and that is not pretty complicated.  The Philonian
| view has been preferred by the greatest logicians.  Its advantage
| is that it is perfectly intelligible and simple.  Its disadvantage
| is that it produces results which seem offensive to common sense.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.441,
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| pp. 19-40, 1896.

DIEP. Note 6

| In order to explain these positions, it is best
| to mention that 'possibility' may be understood
| in many senses;  but they may all be embraced
| under the definition that that is possible
| which, in a certain state of information,
| is not known to be false.  By varying the
| supposed state of information all the
| varieties of possibility are obtained.
|
| Thus, 'essential' possibility
| is that which supposes nothing
| to be known except logical rules.
|
|'Substantive' possibility, on the other
| hand, supposes a state of omniscience.
|
| Now the Philonian logicians have always insisted
| upon beginning the study of conditional propositions
| by considering what such a proposition means in a state
| of omniscience;  and the Diodorans have, perhaps not very
| adroitly, commonly assented to this order of procedure.
| Duns Scotus* terms such a conditional proposition
| a "consequentia simplex de inesse".
|
| According to the Philonians, "If it is now lightening it will thunder",
| understood as a consequence 'de inesse', means "It is either not now
| lightening or it will soon thunder".  According to Diodorus, and
| most of his followers (who seem here to fall into a logical trap),
| it means "It is now lightening and it will soon thunder".
|
|* 'Quaestiones in Octo libror Physicorum Aristotelis', Liber 1, Question 2.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.442,
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| pp. 19-40, 1896.

DIEP. Note 7

| Although the Philonian views lead to such inconveniences as that it
| is true, as a consequence 'de inesse', that if the Devil were elected
| president of the United States, it would prove highly conducive to the
| spiritual welfare of the people (because he will not be elected), yet
| both Professor Schroeder and I prefer to build the algebra of relatives
| upon this conception of the conditional proposition.  The inconvenience,
| after all, ceases to seem important, when we reflect that, no matter
| what the conditional proposition be understood to mean, it can always
| be expressed by a complexus of Philonian conditionals and denials of
| conditionals.  It may, however, be suspected that the Diodoran view
| has suffered from incompetent advocacy, and that if it were modified
| somewhat, it might prove the preferable one.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.443,
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| pp. 19-40, 1896.

DIEP. Note 8

| The consequence 'de inesse', "if A is true, then B is true",
| is expressed by letting i denote the actual state of things,
| A_i mean that in the actual state of things A is true, and
| B_i mean that in the actual state of things B is true, and
| then saying "If A_i is true then B_i is true", or, what is
| the same thing, "Either A_i is not true or B_i is true".
|
| But an 'ordinary' Philonian conditional is expressed
| by saying, "In 'any' possible state of things, i,
| either A_i is not true, or B_i is true".
|
| Now let us express the categorical proposition,
| "Every man is wise".  Here, we let m_i mean that
| the individual object i is a man, and w_i mean that
| the individual object i is wise.  Then, we assert that,
| "taking any individual of the universe, i, no matter
| what, either that object, i, is not a man or that
| object, i, is wise";  that is, whatever is a man
| is wise.  That is, "whatever 'i' can indicate,
| either m_i is not true or w_i is true".
|
| The conditional and categorical propositions
| are expressed in precisely the same form;
| and there is absolutely no difference,
| to my mind, between them.  The 'form'
| of relationship is the same.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.444-445,
|"The Regenerated Logic", 'The Monist', vol. 7,
| pp. 19-40, 1896.

DIEP. Note 9

| The question is what is the sense which is most usefully attached
| to the hypothetical proposition in logic?  Now, the peculiarity of
| the hypothetical proposition is that it goes out beyond the actual
| state of things and declares what 'would' happen were things other
| than they are or may be.  The utility of this is that it puts us in
| possession of a rule, say that "if A is true, B is true", such that
| should we hereafter learn something of which we are now ignorant,
| namely that A is true, then by virtue of this rule, we shall find
| that we know something else, namely, that B is true.
|
| There can be no doubt that the Possible, in its primary meaning,
| is that which may be true for aught we know, that whose falsity
| we do not know.  The purpose is subserved, then, if throughout
| the whole range of possibility, in every state of things in
| which A is true, B is true too.
|
| The hypothetical proposition may therefore be falsified
| by a single state of things, but only by one in which A
| is true while B is false.  States of things in which A
| is false, as well as those in which B is true, cannot
| falsify it.
|
| If, then, B is a proposition true in every case
| throughout the whole range of possibility, the
| hypothetical proposition, taken in its logical
| sense, ought to be regarded as true, whatever
| may be the usage of ordinary speech.
|
| If, on the other hand, A is in no case true, throughout the
| range of possibility, it is a matter of indifference whether
| the hypothetical be understood to be true of not, since it is
| useless.  But it will be more simple to class it among true
| propositions, because the cases in which the antecedent is
| false do not, in any other case, falsify a hypothetical.
| This, at any rate, is the meaning which I shall attach
| to the hypothetical proposition in general, in this
| paper.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.374,
|"On the Algebra of Logic:  A Contribution to the Philosophy of Notation",
|'American Journal of Mathematics', vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 180-202, 1885.

DIEP. Note 10

| Indexical Dicisigns seem to have no important varieties;  but propositions are
| divisible, generally by dichotomy primarily in various ways.  In the first place,
| according to 'Modality' or 'Mode', a proposition is either 'de inesse' (the phrase
| used in the 'Summulae'*) or 'modal'.  A proposition 'de inesse' contemplates only
| the existing state of things -- existing, that is, in the logical universe of
| discourse.  A modal proposition takes account of a whole range of possibility.
| According as it asserts something to be true or false throughout the whole
| range of possibility, it is 'necessary' or 'impossible'.  According as it
| asserts something to be true or false within the range of possibility
| (not expressly including or excluding the existent state of things),
| it is 'possible' or 'contingent'.  (The terms are all from Boethius).
|
|* Petrus Hispanus, 'Summulae Logicales', p. 71B.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.323,
| from an unpublished "Syllabus", circa 1902.

DIEP. Note 11

| It remains to show in what manner I suppose the ideas of the other forms
| of propositions to be evolved;  and this will be a chapter of what I have
| called "speculative rhetoric".  I may begin by remarking that I use the
| sign -< for the sign of inclusion.  I believe I was the first to show,
| in 1867, that Boole's algebra, as he left it, was unfit to express
| particular propositions.  Following out that idea, I showed, in 1870,
| before anybody else, that we needed in logic a sign corresponding to
| the sign =<, but that sign is unsatisfactory because it implies that
| the relation is a combination of the relations expressed by < and =,
| whereas in truth, as I demonstrated, it is more simple than either.  ...
|
| Accordingly,
|
| h_i -< d_i
|
| means that on the occasion i, if the idea h is definitively
| forced upon the mind, then on the same occasion the idea d
| is definitively forced upon the mind.  On the Philonian view
| this is the same as to say that on the occasion i, either the
| idea h is not definitively forced upon the mind or on the same
| occasion the idea d is definitively forced upon the mind.  From
| that hypothesis, the rules of the sign -< may be mathematically
| deduced.  ...
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.356,
|"That Categorical and Hypothetical Propositions
| are one in essence, with some connected matters",
| circa 1895.

DIEP. Note 12

| It must be remembered that
| possibility and necessity
| are relative to the state
| of information.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 4.517,
|"The Gamma Part of Existential Graphs",
|"Lowell Lectures of 1903", Lecture 4.

DIEP. Note 13

| A modal dyadic relation is either a relation between characters
| (including qualities and relations of individuals, of characters,
| and of concepts), or between symbols, or concepts.
|
| Dyadic relations between characters mostly correspond to
| relations between the subjects of those characters or to
| relations between the symbols of them;  and such need not
| be separately considered.  There remain some relations
| between characters, especially between qualities, which
| do not seem to be derivative.  Such are the relations
| of "being more intense than", of "being disparate to"
| (or in applicability to subjects of the same category,
| as multitude and intensity are disparate).  But, so
| far as appears at present, no particular logical
| interest attaches to such relations, and they
| will here be passed by.
|
| Dyadic relations between symbols, or concepts, are matters of logic,
| so far as they are not derived from relations between the objects and
| the characters to which the symbols refer.  Noting that we are limiting
| ourselves to modal 'dyadic' relations, it may probably be said that those
| of them that are truly and fundamentally dyadic arise from corresponding
| relations between propositions.  To exemplify what is meant, the dyadic
| relations of logical 'breadth' and 'depth', often called denotation and
| connotation, have played a great part in logical discussions, but these
| take their origin in the triadic relation between a sign, its object,
| and its interpretant sign;  and furthermore, the distinction appears
| as a dichotomy owing to the limitation of the field of thought, which
| forgets that concepts grow, and that there is thus a third respect
| in which they may differ, depending on the state of knowledge, or
| amount of information.  To give a good and complete account of
| the dyadic relations of concepts would be impossible without
| taking into account the triadic relations which, for the
| most part, underlie them;  and indeed almost a complete
| treatise upon the first of the three divisions of logic
| would be required.*
|
|*
|[ The three divisions of logic are:
|  1.  Speculative Grammar  (= the theory of signs)
|  2.  Critical Logic       (= denotative semantics)
|  3.  Speculative Rhetoric (= methodology, methodeutic)]
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.606-608,
|'A Syllabus of Certain Topics of Logic', intended
| as a supplement to the "Lowell Lectures of 1903".

DIEP. Note 14

| Introduction to the Logic of Quantity
|
| The great importance of the idea of quantity in demonstrative reasoning
| seems to me not yet sufficiently explained.  It appears, however, to be
| connected with the circumstance that the relations of being greater
| than and of being at least as great as are transitive relations.
| Still, a satisfactory evolutionary logic of mathematics remains a
| desideratum.  I intend to take up that problem in a future paper
| ["The Simplest Mathematics", CP 4.227-323, 1902].  Meantime the
| development of projective geometry and of geometrical topics has
| shown that there are at least two large mathematical theories of
| continuity into which the idea of continuous 'quantity', in the
| usual sense of that word, does not enter at all.  For projective
| geometry Schubert has developed an algebraical calculus which has
| a most remarkable affinity to the Boolian algebra of logic.  It is,
| however, imperfect, in that it only gives imaginary points, rays, and
| planes, without deciding whether they are real or not.  This defect cannot
| be remedied until topology -- or, as I prefer to call it, mathematical topics --
| has been further developed and its logic accurately analysed.  To do this
| ought to be one of the first tasks of exact logicians.  But before that
| can be accomplished, a perfectly satisfactory logical account of the
| conception of continuity is required.  This involves the definition
| of a certain kind of infinity;  and in order to make that quite clear,
| it is requisite to begin by developing the logical doctrine of infinite
| multitude.  This doctrine still remains, after the works of Cantor, Dedekind,
| and others, in an inchoate condition.  For example, such a question remains
| unanswered as the following:  Is it, or is it not, logically possible for
| two collections to be so multitudinous that neither can be put into a
| one-to-one correspondence with a part or the whole of the other?
| To resolve this problem demands, not a mere 'application' of
| logic, but a further 'development' of the conception of
| logical possibility.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.526,
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| pp. 161-217, 1897.

DIEP. Note 15

| Introduction to the Logic of Quantity (cont.)
|
| I formerly defined the possible as that which in a given
| state of information (real or feigned) we do not know not
| to be true.  But this definition today seems to me only a
| twisted phrase which, by means of two negatives, conceals
| an anacoluthon.  We know in advance of experience that
| certain things are not true, because we see they are
| impossible.
|
| Thus, if a chemist tests the contents of a hundred bottles for fluorine,
| and finds it present in the majority, and if another chemist tests them
| for oxygen and finds it in the majority, and if each of them reports his
| results to me, it will be useless for them to come to me together and say
| that they know infallibly that fluorine and oxygen cannot be present in the
| same bottle;  for I see that such infallibility is 'impossible'.  I know it
| is not true, because I satisfy myself that there is no room for it even in
| that ideal world of which the real world is but a fragment.  I need no
| sensible experimentation, because ideal experimentation establishes
| a much broader answer to the question than sensible experimentation
| could give.
|
| It has come about through the agencies of development that man is
| endowed with intelligence of such a nature that he can by ideal
| experiments ascertain that in a certain universe of logical
| possibility certain combinations occur while others do not
| occur.  Of those which occur in the ideal world some do
| and some do not occur in the real world;  but all that
| occur in the real world occur also in the ideal world.
| For the real world is the world of sensible experience,
| and it is a part of the process of sensible experience
| to locate its facts in the world of ideas.  This is what
| I mean by saying that the sensible world is but a fragment
| of the ideal world.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| pp. 161-217, 1897.

DIEP. Note 16

| Introduction to the Logic of Quantity (cont.)
|
| In respect to the ideal world we are virtually omniscient;  that is
| to say, there is nothing but lack of time, of perseverance, and of
| activity of mind to prevent our making the requisite experiments
| to ascertain positively whether a given combination occurs or not.
| Thus, every proposition about the ideal world can be ascertained
| to be true or false.  A description of thing which occurs in that
| world is 'possible, in the substantive logical sense'.
|
| Very many writers assert that everything is logically possible which involves
| no contradiction.  Let us call that sort of logical possibility, 'essential',
| or 'formal', logical possibility.  It is not the only logical possibility;
| for in this sense, two propositions contradictory of one another may both
| be severally possible, although their combination is not possible.
|
| That is to say each is 'vaguely', not 'distinctly', possible.  [note, 1908].
|
| But in the 'substantive' sense, the contradictory of a possible proposition
| is impossible, because we are virtually omniscient in regard to the ideal
| world.  For example, there is no contradiction in supposing that only
| four, or any other number, of independent atoms exist.  But it is
| made clear to us by ideal experimentation, that five atoms are
| to be found in the ideal world.  Whether all five are to be
| found in the sensible world or not, to say there are only
| four in the ideal world is a proposition absolutely to be
| rejected, notwithstanding its involving no contradiction.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| pp. 161-217, 1897.

DIEP. Note 17

| A few of the most frequently recurring scholastic phrases follow.  ...
|
|'Essential Predication':  in which the predicate is wholly contained in the
| essence of the subject.  It is, therefore, in Kant's sense, an analytical
| judgment.  But neither Kant nor the scholastics provide for the fact that
| an indefinitely complicated proposition, very far from obvious, may often
| be deduced by mathematical reasoning, or necessary deduction, by the logic
| of relatives, from a definition of the utmost simplicity, without assuming
| any hypothesis whatever (indeed, such assumption could only render the
| proposition deduced simpler);  and this may contain many notions not
| explicit in the definition.
|
| This may be illustrated by the following:
|
| Man is a rational animal;  hence, whatever is not a man is either,
| on the one hand, not rational, while either at the same time being
| an animal or else benefiting nothing except such objects as love
| nothing but fairies, or, on the other hand, is not an animal,
| while either being rational or standing to whatever fairy may
| exist in the relation of benefiting something that loves it.
|
| Now, if it be said that that is an analytical judgment, or essential predication,
| neither the definition of the scholastics nor that of Kant is adequate.  But if it
| be said that it is not an essential predication, or analytical judgement, then the
| accidental predication and the synthetical judgment may be a necessary consequence,
| and a very recondite one, of a mere definition, quite contrary to what either Kant
| or the scholastics supposed and built upon.  Cf. Scotus ('In Univ. Porph.', 9.12),
| who makes essential predication the predication of genus, species, or difference.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.361, in dictionary entry for "Predication",
| J.M. Baldwin (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy & Psychology', vol. 2, pp. 326-329.

DIEP. Note 18

I need to go back and repair an omission.
It occurs at the point in CP 3.527 where
Peirce writes this:

| It has come about through the agencies of development that man is
| endowed with intelligence of such a nature that he can by ideal
| experiments ascertain that in a certain universe of logical
| possibility certain combinations occur while others do not
| occur.  Of those which occur in the ideal world some do
| and some do not occur in the real world;  but all that
| occur in the real world occur also in the ideal world.
| For the real world is the world of sensible experience,
| and it is a part of the process of sensible experience
| to locate its facts in the world of ideas.  This is what
| I mean by saying that the sensible world is but a fragment
| of the ideal world.

In a marginal note, dating from 1908, Peirce provides us with
an important statement about his take on the "end of inquiry":

| For the simple reason that the real world is a part of the ideal world,
| namely, that part which sufficient experience would tend ultimately (and
| therefore definitively), to compel Reason to acknowledge as having a being
| independent of what he may arbitrarily, or willfully, create.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| pp. 161-217, 1897.  Marginal note, 1908.

DIEP. Note 19

| The other divisions of terms, propositions, and arguments
| arise from the distinction of extension and comprehension.
| I propose to treat this subject in a subsequent paper.*
| But I will so far anticipate that as to say that there is,
| first, the direct reference of a symbol to its objects, or
| its denotation;  second, the reference of the symbol to its
| ground, through its object, that is, its reference to the
| common characters of its objects, or its connotation;  and
| third, its reference to its interpretants through its object,
| that is, its reference to all the synthetical propositions in
| which its objects in common are subject or predicate, and this
| I term the information it embodies.  And as every addition to
| what it denotes, or to what it connotes, is effected by means
| of a distinct proposition of this kind, it follows that the
| extension and comprehension of a term are in an inverse
| relation, as long as the information remains the same,
| and that every increase of information is accompanied
| by an increase of one or other of these two quantities.
| It may be observed that extension and comprehension
| are very often taken in other senses in which this
| last proposition is not true.
|
|* C.S. Peirce, "Upon Logical Comprehension and Extension",
| 'Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences',
|  vol. 7, pp. 416-432, 1867.  CP 2.391-430.  Online copy at:
|  http://www.iupui.edu/~peirce/web/writings/v2/w2/w2_06/v2_06.htm
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 1.559, "On a New List of Categories",
|'Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences',
| vol. 7, pp. 287-298, 1867.

DIEP. Note 20

  • CP 2.418

DIEP. De In Esse Predication • Discussion

DIEP. Discussion Note 1


Re: CP 3.441

GR: given that two paragraphs later, Peirce writes:

    | if the Devil were elected president of the United States, it would prove
    | highly conducive to the spiritual welfare of the people (because he will
    | not be elected), yet both Professor Schröder and I prefer to build the
    | algebra of relatives upon this conception of the conditional proposition.

GR: and given the bizarre situation that the devil HAS been
    elected President of the United States, what does this
    say about Peirce's or Schroder's logic, especially in
    its esthetical and ethical presuppositions?

JA: he means that if the name on the ballot were "The Devil",
    the people would not thus knowingly elect him.  of course,
    putting his real name on the ballot would be the last thing
    that the Devil would do.

JA: but hey, don't read ahead,
    it'll spoil the surprise.

GR: Most interesting interpretation.

GR: Yes, I certainly try not to "spoil the surprise".

JA: of course, none of this applies in california ...

JA: With that last bit (CP 3.442) on the "state of information" (SOI)
    in the mix, I guess that I can now follow-up without letting any
    more categories out of the bag -- there are only three after all --
    Peirce's simplex faith in the democratic process is conditioned,
    simplexly or otherwise, on the evidently inessential contingency
    of a "liberally informed electorate" (LIE).

DIEP. Discussion Note 2


CSP = C.S. Peirce
JA  = Jon Awbrey
BM  = Bernard Morand

CSP: | [A Boolian Algebra With One Constant] (cont.)
     |
     | To express the proposition:  "If S then P",
     | first write:
     |
     |    A
     |
     | for this proposition.  But the proposition
     | is that a certain conceivable state of things
     | is absent from the universe of possibility.
     | Hence instead of A we write:
     |
     |    B B

BM: All was going right till there for me.

CSP: | Then B expresses the possibility of S being true and P false.

BM: Now, I am stopped.  May be there is an intermediary
    implicit proposition that I am not seeing?  If yes
    which one?  This could be of interest to Gary too:
    I guess that for the whole passage the elements
    of the demonstration count more than the
    conclusion in itself.

CSP: | Since, therefore, SS denies S, it follows
     | that (SS, P) expresses B.  Hence we write:
     |
     |    SS, P;  SS, P.
     |
     | C.S. Peirce, CP 4.14, untitled paper circa 1880.

Peirce is working analytically here -- I mean that in the good sense of the word --
in the manner that Bentham calls "paraphrasis", Boole "development", or most math
folks "expansion", if I remember right.  But he already knows the answer he wants,
so the whole analysis will have that "pulling a rabbit out of the hat" quality of
such performances.

The basic operation is unmarked, or you could think of the blank space as a symbol
for the logical operation of "joint denial", that Peirce counted as one of the two
possible "amphecks" (cutting both ways), Sheffer called a "stroke", and comp sci
folk call NNOR (neither nor).  The punctuation marks are not really operators,
they just group terms, much like the "puncts" or "dots" of Peano that Russell
so butchered to the point of unintelligibility, like so much else.

In saying "S => P" one is saying "that a certain conceivable state of things
is absent from the universe of possibility" -- sounds awfully "intensional",
does it not? -- but anyway, the conceivable states of things that one is
excluding from the universe of possibility are any states of things that
would form a counterexample to "S => P", namely, those states of things
that are described by "S and not P".

That denial would take the form:

S and not P.  S and not P.

Let's call that the Lady Macbeth denial.

It remains to analyze the metalanguage phrase "S and not P"
using only "S", "P", and the tacit joint denial connective.

If I wrote "S P", this would be saying "not S and not P",
so all I need to do is change the sign on the S part of it,
which I can do by doubling the S.  As we have stipulated,
doubling is a way of putting things in doubt.  Therefore,
"SS, P" says "S and not P", which is the thing we want
to deny, and which final denial we can make by writing:

SS, P;  SS, P.

Voila!

DIEP. Discussion Note 3


JA = Jon Awbrey
TJ = Tom Johnson

Re: CP 4.517

This started out as an attempt to track down a 30 year old memory,
having to do with the phrase "predication (de?) inesse", which
I thought I saw first in Peirce, supposed that he got from
Leibniz (who I also read a lot of in those days), and had
a "clear and distinct" idea (the worst kind) that it was
an "intensional" account of predication.  I used to have
access to the microfilm manuscripts of Peirce's nachlass
at that time, and if it's there I probably won't get back
to it.  From what I have uncovered this time around, I seem
to be correct about the significance that Leibniz attached to
the phrase -- will have to check again -- but all I find so far
in the CP is 'conditio/consequentia simplex de inesse' that Peirce
says he got from Scotus and Petrus Hispanus.  I'll probably have to
go about the mindless data collection for a while longer before I try
to draw a conclusion, but in the meantime I have become more intrigued
with the connection to Peirce's theory of information as the third quid
between extension and intension, and relative to states of which the
entire spectrum of modalities is refracted before our minds' eyes.

TJ: Is Peirce saying here that [1] there is necessity de dicto, but not de re?
    Is he saying [2] that there are no Aristotelian essences?
    Is he [3] distinguishing various kinds of necessity?

My partially informed guesses:

1.  No
2.  No
3.  Yes

TJ: For example, one might argue that physical causality is necessity de re, and
    is not influenced by how much information we have about physical processes.

In the spirit of an even wilder guess, I think that he would say that there
is a difference between what we are destined to believe, for example, about
the objective referent, if any, of the phrase "physical causality" at the
"end of inquiry" (EOI) and what we are likely to believe in that respect
at the present time -- time being relative, too, of course -- and that
it may form a useful analytic ideal or a "hypostatic independentity",
to coin a phrase, to think of this "physical_causality_EOI" as being
there all along, or not being there all along, waiting for us to
discover the quantum of truth in the sign "physical causality".

DIEP. Discussion Note 4


JA = Jon Awbrey
TJ = Tom Johnston

Re: CP 4.517

JA, amending JA:

    I will probably have to go about the mindless data collection
    for a while longer before I try to draw a conclusion, but in
    the meantime I have become more intrigued with the connection
    to Peirce's theory of information as the third quid between
    extension and intension, and relative to the states of which
    information the entire spectrum of modalities is refracted
    before our minds' eyes.

TJ: I like that last sentence, and look
    forward to finding out what it means.

Egged on a bit by Gary and John, I am only just starting to return to
the question of modality, as that was never so compelling to me in math,
where one gets by with a "necessary" and a "sufficient" that seem to rank
inane dismissal quotes in other people's ears, and so mood was never before
so compelling to me as the cousin/cozen issues of intentionality, but here
are some links to Peirce's derivation of information from logical grounds,
Peirce's 1865-1866 Lectures at Harvard and the Lowell Institute, where he
introduces his newfangled notion of "information" and the theory thereof:

C.S. Peirce, Harvard Lectures (1865)

23.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000216.html -- CE 1, 272
24.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000217.html -- CE 1, 272-274
25.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000218.html -- CE 1, 274
26.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000219.html -- CE 1, 274-275
27.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000220.html -- CE 1, 275-276
28.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000221.html -- CE 1, 276
29.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000222.html -- CE 1, 276-277
30.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000223.html -- CE 1, 277
31.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000224.html -- CE 1, 278-279
32.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000225.html -- CE 1, 279-280
33.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000226.html -- CE 1, 280
34.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000227.html -- CE 1, 280-281
35.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000228.html -- CE 1, 281-282
36.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000229.html -- CE 1, 282-283
37.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000230.html -- CE 1, 283
38.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000356.html -- CE 1, 285
39.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000357.html -- CE 1, 285-286
40.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000358.html -- CE 1, 286-288
41.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000359.html -- CE 1, 288
42.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000361.html -- CE 1, 288-289
43.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000362.html -- CE 1, 289
44.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-April/000363.html -- CE 1, 289-290

C.S. Peirce, Lowell Lectures (1866)

11.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000204.html -- CE 1, 458-459
12.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000205.html -- CE 1, 459-460
13.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000206.html -- CE 1, 460
14.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000207.html -- CE 1, 461
15.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000208.html -- CE 1, 461
16.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000209.html -- CE 1, 462
17.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000210.html -- CE 1, 462
18.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000211.html -- CE 1, 462-463
19.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000212.html -- CE 1, 463-464
20.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000213.html -- CE 1, 464-465
21.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000214.html -- CE 1, 465
22.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000215.html -- CE 1, 466-467

02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000195.html -- CE 1, 467
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000196.html -- CE 1, 467-468
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000197.html -- CE 1, 468-469
05.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000198.html -- CE 1, 469
06.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000199.html -- CE 1, 470
07.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000200.html -- CE 1, 470-471

JA: In the spirit of an even wilder guess, I think that he would say that there
    is a difference between what we are destined to believe about, for example,
    the objective referent, if any, of the phrase "physical causality" at the
    "end of inquiry" (EOI) and what we are likely to believe in that respect
    at the present time -- time being relative, too, off course -- and that
    it may form a useful analytic ideal or a "hypostatic independentity",
    to coin a phrase, to think of this "physical_causality_EOI" as being
    there all along, or not being there all along, waiting for us to
    discover the quantum of truth in the sign "physical causality".

TJ: Perhaps I should know better than to ask this, but what the heck:
    (a) What marks the EOI?  No more disagreements among members of
    the relevant community of inquiry (physicists, biologists, etc)?
    (b) Assuming we do reach an EOI in some subject area, what accounts
    for it?  Why have we stopped disagreeing?  Is it that, guided by the
    pragmatic principle, we have finally arrived at a set of statements
    that accurately represent/describe things as they really are?

These are good questions, part of what I tried
to address in my dissertation ever in progress:

http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/awbrey/inquiry.htm

Whatever EOI be in the end, how it functions in the
meantime is as a normative ideal.  I will round up
the usual Chapter & Peirce, but in the meanwhile
here is a 3-logy of good books on the subject:

Peter Skagestad, 'The Road of Inquiry:  [CSP]'s Pragmatic Realism'.
Cheryl Misak, 'Truth and the End of Inquiry:  A Peircean Account of Truth'.
C.F. Delaney, 'Science, Knowledge, and Mind:  A Study in the Philosophy of [CSP]'.

The Big EOI can be understood on analogy with the
little EOI's that make up the "fixions of belief"
that we reach every day in our everyday inquiries.
The primer canon shot on that score is found here:

http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/fixation/fx-frame.htm

DIEP. Discussion Note 5


GR = Gary Richmond
JA = Jon Awbrey

JA: Egged on a bit by Gary and John, I am only just starting to return to
    the question of modality, as that was never so compelling to me in math,
    where one gets by with a "necessary" and a "sufficient" that seem to rank
    inane dismissal quotes in other people's ears, and so mood was never before
    so compelling to me as the cousin/cozen issues of intentionality, but here
    are some links to Peirce's derivation of information from logical grounds,
    Peirce's 1865-1866 Lectures at Harvard and the Lowell Institute, where he
    introduces his newfangled notion of "information" and the theory thereof:

GR: This is very good news indeed, jon.

GR: Of course, you've already expressed that third term
    (beyond "necessary" and "sufficient").  And truly,
    logical breadth x logical depth = information.

GR: But that's not the whole picture by half, right?
    Therefore, modality has finally to be taken up
    with all that trichotomic semiosis ought imply.

GR: Personally, I'm glad that John and I have been "nudges" here.

GR: I can hardly wait ...

Be careful what you wait for ...

I had been putting off the gamma graphs until I was older.
I am older now.  But I don't know if I am old enough yet.
Maybe when I'm aleph plus one ...

I hadn't really been thinking about this much as I gathered the data.
For my part, and I think for Peirce most of the time, 2-valued logic
of the good old-fashioned classical variety is good enough -- in the
beginning, and in the end, there are just two values of significance,
one begins with a distinction, one ends with a decision, and what it
means is that the question of uncertainty is always a meantime thing.

This is what I concluded long ago from my study of Peirce's essays
in 3-valued logics.  The possibility of it all occurred to me when
I was first learning topology, and there you have a 3-valued logic
of {interior, boundary, exterior} rather than classing every point
as {in, out}, 2-tomously in relation to a set, no ifs ands or buts.

There was, and probably still is, a whole literature on "topo-logic",
just my pet name for it, that proceeds from basically this very same
intuition.  The issue did not force itself on my attention again, so
far as I can recall at the moment, in this mood, until I was writing
my Theme One program, or one of its early precursors.  There, in the
middle of a breadth-&-depth search function -- funny how those words
come up again -- what is frequently called a "beam search" algorithm,
I was led, wil-me, nil-me, to interject a "modal variable" of a type:
mode = (null, moot, firm).  See here:

http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-March/000115.html

The use of the mode value dubbed "moot" is in the middle of a search,
to register the fact that the absence or presence of the thing being
sought is not yet decided, though in the end you know that it has to
fall out one way or the other, by the very definition of the case.

That's all I can remember at the moment ...

DIEP. Discussion Note 6


JA = Jon Awbrey
TJ = Tom Johnston

I will go back to your earlier questions and
try to work out my own way of answering them.
There are readers of Peirce I know who would
probably give you a significantly different
collection of answers and interpretations,
so this can only be my own sense of it.

Review.

Quiz 1.

CSP: | It must be remembered that
     | possibility and necessity
     | are relative to the state
     | of information.
     |
     | C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 4.517,
     |"The Gamma Part of Existential Graphs",
     |"Lowell Lectures of 1903", Lecture 4.

TJ: 1.1.  Is Peirce saying here that there is necessity de dicto, but not de re?
    1.2.  Is he saying that there are no Aristotelian essences?
    1.3.  Is he distinguishing various kinds of necessity?

JA: My partially informed guesses:

    1.1.  No
    1.2.  No
    1.3.  Yes

It's not Molly Bloom, but 1 out of 3 ain't bad to my way of counting.

TJ: For example, one might argue that physical causality is necessity de re, and
    is not influenced by how much information we have about physical processes.

JA: In the spirit of an even wilder guess, I think that he would say that there
    is a difference between what we are destined to believe, for example, about
    the objective referent, if any, of the phrase "physical causality" at the
    "end of inquiry" (EOI) and what we are likely to believe in that respect
    at the present time -- time being relative, too, of course -- and that
    it may form a useful analytic ideal or a "hypostatic independentity",
    to coin a phrase, to think of this "physical_causality_EOI" as being
    there all along, or not being there all along, waiting for us to
    discover the quantum of truth in the sign "physical causality".

Quiz 2.

TJ: Perhaps I should know better than to ask this, but what the heck:

    2.1.  What marks the EOI?  No more disagreements among members of
          the relevant community of inquiry (physicists, biologists, etc)?

    2.2.1.  Assuming we do reach an EOI in some
            subject area, what accounts for it?

    2.2.2.  Why have we stopped disagreeing?

    2.2.3.  Is it that, guided by the pragmatic principle,
            we have finally arrived at a set of statements
            that accurately represent/describe things as
            they really are?

JA: These are good questions, part of what I tried
    to address in my dissertation ever in progress:

JA: http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/aboutcsp/awbrey/inquiry.htm

JA: Whatever the EOI might be in the end,
    how it functions in the meantime is
    effectively as a normative ideal.

JA: The Big EOI can be understood on analogy with the
    little EOI's that make up the "fixions of belief"
    that we reach every day in our everyday inquiries.
    The primer canon shot on that score is found here:

JA: http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/fixation/fx-frame.htm

I get a handle on this subject with the following two hands:

On the 1st hand, Peirce's Theory Of Signs (PTOS).
On the 2nd hand, Peirce's Theory Of Inquiry (PTOI).

PTOS.

The following is what I personally consider
to be the clearest and the most complete of
all the definitions of a sign relation that
I've been able to find in Peirce's writings:

| A sign is something, 'A',
| which brings something, 'B',
| its 'interpretant' sign
| determined or created by it,
| into the same sort of correspondence
| with something, 'C', its 'object',
| as that in which itself stands to 'C'.
|
| C.S. Peirce, NEM 4, pp. 20-21, cf. p. 54, also available here:
| http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/L75/L75.htm

It is one of the few where Peirce is intrepid enough
to go boldly forward without any sop to psychologism.

More detail here:

| On the Definition of Logic [Version 1]
|
| Logic will here be defined as 'formal semiotic'.
| A definition of a sign will be given which no more
| refers to human thought than does the definition
| of a line as the place which a particle occupies,
| part by part, during a lapse of time.  Namely,
| a sign is something, 'A', which brings something,
| 'B', its 'interpretant' sign determined or created
| by it, into the same sort of correspondence with
| something, 'C', its 'object', as that in which it
| itself stands to 'C'.  It is from this definition,
| together with a definition of "formal", that I
| deduce mathematically the principles of logic.
| I also make a historical review of all the
| definitions and conceptions of logic, and show,
| not merely that my definition is no novelty, but
| that my non-psychological conception of logic has
| 'virtually' been quite generally held, though not
| generally recognized.  (CSP, NEM 4, 20-21).
|
| On the Definition of Logic [Version 2]
|
| Logic is 'formal semiotic'.  A sign is something,
| 'A', which brings something, 'B', its 'interpretant'
| sign, determined or created by it, into the same
| sort of correspondence (or a lower implied sort)
| with something, 'C', its 'object', as that in
| which itself stands to 'C'.  This definition no
| more involves any reference to human thought than
| does the definition of a line as the place within
| which a particle lies during a lapse of time.
| It is from this definition that I deduce the
| principles of logic by mathematical reasoning,
| and by mathematical reasoning that, I aver, will
| support criticism of Weierstrassian severity, and
| that is perfectly evident.  The word "formal" in
| the definition is also defined.  (CSP, NEM 4, 54).
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce,
|'The New Elements of Mathematics', Volume 4,
| Edited by Carolyn Eisele, Mouton, The Hague, 1976.

I will pick up from there next time.

DIEP. Discussion Note 7


BM = Bernard Morand
JA = Jon Awbrey

CSP: | It has come about through the agencies of development that man is
     | endowed with intelligence of such a nature that he can by ideal
     | experiments ascertain that in a certain universe of logical
     | possibility certain combinations occur while others do not
     | occur.  Of those which occur in the ideal world some do
     | and some do not occur in the real world;  but all that
     | occur in the real world occur also in the ideal world.
     | For the real world is the world of sensible experience,
     | and it is a part of the process of sensible experience
     | to locate its facts in the world of ideas.  This is what
     | I mean by saying that the sensible world is but a fragment
     | of the ideal world.*

CSP: * For the simple reason that the real world is a part of the ideal world,
     | namely, that part which sufficient experience would tend ultimately (and
     | therefore definitively), to compel Reason to acknowledge as having a being
     | independent of what he may arbitrarily, or willfully, create.
     |
     | C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.527,
     |"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
     | pp. 161-217, 1897.  * Marginal note, 1908.

BM: Thanks Jon.  This marginal note is a very
    important one and it deserves slow reflection.

BM: On one side, I was lead start from the beginning of my peircean studies
    to think that such point could be a reason for me to differ radically
    from Peirce.  I thought that such statements were reflecting two bias:

BM: 1.  they could support the critic that Peirce was some kind of
        "intellectualist" who was ignorant of how things go in the
        actual world:  there would be an ideal world the knowledge
        of which could be attained in the long run by wise people.

    2.  they were optimistic about the possibility of such
        a happy end.  I was wondering too if Peirce's thought
        was not really representative of the major trends of
        XIXth century that believed in an endless progress
        of science, economics, welfare and so on.  A kind
        of belief in some "age d'or" to become.

BM: It is worth noticing that my background has been fed with marxism
    for a long time and that I have no reason to think the contrary
    today, particularly from the economical standpoint as it was
    developped in 'The Capital'.  In marxism too there is the
    idea of communism as an ultimate stage of evolution where
    all would be going fine.

BM: But undoubtly, there are major differences between both,
    namely according to the ways as the happy end could take
    place (materialism vs pragmatism).  So I put the question
    in some kind of provocative manner here:

BM: http://www.iutc3.unicaen.fr/~moranb/accueilperso51.htm

BM: But, on the other hand, I am now less sure about all that.
    From the Capital itself, there is nothing that states the
    necessity of the happy end.  We have just two concluding
    statements, first the necessity of the capitalism crisis
    as a tendency and second, the statement that there are
    "causes which go against this law" (Evidently, in his
    political and social works, Marx is much less cautious).

BM: If we turn now to Peirce, the marginal note (written in 1908,
    so it is not refering to some "young" Peirce) we get the idea
    of tendency too.  But we get also the idea that it is the growth
    of EXPERIENCE in the real world which will lead Reason to overcome.

BM: So, returning to my starting point, may be they were not so far one
    of each other, but not for the reasons I had thought.  It seems that
    they had in common an interest on the problematic of evolution, which
    is after all a leading idea of the XIXth century too.  The fact that
    one of them was revolutionary and the other a strong conservative is
    not without interest here.

When Peirce talks this way about the EOI, some people that I know
will reflexively (not too reflectively) label him as an "idealist",
and I take it that they mean this in a dismissive sense of the word.

I have always taken the concept of the EOI to be a "normative idealization",
or a "regulative principle" in Kant's sense, which I imagine that someone so
steeped in Kant as was Peirce must also have had in mind.  In this connection
normative idealizations are bound up with the principle of hope, which also
corresponds to abductive reasoning in Peirce's categories.  You will be
thinking of the story of a soldier.

Now the normative ideal or regulative principle of the EOI
refers to an intentional objective in the far remote future,
about the actualization of which we can of course know naught,
but the ideal is embodied in those who maintain it and thus it
has a very real action in the present, the "functional meaning"
of the EOI, in the sociological sense of the word "functional".

I think of Peirce's marginal note as the "Venus de Milo" theory of the
relations among the ideal world, the real world, and the sensible world.

The ideal world is the unhewn block of Parian marble, from which
substrate the brute encounter of recalcitrant experience chips away
everything that "does not look like Aphrodite", or some say Amphitrite,
and this is the real that eternally endures, whatever vicissitudes happen
to befall its concrete images, and yet we possess but a fragment of that in
our sensible world, just barely enough to intimate the nature of that reality.

Time to Muse the Facet:

http://www.louvre.fr/img/photos/collec/ager/grande/ma0399.jpg

DIEP. De In Esse Predication • Work Area


01.  1880, CP 4.12
02.  1880, CP 4.13
03.  1880, CP 4.14

04.  1896, CP 3.440
05.  1896, CP 3.441
06.  1896, CP 3.442
07.  1896, CP 3.443
08.  1896, CP 3.444-445
09.  1885, CP 3.374

10.  1902, CP 2.323
11.  1895, CP 2.356

12.  1903, CP 4.517

13.  1903, CP 3.606-608
14.  1897, CP 3.526
15.  1897, CP 3.527
16.  1897, CP 3.527
17.  ????, CP 2.361
18.  1908, CP 3.527 note
19.  1867, 1.559
20.

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

1.559      x

2.323      x
2.347-349
2.356      x
2.361      x
2.382
2.394
2.407-409
2.418
2.546

2.
323
348
349
546

2.
231
250
260
293
364
409
416
418
418n

3.374      x
3.375
3.382
3.384      Peirce's Law
3.440-445  x
3.446-448
3.526-527  x
3.606-608  x

4.12-14    x
4.21
4.49
4.372-376
4.401
4.454
4.514-523
4.517      x
4.520
4.564

6.450

HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction

HAPA. Note 1

| When we have analyzed a proposition so as to throw into the subject everything
| that can be removed from the predicate, all that it remains for the predicate to
| represent is the form of connection between the different subjects as expressed in
| the propositional 'form'.  What I mean by "everything that can be removed from the
| predicate" is best explained by giving an example of something not so removable.
| But first take something removable.  "Cain kills Abel."  Here the predicate
| appears as "--- kills ---."  But we can remove killing from the predicate
| and make the latter "--- stands in the relation --- to ---."  Suppose we
| attempt to remove more from the predicate and put the last into the form
| "--- exercises the function of relate of the relation --- to ---" and then
| putting "the function of relate to the relation" into a another subject leave
| as predicate "--- exercises --- in respect to --- to ---."  But this "exercises"
| expresses "exercises the function".  Nay more, it expresses "exercises the function
| of relate", so that we find that though we may put this into a separate subject, it
| continues in the predicate just the same.  Stating this in another form, to say that
| "A is in the relation R to B" is to say that A is in a certain relation to R.  Let
| us separate this out thus:  "A is in the relation R^1 (where R^1 is the relation
| of a relate to the relation of which it is the relate) to R to B".  But A is
| here said to be in a certain relation to the relation R^1.  So that we can
| expresss the same fact by saying, "A is in the relation R^1 to the relation
| R^1 to the relation R to B", and so on 'ad infinitum'.  A predicate which
| can thus be analyzed into parts all homogeneous with the whole I call
| a 'continuous predicate'.  It is very important in logical analysis,
| because a continuous predicate obviously cannot be a 'compound'
| except of continuous predicates, and thus when we have carried
| analysis so far as to leave only a continuous predicate, we
| have carried it to its ultimate elements.
|
| Peirce, "Letters to Lady Welby", 14 Dec 1908, 'Selected Writings', pp. 396-397.
|
| Charles S. Peirce, "Letters to Lady Welby", pp. 380-432 in:
|'Charles S. Peirce:  Selected Writings (Values in a Universe
| of Chance)', Edited with an Introduction and Notes by
| Philip P. Wiener, Dover, New York, NY, 1966.

HAPA. Note 2

| Another characteristic of mathematical thought is the extraordinary
| use it makes of abstractions.  Abstractions have been a favorite
| butt of ridicule in modern times.  Now it is very easy to laugh
| at the old physician who is represented as answering the question,
| why opium puts people to sleep, by saying that it is because it
| has a dormative virtue.  It is an answer that no doubt carries
| vagueness to its last extreme.  Yet, invented as the story was
| to show how little meaning there might be in an abstraction,
| nevertheless the physician's answer does contain a truth
| that modern philosophy has generally denied:  it does
| assert that there really is in opium 'something' which
| explains its always putting people to sleep.  This has,
| I say, been denied by modern philosophers generally.
| Not, of course, explicitly;  but when they say that
| the different events of people going to sleep after
| taking opium have really nothing in common, but
| only that the mind classes them together -- and
| this is what they virtually do say in denying
| the reality of generals -- they do implicitly
| deny that there is any true explanation of
| opium's generally putting people to sleep.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.234, "The Simplest Mathematics",
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.

HAPA. Note 3

| Look through the modern logical treatises, and you will find that they
| almost all fall into one or other of two errors, as I hold them to be;
| that of setting aside the doctrine of abstraction (in the sense in
| which an abstract noun marks an abstraction) as a grammatical topic
| with which the logician need not particularly concern himself;  and
| that of confounding abstraction, in this sense, with that operation
| of the mind by which we pay attention to one feature of a percept to
| the disregard of others.  The two things are entirely disconnected.
|
| The most ordinary fact of perception, such as "it is light", involves
| 'precisive' abstraction, or 'prescission'.  But 'hypostatic' abstraction,
| the abstraction which transforms "it is light" into "there is light here",
| which is the sense which I shall commonly attach to the word abstraction
| (since 'prescission' will do for precisive abstraction) is a very special
| mode of thought.  It consists in taking a feature of a percept or percepts
| (after it has already been prescinded from the other elements of the percept),
| so as to take propositional form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon
| any judgment whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another subject, which
| has a mode of being that merely consists in the truth of propositions of
| which the corresponding concrete term is the predicate.
|
| Thus, we transform the proposition, "honey is sweet",
| into "honey possesses sweetness".  "Sweetness" might be
| called a fictitious thing, in one sense.  But since the
| mode of being attributed to it 'consists' in no more than
| the fact that some things are sweet, and it is not pretended,
| or imagined, that it has any other mode of being, there is,
| after all, no fiction.  The only profession made is that we
| consider the fact of honey being sweet under the form of a
| relation;  and so we really can.  I have selected sweetness
| as an instance of one of the least useful of abstractions.
| Yet even this is convenient.  It facilitates such thoughts
| as that the sweetness of honey is particularly cloying;
| that the sweetness of honey is something like the
| sweetness of a honeymoon;  etc.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.

HAPA. Note 4

| Abstractions are particularly congenial to mathematics.  Everyday life
| first, for example, found the need of that class of abstractions which
| we call 'collections'.  Instead of saying that some human beings are
| males and all the rest females, it was found convenient to say that
| 'mankind' consists of the male 'part' and the female 'part'.  The
| same thought makes classes of collections, such as pairs, leashes,
| quatrains, hands, weeks, dozens, baker's dozens, sonnets, scores,
| quires, hundreds, long hundreds, gross, reams, thousands, myriads,
| lacs, millions, milliards, milliasses, etc.  These have suggested
| a great branch of mathematics.*
|
| Again, a point moves:  it is by abstraction that the geometer says that
| it "describes a line".  This line, though an abstraction, itself moves;
| and this is regarded as generating a surface;  and so on.
|
| So likewise, when the analyst treats operations as themselves subjects of
| operations, a method whose utility will not be denied, this is another
| instance of abstraction.  Maxwell's notion of a tension exercised upon
| lines of electrical force, transverse to them, is somewhat similar.
|
| These examples exhibit the great rolling billows of abstraction in the ocean
| of mathematical thought;  but when we come to a minute examination of it,
| we shall find, in every department, incessant ripples of the same form
| of thought, of which the examples I have mentioned give no hint.
|
|* Of course, the moment a collection is recognized as an abstraction we have
|  to admit that even a percept is an abstraction or represents an abstraction,
|  if matter has parts.  It therefore becomes difficult to maintain that all
|  abstractions are fictions.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.

HAPA. Note 5

| Hypostasis.  Literally the Greek word signifies that which stands under
| and serves as a support.  In philosophy it means a singular substance,
| also called a supposite, 'suppositum', by the Scholastics, especially
| if the substance is a completely subsisting one, whether non-living
| or living, irrational or rational.  However, a rational hypostasis
| has the same meaning as the term, 'person'.
|
| J.J.R. [= J.J. Rolbiecki] in:
|
| Dagobert D. Runes (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy',
| Littlefield, Adams, & Company, Totowa, NJ, 1972.

HAPA. Note 6

| But the highest kind of synthesis is what the mind is compelled to make neither
| by the inward attractions of the feelings or representations themselves, nor by
| a transcendental force of necessity, but in the interest of intelligibility,
| that is, in the interest of the synthesizing "I think" itself;  and this
| it does by introducing an idea not contained in the data, which gives
| connections which they would not otherwise have had.  This kind of
| synthesis has not been sufficiently studied, and especially the
| intimate relationship of its different varieties has not been
| duly considered.  The work of the poet or novelist is not so
| utterly different from that of the scientific man.  The artist
| introduces a fiction;  but it is not an arbitrary one;  it exhibits
| affinities to which the mind accords a certain approval in pronouncing
| them beautiful, which if it is not exactly the same as saying that the
| synthesis is true, is something of the same general kind.  The geometer
| draws a diagram, which if not exactly a fiction, is at least a creation,
| and by means of observation of that diagram he is able to synthesize and
| show relations between elements which before seemed to have no necessary
| connection.  The realities compel us to put some things into very close
| relation and others less so, in a highly complicated, and in the [true?]
| sense itself unintelligible manner;  but it is the genius of the mind,
| that takes up all these hints of sense, adds immensely to them, makes
| them precise, and shows them in intelligible form in the intuitions
| of space and time.  Intuition is the regarding of the abstract in
| a concrete form, by the realistic hypostatization of relations;
| that is the one sole method of valuable thought.  Very shallow
| is the prevalent notion that this is something to be avoided.
| You might as well say at once that reasoning is to be avoided
| because it has led to so much error;  quite in the same philistine
| line of thought would that be;  and so well in accord with the spirit
| of nominalism that I wonder some one does not put it forward.  The true
| precept is not to abstain from hypostatization, but to do it intelligently ...
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 1.383, "A Guess at the Riddle",
| circa 1890, 'Collected Papers', CP 1.354-416.

HAPA. Note 7

| Exceedingly important are the relatives signifying "-- is a quality of --"
| and "-- is a relation of -- to --".  It may be said that mathematical
| reasoning (which is the only deductive reasoning, if not absolutely,
| at least eminently) almost entirely turns on the consideration of
| abstractions as if they were objects.  The protest of nominalism
| against such hypostatisation, although, if it knew how to formulate
| itself, it would be justified as against much of the empty disputation
| of the medieval Dunces, yet, as it was and is formulated, is simply a
| protest against the only kind of thinking that has ever advanced human
| culture.  Nobody will work long with the logic of relatives -- unless
| he restricts the problems of his studies very much -- without seeing
| that this is true.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 3.509, "The Logic of Relatives",
|'The Monist', vol. 7, pp. 161-217, 1897.
|'Collected Papers', CP 3.456-552.

HAPA. Note 8

| The logical term 'subjectal abstraction' here requires a
| word of explanation;  for there are few treatises on logic
| which notice subjectal abstraction under any name, except so
| far as to confuse it with precisive abstraction which is an
| entirely different logical function.  When we say that the
| Columbia library building is 'large', this remark is a result
| of precisive abstraction by which the man who makes the remark
| leaves out of account all the other features of his image of
| the building, and takes the word "large" which is entirely
| unlike that image -- and when I say the word is unlike the
| image, I mean that the general signification of the word is
| utterly disparate from the image, which involves no predicates
| at all.  Such is 'precisive abstraction'.  But now if this man
| goes on to remark that the largeness of the building is very
| impressive, he converts the applicability of that predicate
| from being a way of thinking about the building to being
| itself a subject of thought, and that operation is
| 'subjectal abstraction'.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.332, "Ordinals", circa 1905.

HAPA. Note 9

| Predicate.
|
| The view which pragmatic logic takes of the predicate, in consequence of
| its assuming that the entire purpose of deductive logic is to ascertain
| the necessary conditions of the truth of signs, without any regard to
| the accidents of Indo-European grammar, will be here briefly stated.
| Cf. Negation [CP 2.378-380].
|
| In any proposition, i.e., any statement which must be true or false,
| let some parts be struck out so that the remnant is not a proposition,
| but is such that it becomes a proposition when each blank is filled by
| a proper name.  The erasures are not to be made in a mechanical way, but
| with such modifications as may be necessary to preserve the partial sense
| of the fragment.  Such a residue is a 'predicate'.  The same proposition
| may be mutilated in various ways so that different fragments will appear
| as predicates.  Thus, take the proposition "Every man reveres some woman."
| This contains the following predicates, among others:
|
|    ". . . reveres some woman."
|
|    ". . . is either not a man or reveres some woman."
|
|    "Any previously selected man reveres . . ."
|
|    "Any previously selected man is . . ."
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.358, in dictionary entry for "Predicate",
| J.M. Baldwin (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy & Psychology', vol. 2, pp. 325-326.

HAPA. Note 10

| Relatives Of Second Intention
|
| The general method of graphical representation of propositions has now
| been given in all its essential elements, except, of course, that we
| have not, as yet, studied any truths concerning special relatives;
| for to do so would seem, at first, to be "extralogical".  Logic in
| this stage of its development may be called 'paradisaical logic',
| because it represents the state of Man's cognition before the
| Fall.  For although, with this apparatus, it easy to write
| propositions necessarily true, it is absolutely impossible
| to write any which is necessarily false, or, in any way
| which that stage of logic affords, to find out that
| anything is false.  The mind has not as yet eaten
| of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Truth
| and Falsity.
|
| Probably it will not be doubted that every child in
| its mental development necessarily passes through
| a stage in which he has some ideas, but yet has
| never recognised that an idea may be erroneous;
| and a stage that every child necessarily passes
| through must have been formerly passed through
| by the race in its adult development.  It may
| be doubted whether many of the lower animals
| have any clear and steady conception of
| falsehood;  for their instincts work
| so unerringly that there is little
| to force it upon their attention.
| Yet plainly without a knowledge
| of falsehood no development
| of discursive reason can
| take place.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.488,
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'Monist', vol. 7,
| pp. 161-217, 1897.

HAPA. Note 11

| Relatives Of Second Intention (cont.)
|
| This paradisaical logic appears in the study of non-relative formal logic.
| But 'there' no possible avenue appears by which the knowledge of falsehood
| could be brought into this Garden of Eden except by the arbitrary and
| inexplicable introduction of the Serpent in the guise of a proposition
| necessarily false.  The logic of relatives affords such an avenue,
| and 'that', the very avenue by which in actual development,
| this stage of logic supervenes.  It is the avenue of
| experience and logical reflexion.
|
| By 'logical' reflexion, I mean the observation of thoughts
| in their expressions.  Aquinas remarked that this sort of
| reflexion is requisite to furnish us with those ideas
| which, from lack of contrast, ordinary external
| experience fails to bring into prominence.
| He called such ideas 'second intentions'.
|
| It is by means of 'relatives of second intention'
| that the general method of logical representation
| is to find completion.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.489-490,
|"The Logic of Relatives", 'The Monist', vol. 7,
| pp. 161-217, 1897.

HAPA. Note 12

| One branch of deductive logic, of which from the nature of
| things ordinary logic could give no satisfactory account,
| relates to the vitally important matter of abstraction.
|
| Indeed, the student of ordinary logic naturally regards abstraction,
| or the passage from "the rose smells sweet" to "the rose has perfume",
| to be a quasi-grammatical matter, calling for little or no notice from
| the logician.  The fact is, however, that almost every great step in
| mathematical reasoning derives its importance from the fact that it
| involves an abstraction.
|
| For by means of abstraction, the transitory elements of thought,
| the 'epea pteroenta' [winged words], are made substantive elements,
| as James terms them, 'epea apteroenta' [plucked words].*  It thus
| becomes possible to study their relations and to apply to these
| relations discoveries already made respecting analogous relations.
| In this way, for example, operations become themselves the subjects
| of operations.
|
|* William James, 'Principles of Psychology', vol. 1, p. 243.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.642, in dictionary entry for "Relatives",
| J.M. Baldwin (ed.), 'Dictionary of Philosophy & Psychology', vol. 2, pp. 447-450.

Incidental Musement:

http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Hom.+Il.+1.172

HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction • Discussion

HAPA. Discussion Note 1

Referring to a few of Peirce's standard discussions
of "hypostatic abstraction" (HA), the main thing
about HA is that it turns an adjective or some
part of a predicate into an extra subject,
upping the arity of the main predicate
in the process.

For example, a typical case of HA occurs in the transformation
from "honey is sweet" to "honey possesses sweetness", which we
could choose to represent in several different ways as follows:

Sweet(honey) ~~~> Possesses(honey, sweetness)

S(h) ~~~> P(h, s)

 S          P
 o          o
 |   ~~~>   |
 o          o
 h        <h,s>

            ^
[S]  ~~~>  /P\
 |        o->-o
 |        |   |   
 o        o   o
 h        h   s

The chief thing about this form of grammatical transformation is that we
abstract the adjective "sweet" from the main predicate, thus arriving at
a new, increased-arity predicate "possesses", and as a by-product of the
reaction, as it were, precipitating out the substantive "sweetness" as a
new subject of the new predicate.

HAPA. Discussion Note 2

Abstractions And Their Deciduation Problems

I have studied mathematics one way or another most of my life,
and mathematics is nothing if not the study of abstract objects,
yet I do not believe that I am ready to venture my own definition
of "abstract object", not just yet, and I honestly do not know if
I ever will be, but what I have been attempting intermittently to
do all this while is to transmit the sort of information that the
typical backwoodsman in the wild wold of logic and mathematics
might regard as being analogous to a botanical key, useful in
recognizing various species of abstract objects, with which
I can genuinely say that I have some acquaintance, although
I would prefer to defer, in my reference, in my reverence,
to ones who I know know vastly more.  So forgive a quote:

| To most otherwise "forest-minded" folk, the approach of autumn
| with its showers of many-colored leaves, spells the end of the
| season's activities in the indentification [sic] of deciduous
| trees and shrubs.  Without leaves, the members of the forest
| community, unless they be relatively large, seem to lose
| much of their summer's identity and may even descend to
| the level of "brush".  This is in reality not the case,
| as may be easily discovered by examining any leafless
| twig with a 10-x pocket lens, or even with the naked
| eye.  A casual glance at Plate 1 will also serve to
| show that woody plants in winter are anything but
| featureless.
|
| Harlow, William M.,
|"Twig Key to the Deciduous Woody Plants of Eastern North America",
| 4th ed., reprinted in 'Fruit Key and Twig Key to Trees and Shrubs',
| Dover, New York, NY, 1959.  Originally published by the author 1954.

HAPA. Discussion Note 3

I think that it would be useful at this time to run back through
one of Peirce's best descriptions of the two kinds of abstraction,
and try to tackle it line by line.

The first and simpler type of abstraction is "prescisive abstraction" --
where here I have taken something like the running average of several
different spellings of the term -- that merely extracts or selectively
attends to a feature or a property of a more concrete object.  In this
case one passes from an object to one of its properties, very analogous
to the sort of mathematical operation that is usually called "projection".
Here, one speaks of "prescinding" the property in question from the object,
whereby prescisive abstraction acquires the equivalent name of "prescission".

The second, more substantial type of abstraction is "hypostatic abstraction".
This is the operation that we regard as bringing the abstract object proper
into being, or into the sphere of human thought, or at least into the frame
of a particular discussion.  In this case one passes from a concrete object
or situation, via a selection of properties, to end with an abstract object.

| Look through the modern logical treatises, and you will find that they
| almost all fall into one or other of two errors, as I hold them to be;
| that of setting aside the doctrine of abstraction (in the sense in
| which an abstract noun marks an abstraction) as a grammatical topic
| with which the logician need not particularly concern himself;  and
| that of confounding abstraction, in this sense, with that operation
| of the mind by which we pay attention to one feature of a percept to
| the disregard of others.  The two things are entirely disconnected.

Here Peirce gives a first description of the two types of abstraction
and emphasizes the importance of distinguishing them one from another.

| The most ordinary fact of perception, such as "it is light",
| involves 'precisive' abstraction, or 'prescission'.

In other words, all attention is selective to some degree,
so any perception, such as that which we typically express
by means of the sentence "It is light" involves prescission,
a trimming of the whole experience to crop an observed fact.

| But 'hypostatic' abstraction, the abstraction which transforms
| "it is light" into "there is light here", which is the sense
| which I shall commonly attach to the word abstraction (since
| 'prescission' will do for precisive abstraction) is a very
| special mode of thought.

In the transformation from "It is light" to "There is light here",
the spelling "light" is transformed from an adjective into a noun.
This is the typical grammatical clue that an underlying operation
of "hypostatic" or "subjectal" abstraction has been accomplished.

| It consists in taking a feature of a percept or percepts (after it has
| already been prescinded from the other elements of the percept), so as
| to take propositional form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon
| any judgment whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another subject, which
| has a mode of being that merely consists in the truth of propositions of
| which the corresponding concrete term is the predicate.

This is very significant.  It marks not just a grammatical
transformation that happens to be taking place in a given
example of hypostatic abstraction, but describes the very
form of a certain transformation that took place all along
the frontiers of thought in the formal sciences beginning
toward the middle of the Nineteenth Century, a development
in which C.S. Peirce was a major force and prime expositor.

But I'll need to save the rest of that story for tomorrow.

Reference:

| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
|
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html

HAPA. Discussion Note 4

By way of starting to compile a "key to abstractions and relatives"
in the spirit of an old-fashioned field study key, I have gone back
through our neck of the woulds and gathered these initial specimens:

1.  HIROTUFIA.  Handy Indexical Rules Of Thumb Used For Identifying Abstractions

1.1.  One of the features that points to an abstract object or
      a hypostatic abstraction is its being known by description,
      in other words, by the predicates that are attributed to it
      in remote reports of some variety, or in the various stories
      and theories that are spun about it, instead of being known
      more concretely and directly by acquaintance.  That is one
      of the marks of all of the things that I mentioned before:
      dormitive virtues, egos, numbers, quarks, sweetness, the
      Starship Enterprise, and last not not least, unicorns.

1.2.  CSP on HA:  "It consists in taking a feature of a percept
      or percepts (after it has already been prescinded from the
      other elements of the percept), so as to take propositional
      form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon any judgment
      whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
      relation between the subject of that judgment and another
      subject, which has a mode of being that merely consists
      in the truth of propositions of which the corresponding
      concrete term is the predicate."

2.  HIROTUFIR.  Handy Indexical Rules Of Thumb Used For Identifying Relatives

2.1.  A practical test of whether a property of a thing
      is a relative property of a thing is that one needs
      additional information, beyond that which identifies
      the thing, in order to make a decision about whether
      the thing in question has the property in question.

2.2.  Let me just throw out this thought:  Words and phrases like
      "ego", "number", "quark", "unicorn", "Starship Enterprise",
      along with all of the rest of the words and phrases that
      we use, have no meaning at all outside of some community,
      context, or framework of interpretation, so all of their
      meanings and all of their specifications on any semantic
      or semiotic feature, like "abstract" or "concrete", are
      relative to the given community, context, or framework
      of interpretation that gives them those meanings and
      those specifications.

HAPA. Discussion Note 5

BM = Bernard Morand

| CSP on HA:  "It consists in taking a feature of a percept
| or percepts (after it has already been prescinded from the
| other elements of the percept), so as to take propositional
| form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon any judgment
| whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another
| subject, which has a mode of being that merely consists
| in the truth of propositions of which the corresponding
| concrete term is the predicate."

BM: Could you give the source of this passage?

This came up in the context of several different threads on the SUO and
Ontology Lists that involved different people's ideas about abstraction:
Cathy Legg mentioned HA a la Cyc and/or Davidson that piqued my interest,
but I am still waiting for clarification of its relation to Peirce's HA;
Matthew West has a distinction between the categories of <abstract_object>
and <possible_individual> in his Lifecycle Integration Schema, a datamodel
and/or ontology that is currently being considered by the SUO working group;
John Sowa dreams of a divine apportionment of every thing between the domain
of Physical Earth and the realm of Abstract Heaven in his Philosophy, Horatio.

Here is the stem cell of the LIS filiation:

LIS.  Lifecycle Integration Schema -- Matthew West

01.  http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10712.html

Here are the links to the source materials
and discussion notes that have accumulated
up to this point on HA and PA:

HAPA.  Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction

01.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05089.html -- Cain and Abel
02.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05090.html -- Dormative Virtue
03.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html -- Honey is Sweet
04.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05093.html -- Math Abstraction
05.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05100.html -- Reading Runes
06.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05101.html -- Hypostatization
07.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05105.html -- Abstract Objects
08.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05108.html -- Subjectal Abstraction

D1.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05092.html -- Metaphormazes
D2.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05110.html -- Deciduation Problems
D3.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05111.html -- Recapitulation
D4.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05112.html -- Key To Abstraction
D5.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05113.html -- Self Reference?

The passage that you mention is quoted initially at No. 3, and
it is discussed further at D1, D3, D4, and prospectively at D5.

Have to break fast for breakfast as I am still semi-asleep ...

BM = Bernard Morand

BM: I wonder whether Peirce is refering here to second
    intention or namely to hypostatic abstraction (HA).

BM: If we take as a starting case:

    (1) "Opium puts to sleep",

    in order to transform it by HA, we get:

    (2) "Opium has a dormitive virtue".

BM: I see it as the transformation of a fact into
    a more abstract concept, or say something like
    "opium has the general property of putting to sleep".
    It is hypostatic in the sense that it requires no further
    proposition than (1) and that the transformation relies on
    an "ens rationis".  But from (2) we can also get for example:

    (3) "this discourse has a dormitive virtue",

    which requires a second subject (a fact about discourse).
    I would be tempted to call this latter transformation
    second intention, and it seems to fit with your quote
    before.  But going from (2) to (3) doesn't seem to be
    an hypostatic abstraction stricly speaking.

BM: Thanks for throwing some light on this if possible.

HAPA. Discussion Note 6

BM = Bernard Morand

The genealogy of this circle of thoughts goes a bit like this:

| Bentham's "Theory of Fictions" begat (paraphrastically)
| Schönfinkel's "Bausteine" and this begat (independently)
| Church's "Lambda Calculus" and this begat (in good time)
| McCarthy's "Lisp" and all the rest is AI and IEEE ...

It is no accident, at least not from the right "state of information" (SOI),
how lambda abstraction got its tale, as it is truly most pertinently tagged.
It is said that the lambda came from Russell('s) and Whitehead's employment
of a caret (^) to mark a cousin operation of relational conversion, but let
me try to look that up later.  At any rate, the main idea has been stock in
trade of mathematics for as long as anybody can remember, and in philosophy
more generally (or vaguely, I can never remember which) the laurel is often
placed on Bentham for his idea of paraphrasis.  Here's a general/vague link:

http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/b/bentham.htm

What we see here is the very same thing going on
in the colloquial homilies that Peirce attempted
to use to adumbrate the spirit of abstraction in
the formal sciences.

BM: I wonder whether Peirce is refering here to second
    intention or namely to hypostatic abstraction (HA).

BM: If we take as a starting case:

    (1) "Opium puts to sleep",

    in order to transform it by HA, we get:

    (2) "Opium has a dormitive virtue".

Here is the diagram that I drew for the analogous case
of "virtus dulcitiva", in lay terminology, "sweetness".

Referring to a few of Peirce's standard discussions
of "hypostatic abstraction" (HA), the main thing
about HA is that it turns an adjective or some
part of a predicate into an extra subject,
upping the arity of the main predicate
in the process.

For example, a typical case of HA occurs in the transformation
from "honey is sweet" to "honey possesses sweetness", which we
could choose to represent in several different ways as follows:

Sweet(honey) ~~~> Possesses(honey, sweetness)

S(h) ~~~> P(h, s)

 S          P
 o          o
 |   ~~~>   |
 o          o
 h        <h,s>

            ^
[S]  ~~~>  /P\
 |        o->-o
 |        |   |   
 o        o   o
 h        h   s

Figs.  Are Sweet.  If served in season.  At just the right temps.

The chief thing about this form of grammatical transformation is that we
abstract the adjective "sweet" from the main predicate, thus arriving at
a new, increased-arity predicate "possesses", and as a by-product of the
reaction, as it were, precipitating out the substantive "sweetness" as a
new subject of the new predicate.

BM: I see it as the transformation of a fact into a more abstract concept, or
    say something like "opium has the general property of putting to sleep".

Sticking, sweetly, if you will, to the notion that a concept is a mental symbol,
some might say that a sufficently "precise" abstract concept is already present
in the predicate "is_sweet", but HA takes a step beyond that, as some would say,
onto the flypaper of "abstract but substantial objects" like 'virtus dulcitiva'.

BM: It is hypostatic in the sense that it requires no further
    proposition than (1) and that the transformation relies on
    an "ens rationis".

Yes, this is the critical observation.

BM: But from (2) we can also get for example:

    (3) "this discourse has a dormitive virtue",

    which requires a second subject (a fact about discourse).

This is known as "application of the abstraction to another argument",
and it is analogous to the other half of the lambda calculus paradigm.

BM: I would be tempted to call this latter transformation
    second intention, and it seems to fit with your quote
    before.  But going from (2) to (3) doesn't seem to be
    an hypostatic abstraction stricly speaking.

As for the matter of intentional orders, I foggily peirceive
but the clue that it has something to do with the operations
that I throw together under the name of "reflection", and by
this plurality of reflection to say I abstract some fraction
of my action's contentious tensor that here-to-fore had been 
too obsistently refractory to all of my previous reflections.

BM: Thanks for throwing some light on this if possible.

And thank you for a very peirceptive set of questions.

HAPA. Discussion Note 7

I will pick up from where I left off with Peirce's "sweetness and light"
example, illustrating the difference between prescisive abstraction and
hypostatic abstraction, and articulating the relationship between them,
because there are many important things going on all at the same time
in this example that I have yet to sort out and explain clearly enough.
But Bernard Morand's observation about the link to "second intentional"
or "second order" logic is very helpful in drawing out the main ideas.

| CSP on HA:  "It consists in taking a feature of a percept
| or percepts (after it has already been prescinded from the
| other elements of the percept), so as to take propositional
| form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon any judgment
| whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another
| subject, which has a mode of being that merely consists
| in the truth of propositions of which the corresponding
| concrete term is the predicate."
|
| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
|
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html

As a thematic development in logic, this might be called the "relational turn".
It involves a change of perspective that changes how one describes the same
situation, passing from an expression that uses one subject and a monadic
predicate to an expression that uses two subjects and a dyadic predicate.
You can see a graphic illustration of the same sort of thing occurring
in the transition from Euler's circles, that retain a residue of the
asymmetric or inhomogeneous syllogistic form of one subject and one
predicate, to the more symmetric or homogeneous relational form of
the Venn diagram, that expresses a relation between two subjects
in the same intentional order or at the same ontological level.
In category theory, perspectival changes involve the concepts
of "functors" and of "natural transformations" between them.

HAPA. Discussion Note 8

JA = Jon Awbrey
JS = John Sowa
OS = Oliver Sacks

Yes, very true, at least about the rhematic abstraction,
which is more or less the same as what Frege described
by talking of "saturated" and "unsaturated" expressions.

But still, there seems to be a difference between the
prescisive extraction of the predicate "__ is sweet",
and the hypostatic precipitate of the abstract object
"sweetness".  I am still trying to clarify the residue
of what remains a cloudy suspension, but it seems like
this has something to do with the interpretation of the
syntactic abstraction as actually denoting an object,
as a lambda abstraction denotes a real-live function,
an 'ens rationis'.

CP 2.358 is Peirce's Baldwin Dictionary definition of "predicate".
CP 3.465 is a short summary of these poly-unsaturated "polyads".
CP 3.469 mentions the chemical analogy with "unsaturated bonds".

JS: I would put Peirce much closer to the beginning of that
    process with his writings on relations in the 1870s:

JA: Bentham's "Theory of Fictions" begat (paraphrastically)
    Schönfinkel's "Bausteine" and this begat (independently)
    Church's "Lambda Calculus" and this begat (in good time)
    McCarthy's "Lisp" and all the rest is AI and IEEE ...

JS: Peirce constructed relational abstractions from sentences
    simply by replacing any constituent with a blank.  He called
    the various constituents "logical subjects".  For example,
    start with an arbitrary sentence that states a proposition:

    John gave a book to Mary.

JS: The proposition as a whole is a medad (0-adic relation).
    By erasing one logical subject, you get a monad or
    monadic relation:

    John gave ____ to Mary.

JS: By erasing two sujects, you get a dyad or dyadic relation:
  
    ____ gave ____ to Mary.
  
JS: By erasing three subjects, you get a triad or triadic relation:

    ____ gave ____ to ____.

JS: Peirce described this process many times in many different places over
    the years, but I don't happen to have any quotations handy.  He does
    allude to this process in his tutorial on existential graphs:

JS: http://www.jfsowa.com/peirce/ms514.htm -- Existential Graphs

JS: As another interesting example, following is an excerpt from the
    book 'Seeing Voices' by Oliver Sacks.  He reports the case of an
    11-year-old deaf boy, who had not had the benefit of sign language
    for his first 10 years:

OS: Joseph saw, distinguished, categorized, used;  he had no problems with
    perceptual categorization or generalization, but he could not, it seemed,
    go much beyond this, hold abstract ideas in mind, reflect, play, plan.
    He seemed completely literal -— unable to juggle images or hypotheses
    or possibilities, unable to enter an imaginative or figurative realm ...
    He seemed, like an animal, or an infant, to be stuck in the present,
    to be confined to literal and immediate perception, though made
    aware of this by a consciousness that no infant could have.

JS: This example highlights the importance of language in abstraction.

HAPA. Discussion Note 9

"Inhomogeneopus", you say? -- That's Greek for "having two left feet".

Here's a corrected version:

As a thematic development in logic, this might be called the "relational turn".
It involves a change of perspective that changes how one describes the same
situation, passing from an expression that uses one subject and a monadic
predicate to an expression that uses two subjects and a dyadic predicate.
You can see a graphic illustration of the same sort of thing occurring
in the transition from Euler's circles, that retain a residue of the
asymmetric or inhomogeneous syllogistic form of one subject and one
predicate, to the more symmetric or homogeneous relational form of
the Venn diagram, that expresses a relation between two subjects
in the same intentional order or at the same ontological level.
In category theory, perspectival changes involve the concepts
of "functors" and of "natural transformations" between them.

I think I'll while away the morning by copying out the very
instructive passages from Peirce that I mentioned last time:

| CP 2.358 is Peirce's Baldwin Dictionary definition of "predicate".
| CP 3.465 is a short summary of these poly-unsaturated "polyads".
| CP 3.469 mentions the chemical analogy with "unsaturated bonds".

HAPA. Discussion Note 10

There are a several things of note that leap to mind
in reading Peirce's dictionary entry for "Predicate":

http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11239.html

1.  It is not so much a definition in the sense of stating logically
    necessary and sufficient conditions for a thing to be a predicate
    as it is a "key", an operational definition that tells you how to
    recognize a predicate if you encounter one in the wild, or better
    yet, a "recipe", a sequence of instructions that tells you how to
    construct all the examples of predicates that you might ever need.

2.  It is clear that we are looking at one of the precursors of what
    would in the fullness of time became a standard socket wrench in
    the AI toolbox, namely, frame-&-slot-&-filler systems.  Peirce's
    objection to this precursory distinction would probably take the
    form of a long list of proto-precursors from which he would say
    that he borrowed the tool, or derived the materials to build it.

3.  It is clear, too, that the precursor has already given rather
    more thought to the nature of the rhematic construction than
    most of his postcursors have yet to do.  For example, Peirce
    advises "The erasures are not to be made in a mechanical way,
    but with such modifications as may be necessary to preserve
    the partial sense of the fragment".  This means that the
    construction of the predicate is not a purely syntactic
    operation, whereby one perforates in a perfunctory way
    one isolated sentence at a time, but instead a fully
    sign-relational (referential, semiotic, or pragmatic)
    operation, working on whole equivalence classes of
    sentences at a time.

HAPA. Discussion Note 11

"You can't get there from here"

Let us recall why we might be interested in Peirce's
formulation of "hypostatic abstraction" (HA), a term
that he cannot be blamed for coining because he only
borrowed it from established traditions of prior use.

The concept of an "abstract object" is dreamt of in
many of our faniced and our favored ontologies, the
theories of what is and the theories of what may be
that we strain to snatch from out the thin air into
which, so we dream, they were erstwhile disappeared,
and by this dream to say we are led to believe that
these "abstract objects" can be recognized by their
lack of existence in space and time, or so they say.

Now, asking for enlightenment about abstract objects
and being told that their distinctive characteristic
is their failure to exist in space and time, and not
just our space and time -- as if to say "they're not
from around here" -- but their remove from all space
and time -- as if to say "they're not from anywhere" --
is just about as useful as asking for directions and
being wrily informed "you can't get there from here".

Whatever else you say about this description of abstract objects,
for instance, whether it's true or false to its ostensible object --
for who, indeed, could demonstrate the fact one way or the other? --
this is not what is commonly meant by an "operational definition",
since there is no hint of a feasible operation that is used in it,
no where, no when, no how.

So the search continues for a key or a recipe to abstract objects.

HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction • Work Area

HAPA. Work Area 1


Subj:  Re: ification
Date:  Mon, 13 Nov 2000 16:16:02 -0500
From:  Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
  To:  Stand Up Ontology <standard-upper-ontology@ieee.org>

Just enough time to insert a genealogical note:

http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/b/bentham.htm

Bentham's "Theory of Fictions" begat (paraphrastically)
Schönfinkel's "Bausteine" and this begat (independently)
Church's "Lambda Calculus" and this begat (in good time)
McCarthy's "Lisp" and all the rest is AI and IEEE ...

By way of stuffing the e-lectural ballot boxes just a little bit better
I will attach here some bits of an ongoing dialectric that a few of the
denizens of the Peirce List, most especially Tom Gollier and yours truly,
have been carrying on intermittently for quite some time now, regarding
this most atmospheric of all topics of our current concern, to wit, the
question of hypostatic electricity, of how or whether it can ever stick.

This will also serve to throw a new synonym into the mix:  "subjectal abstraction".

Subj:  Re: Varieties of Abstraction
Date:  Thu, 15 Jun 2000 01:23:31 -0400
From:  Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
  To:  TGollier@aol.com

JA = Jon Awbrey
TG = Tom Gollier

TG: I knew there was no sense getting carried away until you'd had a chance
    to straighten out the context, and your mathematical orientation, which
    is not foreign to Peirce's either, was clear in our previous exchanges
    on the list.  But I don't think mathematicians are to be trusted in
    this regard;  not from any moral flaw in their characters but
    because they're treating this subject of generalization
    within an abstract realm, and hence they feel no need
    or compulsion to make a distinction between the two.

JA: For me, generalization begins in a fairly concrete realm --
    I take "concrete" to mean "grown together", suggesting the
    concrescence of attributes or the fusion of features that
    go to constitute a definite, particulate, and vivid object --
    the action passes through a series of mental affections or
    cognitive impressions -- the only place where such a passage
    is possible without actually destroying the original object --
    toward a conceptual symbol that has a more abstract reference,
    to wit, a selection of the attributes, characters, features,
    marks, or properties that were initially conceived to make up
    the object.  There is a common form to this general direction
    of thought, whether the objects are apples and oranges being
    generalized under the nomen of fruits, or whether the objects
    are numbers under addition and numbers under multiplication
    being generalized under the the nomen of groups.

JA: Generalization is a relative notion, and there is no more need
    for an absolute ground here than there is for a non-inferential
    perception at the origin of thought.  But the distinction between
    precisive (or prescindive) abstraction and hypostatic (or subjectal)
    abstraction is independent of how abstracted already, how far along
    the continuum or the spectrum of abstraction, happens to be the object
    of thought with which one begins.

JA: Again, hypostatic abstraction is a two-edged sword -- a "subject"
    is now and henceforth "supposed" to "stand its own ground beneath"
    the flight of sorcery of the nominal property that is prescinded
    by the flightier fancy of generalization.

JA: This occurs in concrete domains and in vivid realms as much as in the
    other sort, if there is any other sort.  For instance, I do not know
    you as a person, in person, and all I know of you are these signs
    that issue from my computer under your name.  Naturally, I suppose
    that there is a person who stands behind them, someone who is indeed
    responsible for their generation, as their hypothetical perpetrator --
    this is my act of "hypostation", or abstractive hypostasis -- in one of
    its senses, and this is no accident, "hypostasis" = "person", and anyone
    can look it up!  The supposition of a person, an interpretive performer,
    who generates the signs that one passively interprets, indeed, the very
    supposition that there is a person called onself who affords the medium,
    gives a local habitation and a name, and lends a substance to all of the
    signs that constitute the experiences that one calls one's own, well,
    those are acts of "drawing away to stand under" that are fundamental
    to our "under-standing" of ourselves, however fallible, malfeasant,
    and self-deceptive this form of understanding often is.

JA: Four short paragraphs and I have already put myself to sleep --
    you can supply your own joke about dormitive virtues here --
    I pity the person who finds this stuff in his morning post --
    warning:  do not drive or operate heavy machinery while under
    the influence of this philosophy, or any such stuff as these
    dreams are made on!

Subj:  Re: Varieties of Abstraction
Date:  Mon, 19 Jun 2000 23:07:04 -0400
From:  Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
  To:  TGollier@aol.com

CP = Charles Peirce
JA = Jon Awbrey

CP: CP 4.332  [Subjectal Abstraction = Hypostatic Abstraction]

JA: I think that the relation between 'hypostation', that mode of mental operation
    that passes from a verb in action to a noun in stasis, that turn or that style
    of thoughtful conduct that converts a "way of thinking" (WOT) about some thing
    into a "subject of thought" (SOT) itself, and 'reflection', that "bending back"
    and "folding over" of thought on itself, is strikingly clear in this depiction.

Subj:  Re: Varieties of Abstraction
Date:  Thu, 22 Jun 2000 00:24:07 -0400
From:  Jon Awbrey <jawbrey@oakland.edu>
  To:  TGollier@aol.com

JA: Now, this is where I came in -- that is, it is just the point that I had reached
    in my thinking at the end of last year when I decided to take a little break from
    my day to day mental grind to see what sorts of diversion I might find on the web.
    Little did I know how the play would play out!  But the place in question, where
    a peculiar form of reflexive complication found itself tied and once again begins
    to tighten, is the place where one rises from an ongoing activity, whatever it is,
    to reflect on what one is doing, perhaps with a critical eye, and this is where the
    activity that one was cast into, thrown into, willy nilly, and not entirely awarely,
    begins to appear, by virtue of the reflective image that is formed by the reflection,
    like an object, that is, an objective form of conduct, like a chess game, that one
    can choose to play or not, and even consider how to generalize and how to transform.

JA: Not too coincidentally, this is the place where the mental operations that implement
    precisive and subjectal abstraction, namely, selection and reflection, respectively,
    begin to highlight the importance that Dewey placed on a favorite couple of words of
    his, namely, "activity" and "reflection".  An ongoing activity gradually acquires an
    activity of reflection as a parallel rider, then the activity of reflection is turned,
    chiasmatically, into a reflection on activity.  As far as I am concerned, this is the
    true significance of hypostatic abstraction, that takes us from a point in medias res,
    of an action that engages us, to a stance that is just a little bit outside the action,
    a change of attitude or a shift of status toward the activity that is marked by our
    ability to name the action or the state of becoming by means of an abstract noun.

JA: In my case, it is the activity of inquiry that I am wondering how and thus beginning
    to reflect on, and this reflection is a critical component of the inquiry into inquiry.
    That is a very nice description, I think, so far as it goes, but how can I teach this
    skill of reflection to a rock, of the sort that we mine from silicon valley?

JA: Like I said, this is where I came in,
    and I seem to be leaving by the very
    same door by which I entered.

Previously under this skein, a sampler:

http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00739.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00792.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00815.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00828.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00829.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00836.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00892.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00893.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00894.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00933.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00977.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00979.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg00980.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01010.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01011.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01680.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01684.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01687.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01689.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01707.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01791.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01837.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01842.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01845.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01858.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01870.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01890.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01891.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01901.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01902.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01931.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01940.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01955.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01964.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01965.html
http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg01968.html

http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ASC/
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ASC/Reification.html
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ASC/SYSTEM.html

http://www.bestweb.net/~sowa/ontology/
http://www.bestweb.net/~sowa/ontology/causal.htm
http://www.bestweb.net/~sowa/ontology/mthworld.gif

http://www.iso18876.org/
http://www.nist.gov/sc4/
http://www.iso18876.org/iso18876/
http://www.iso18876.org/architecture/index.html
http://www.pdtsolutions.co.uk/standard/wg10/n307/wg10n307.pdf

http://www.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/L75/L75.htm

http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/generality.html
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node1.html
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node2.html
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node3.html
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node4.html
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node5.html
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node6.html
http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/generality/node7.html

http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/design.html
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node1.html
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node2.html
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node3.html
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node4.html
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node5.html
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node6.html
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node15.html
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node16.html
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node17.html
http://www.dcc.unicamp.br/~oliva/guarana/docs/design-html/node18.html

http://blather.newdream.net/r/reification.html
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/b/bentham.htm

HAPA. Work Area 2


CP 3.642
CP 4.463-465

CP 2.358 is Peirce's Baldwin Dictionary definition of "predicate".
CP 3.465 is a short summary of these poly-unsaturated "polyads".
CP 3.469 mentions the chemical analogy with "unsaturated bonds".

| The most ordinary fact of perception, such as "it is light", involves
| 'precisive' abstraction, or 'prescission'.  But 'hypostatic' abstraction,
| the abstraction which transforms "it is light" into "there is light here",
| which is the sense which I shall commonly attach to the word abstraction
| (since 'prescission' will do for precisive abstraction) is a very special
| mode of thought.  It consists in taking a feature of a percept or percepts
| (after it has already been prescinded from the other elements of the percept),
| so as to take propositional form in a judgment (indeed, it may operate upon
| any judgment whatsoever), and in conceiving this fact to consist in the
| relation between the subject of that judgment and another subject, which
| has a mode of being that merely consists in the truth of propositions of
| which the corresponding concrete term is the predicate.
|
| Thus, we transform the proposition, "honey is sweet",
| into "honey possesses sweetness".  "Sweetness" might be
| called a fictitious thing, in one sense.  But since the
| mode of being attributed to it 'consists' in no more than
| the fact that some things are sweet, and it is not pretended,
| or imagined, that it has any other mode of being, there is,
| after all, no fiction.  The only profession made is that we
| consider the fact of honey being sweet under the form of a
| relation;  and so we really can.  I have selected sweetness
| as an instance of one of the least useful of abstractions.
| Yet even this is convenient.  It facilitates such thoughts
| as that the sweetness of honey is particularly cloying;
| that the sweetness of honey is something like the
| sweetness of a honeymoon;  etc.

Reference:

| C.S. Peirce, CP 4.235, "The Simplest Mathematics",
| Chapter 3 of the "Minute Logic", Jan-Feb 1902.
|
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html

JITL. Just In Time Logic

JITL. Note 1

| [On Time and Thought, MS 215, 08 Mar 1873]
|
| Every mind which passes from doubt to belief must have ideas which follow
| after one another in time.  Every mind which reasons must have ideas which
| not only follow after others but are caused by them.  Every mind which is
| capable of logical criticism of its inferences, must be aware of this
| determination of its ideas by previous ideas.  But is it pre-supposed
| in the conception of a logical mind, that the temporal succession in
| its ideas is continuous, and not by discrete steps?  A continuum such
| as we suppose time and space to be, is defined as something any part
| of which itself has parts of the same kind.  So that the point of time
| or the point of space is nothing but the ideal limit towards which we
| approach, but which we can never reach in dividing time or space;  and
| consequently nothing is true of a pointmical which is not true of a space or
| a time.  A discrete quantum, on the other hand, has ultimate parts which
| differ from any other part of the quantum in their absolute separation from
| one another.  If the succession of images in the mind is by discrete steps,
| time for that mind will be made up of indivisible instants.  Any one idea
| will be absolutely distinguished from every other idea by its being present
| only in the passing moment.  And the same idea can not exist in two different
| moments, however similar the ideas felt in the two different moments may, for
| the sake of argument, be allowed to be.  Now an idea exists only so far as the
| mind thinks it;  and only when it is present to the mind.  An idea therefore
| has no characters or qualities but what the mind thinks of it at the time
| when it is present to the mind.  It follows from this that if the succession
| of time were by separate steps, no idea could resemble another;  for these
| ideas if they are distinct, are present to the mind at different times.
| Therefore at no time when one is present to the mind, is the other present.
| Consequently the mind never compares them nor thinks them to be alike;  and
| consequently they are not alike;  since they are only what they are thought
| to be at the time when they are present.  It may be objected that though the
| mind does not directly think them to be alike;  yet it may think together
| reproductions of them, and thus think them to be alike.  This would be a
| valid objection were it not necessary, in the first place, in order that
| one idea should be the representative of another, that it should resemble
| that idea, which it could only do by means of some representation of it
| again, and so on to infinity;  the link which is to bind the first two
| together which are to be pronounced alike, never being found.  In short
| the resemblance of ideas implies that some two ideas are to be thought
| together which are present to the mind at different times.  And this
| never can be, if instants are separated from one another by absolute
| steps.  This conception is therefore to be abandoned, and it must be
| acknowledged to be already presupposed in the conception of a logical
| mind that the flow of time should be continuous.  Let us consider then
| how we are to conceive what is present to the mind.  We are accustomed
| to say that nothing is present but a fleeting instant, a point of time.
| But this is a wrong view of the matter because a point differs in no
| respect from a space of time, except that it is the ideal limit which,
| in the division of time, we never reach.  It can not therefore be that
| it differs from an interval of time in this respect that what is present
| is only in a fleeting instant, and does not occupy a whole interval of
| time, unless what is present be an ideal something which can never be
| reached, and not something real.  The true conception is, that ideas
| which succeed one another during an interval of time, become present
| to the mind through the successive presence of the ideas which occupy
| the parts of that time.  So that the ideas which are present in each
| of these parts are more immediately present, or rather less mediately
| present than those of the whole time.  And this division may be carried
| to any extent.  But you never reach an idea which is quite immediately
| present to the mind, and is not made present by the ideas which occupy
| the parts of the time that it occupies.  Accordingly, it takes time
| for ideas to be present to the mind.  They are present during a time.
| And they are present by means of the presence of the ideas which are
| in the parts of that time.  Nothing is therefore present to the mind
| in an instant, but only during a time.  The events of a day are less
| mediately present to the mind than the events of a year;  the events
| of a second less mediately present than the events of a day.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 68-70.
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 215, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 68-71 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 2

| [On Time and Thought, MS 215, 08 Mar 1873] (cont.)
|
| It remains to show that, adopting this conception, the possibility of the
| resemblance of two ideas becomes intelligible;  and that therefore it is not
| inconceivable that one idea should follow after another, according to a general
| rule.  In the first place, then, it is to be observed that under this conception,
| two ideas may be both present to the mind during a longer interval, while they are
| separately present in shorter intervals which make up the longer interval.  During
| this longer interval they are present to the mind as different.  They are thought
| as different.  And this longer interval embraces still shorter intervals than
| those hitherto considered, during which there are ideas which agree in the
| respects which are defined by each of the two ideas, which are seen to be
| different.  During the longer interval therefore, the ideas of these shortest
| intervals are thought as partly alike and partly different.  There is therefore
| no difficulty in the conception of the resemblance of ideas.  Let us now see what
| is necessary in order that ideas should determine one another, and that the mind
| should be aware that they determine one another.  In order that there should be
| any likeness among ideas, it is necessary that during an interval of time there
| should be some constant element in thought or feeling.  If I imagine something
| red, it requires a certain time for me to do so.  And if the other elements
| of the image vary during that time, in one part it must be invariable, it
| must be constantly red.  And therefore it is proper to say that the idea
| of red is present to the mind at every instant.  For we are not now saying
| that an idea is present to the mind in an instant in the objectionable sense
| which has been referred to above, according to which an instant would differ
| from an interval of time;  but we are only saying that the idea is present at
| an instant, in the sense that it is present in every part of a certain interval
| of time;  however short that part may be.  The first thing that is requisite
| therefore to a logical mind, is that there should be elements of thought which
| are present at instants in this sense.  The second thing that is requisite is,
| that what is present one instant should have an effect upon what is present
| during the lapse of time which follows that instant.  This effect can only be
| a reproduction of a part of what was present at the instant;  because what is
| present at the instant, is present during an interval of time during the whole
| of which the effect will be present.  And therefore since all that is present
| during this interval is present at each instant, it follows that the effect
| of what is present at each instant is present at that instant.  So that this
| effect is a part of the idea which produces it.  In other words, it is merely
| a reproduction of a part of that idea.  This effect is memory, in its most
| elementary form.  But something more than this is required in order that the
| conclusion shall be produced from a premiss;  namely, an effect produced by
| the succession of one idea upon another.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 70-71.
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 215, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 68-71 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 3

| [On Time and Thought, MS 216, 08 Mar 1873]
|
| Any mind which has the power of investigation, and which therefore passes from
| doubt to belief, must have its ideas follow after one another in time.  And if
| there is to be any distinction of a right and a wrong method of investigation,
| it must have some control over the process.  So that there must be such a thing
| as the production of one idea from another which was previously in the mind.
| This is what takes place in reasoning, where the conclusion is brought into the
| mind by the premisses.  We may imagine a mind which should reason and never know
| that it reasoned;  never being aware that its conclusion was a conclusion, or was
| derived from anything which went before.  For such a mind there might be a right
| and a wrong method of thinking;  but it could not be aware that there was such
| a distinction, nor criticize in any degree its own operations.  To be capable of
| logical criticism, the mind must be aware that one idea is determined by another.
| Now when this happens after the first idea comes the second.  There is a process
| which can only take place in a space of time;  but an idea is not present to the
| mind during a space of time -- at least not during a space of time in which this
| idea is replaced by another;  for when the moment of its being present is passed,
| it is no longer in the mind at all.  Therefore, the fact that one idea succeeds
| another is not a thing which in itself can be present to the mind, any more than
| the experiences of a whole day or of a year can be said to be present to the mind.
| It is something which can be lived through;  but not be present in any one instant;
| and therefore, which can not be present to the mind at all;  for nothing is present
| but the passing moment, and what it contains.  The only way therefore in which we can
| be aware of a process of inference, or of any other process, is by its producing some
| idea in us.  Not only therefore is it necessary that one idea should produce another;
| but it is also requisite that a mental process should produce an idea.  These three
| things must be found in every logical mind:  First, ideas;  second, determinations
| of ideas by previous ideas;  third, determinations of ideas by previous processes.
| And nothing will be found which does not come under one of these three heads.
| The determination of one thing by another, implies that the former not only
| follows after the latter, but follows after it according to a general rule,
| in consequence of which, every such idea would be followed by such a second one.
| There can therefore be no determination of one idea by another except so far as
| ideas can be distributed into classes, or have some resemblances.  But how can
| one idea resemble another?  An idea can contain nothing but what is present to
| the mind in that idea.  Two ideas exist at different times;  consequently what is
| present to the mind in one is present only at that time, and is absent at the time
| when the other idea is present.  Literally, therefore, one idea contains nothing
| of another idea;  and in themselves they can have no resemblance.  They certainly
| do not resemble one another except so far as the mind can detect a resemblance;
| for they exist only in the mind, and are nothing but what they are thought to
| be.  Now when each is present to the mind the other is not in the mind at all.
| No reference to it is in the mind, and no idea of it is in the mind.  Neither
| idea therefore when it is in the mind, is thought to resemble the other which
| is not present in the mind.  And an idea can not be thought, except when it is
| present in the mind.  And, therefore, one idea can not be thought to resemble
| another, strictly speaking.  In order to escape from this paradox, let us see
| how we have been led into it.  Causation supposes a general rule, and therefore
| similarity.  Now so long as we suppose that what is present to the mind at one
| time is absolutely distinct from what is present to the mind at another time,
| our ideas are absolutely individual, and without any similarity.  It is necessary,
| therefore, that we should conceive a process as present to the mind.  And this
| process consists of parts existing at different times and absolutely distinct.
| And during the time that one part is in the mind, the other is not in the mind.
| To unite them, we have to suppose that there is a consciousness running through
| the time.  So that of the succession of ideas which occur in a second of time,
| there is but one consciousness, and of the succession of ideas which occurs in
| a minute of time there is another consciousness, and so on, perhaps indefinitely.
| So that there may be a consciousness of the events that happened in a whole day or
| a whole life time.  According to this, two parts of a process separated in time --
| though they are absolutely separate, in so far as there is a consciousness of the
| one, from which the other is entirely excluded -- are yet so far not separate,
| that there is a more general consciousness of the two together.  This conception
| of consciousness is something which takes up time.  It seems forced upon us to
| escape the contradictions which we have just encountered.  And if consciousness
| has a duration, then there is no such thing as an instantaneous consciousness;
| but all consciousness relates to a process.  And no thought, however simple, is
| at any instant present to the mind in its entirety, but it is something which we
| live through or experience as we do the events of a day.  And as the experiences
| of a day are made up of the experiences of shorter spaces of time so any thought
| whatever is made up of more special thoughts which in their turn are themselves
| made up by others and so on indefinitely.  It may indeed very likely be that there
| is some minimum space of time within which in some sense only an indivisible thought
| can exist and as we know nothing of such a fact at present we may content ourselves
| with the simpler conception of an indefinite continuity in consciousness.  ...
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 72-74.
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 216, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 72-75 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 4

| [On Time and Thought, MS 216, 08 Mar 1873] (cont.)
|
| It will easily be seen that when this conception is once grasped the
| process of the determination of one idea by another becomes explicable.
| What is present to the mind during the whole of an interval of time is
| something generally consisting of what there was in common in what was
| present to the mind during the parts of that interval.  And this may be
| the same with what is present to the mind during any interval of time;
| or if not the same, at least similar -- that is, the two may be such
| that they have much in common.  These two thoughts which are similar
| may be followed by others that are similar and according to a general
| law by which every thought similar to either of these is followed by
| another similar to those by which they are followed.  If a succession
| of thoughts have any thing in common this may belong to every part of
| these thoughts however minute, and therefore it may be said to be present
| at every instant.  This element of consciousness which belongs to a whole
| only so far as it belongs to its parts is termed the matter of thought.
| There is besides this a causation running through our consciousness by
| which the thought of any one moment determines the thought of the next
| moment no matter how minute these moments may be.  And this causation
| is necessarily of the nature of a reproduction;  because if a thought
| of a certain kind continues for a certain length of time as it must
| do to come into consciousness the immediate effect produced by this
| causality must also be present during the whole time, so that it is a
| part of that thought.  Therefore when this thought ceases, that which
| continues after it by virtue of this action is a part of the thought
| itself.  In addition to this there must be an effect produced by the
| following of one idea after a different idea otherwise there would be
| no process of inference except that of the reproduction of the premisses.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 74-75.
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 216, 1873, ["On Time and Thought"], pages 72-75 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 5

| [Lecture on Practical Logic, MS 191, Summer-Fall 1872]
|
| I suppose that the fundamental proposition from which all metaphysics
| takes its rise is that opinions tend to an ultimate settlement & that
| a predestinate one.  Upon most subjects at least sufficient experience,
| discussion, and reasoning will bring men to an agreement;  and another
| set of men by an independent investigation with sufficient experience,
| discussion, and reasoning will be brought to the same agreement as the
| first set.
|
| Hence we infer that there is something which determines
| opinions and which does not depend upon them.  To this
| we give the name of the 'real'.  Now this 'real' may
| be regarded from two opposite points of view.
|
| In the first place, to say that thought tends to come to a determinate conclusion,
| is to say that it tends to an end or is influenced by a 'final cause'.  This final
| cause, the ultimate opinion, is independent of how you, I, or any number of men
| think.  Let whole generations think as perversely as they will;  they can only
| put off the ultimate opinion but cannot change its character.  So the ultimate
| conclusion is that which determines opinions and does not depend upon them and
| so is the real object of cognition.  This is idealism since it supposes the
| real to be of the nature of thought.
|
| But, in the second place, a cause precedes its effect.  And moreover the ultimate
| conclusion though independent of this or that mind is not independent of mind in
| general.  The real, therefore, which determines thought but does not depend upon it,
| is not the last conclusion but the first premiss or what produces the first premiss,--
| a something out of the mind and incommensurable with thought.
|
| Since experience proceeds from the less general to the more general, the
| last conclusion is general, and so the first view is realistic, while the
| second from a like reason is individualistic.  In the first view, the real
| is in one sense never realized since though opinion may in fact have reached
| a settlment in reference to any question, there always remains a possibility
| that more experience, discussion, and reasoning would change any given opinion.
| In the second view also the real is a species of fiction for that which is
| logically singular,-- or is determined with reference to every quality,--
| can from the continual change which is constantly taking place not remain
| for any time however short, (Daniel Webster, for example, is a class embracing
| Daniel Webster under 50 years of age & Daniel Webster over 50 years of age) and
| consequently does not exist as absolutely determinate at all.
|
| Upon either view therefore the real is something ideal and never actually exists.
| But it is true on the one hand that thought tends to a determinate conclusion and
| on the other that if anything is true, true determinations without number are true
| of it.  We ought therefore to discard the conception of the real as something actual
| and to say simply that only thought actually exists and it has a law which no more
| determines it than it by the mode in which it acts makes the law.  Only this law
| is such that in a sufficient time it will determine thought to any extent.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 8-9.
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, MS 191, 1872, ["Lecture on Practical Logic"], pp. 8-9 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 6

| [Logic, Truth, and the Settlement of Opinion, MS 179, Winter-Spring 1872]
|
| Logic is the doctrine of truth, its nature and
| the manner in which it is to be discovered.
|
| The first condition of learning is to know that we are ignorant.
| A man begins to inquire and to reason with himself as soon as he
| really questions anything and when he is convinced he reasons no more.
| Elementary geometry produces formal proofs of propositions which nobody
| doubts, but that cannot properly be caled reasoning which does not carry us
| from the known to the unknown, and the only value in the first demonstrations
| of geometry is that they exhibit the dependence of certain theorems on certain
| axioms, a thing which is not clear without the demonstrations.  When two men
| discuss a question, each first endeavors to raise a doubt in the mind of the
| other, and that is often half the battle.  When the doubt ceases there is no
| use in further discussion.  Thus real inquiry begins when genuine doubt begins
| and ends when this doubt ends.  And the premisses of the reasoning are facts
| not doubted.  It is therefore idle to tell a man to begin by doubting familiar
| beliefs, unless you say something which shall cause him really to doubt them.
| Again, it is false to say that reasoning must rest either on first principles
| or on ultimate facts.  For we cannot go behind what we are unable to doubt,
| but it would be unphilosophical to suppose that any particular fact will
| never be brought into doubt.
|
| It is easy to see what truth would be for a mind which could not doubt.  That mind
| could not regard anything as possible except what it believed in.  By all existing
| things it would mean only what it thought existed, and everything else would be what
| it would mean by 'non-existent'.  It would, therefore, be omniscient in its universe.
| To say that an omniscient being is necessarily destitute of the faculty of reason,
| sounds paradoxical;  yet if the act of reasoning must be directed to an end, when
| that end is attained the act naturally becomes impossible.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 14-15.
|
| C.S. Peirce, MS 179, 1872, ["Logic, Truth, Settlement of Opinion"], pp. 14-16 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 7

| [Logic, Truth, and the Settlement of Opinion, MS 179, Winter-Spring 1872] (cont.)
|
| The only justification for reasoning is that it settles doubts,
| and when doubt finally ceases, no matter how, the end of reasoning
| is attained.  Let a man resolve never to change his existing opinions,
| let him obstinately shut his eyes to all evidence against them, and if
| his will is strong enough so that he actually does not waver in his faith,
| he has no motive for reasoning at all, and it would be absurd for him to
| do it.  That is method number one for attaining the end of reasoning, and
| it is a method which has been much practised and highly approved, especially
| by people whose experience has been that reasoning only leads from doubt to
| doubt.  There is no valid objection to this proceedure if it only succeeds.
| It is true it is utterly irrational;  that is to say it is foolish from the
| point of view of those who do reason.  But to assume that point of view is
| to beg the question.  In fact, however, it does not succeed;  and the first
| cause of failure is that different people have different opinions and the
| man who sees this begins to feel uncertain.  It is therefore desirable to
| produce unanimity of opinion and this gives rise to method number two, which
| is to force people by fire and sword to adopt one belief, to massacre all who
| dissent from it and burn their books.  This way of bringing about a catholic
| consent has proved highly successful for centuries in some cases, but it is
| not practicable in our days.  A modification of this is method number three,
| to cultivate a public opinion by oratory and preaching and by fostering
| certain sentiments and passions in the minds of the young.  This method
| is the most generally successful in our day.  The fourth and last method
| is that of reasoning.  It will never be adopted when any of the others will
| succeed and it has itself been successful only in certain spheres of thought.
| Nevertheless those who reason think that it must be successful in the end,
| & so it would if all men could reason.  There is this to be said in favor
| of it.  He who reasons will regard the opinions of the majority of mankind
| with contemptuous indifference;  they will not in the least disturb his
| opinions.  He will also neglect the beliefs of those who are not informed,
| and among the small residue he may fairly expect some unanimity on many
| questions.
|
| I hope it will now be plain to the reader, that the only rational
| ground for preferring the method of reasoning to the other methods
| is that it fixes belief more surely.  A man who proposes to adopt the
| first method may consistently do so simply because he chooses to do so.
| But if we are to decide in favor of reasoning, we ought to do so on
| rational grounds.  Now if belief is fixed, no matter how, doubt has
| as a matter of fact ceased, & there is no motive, rational or other,
| for reasoning any more.  Any settlement of opinion, therefore, if it
| is full and perfect, is entirely satisfactory and nothing could be
| better.  It is the peculiarity of the method of reasoning, that if
| a man thinks that it will not burn him to put his hand in the fire,
| reasoning will not confirm that belief but will change it.  This is
| a vast advantage to the mind of a rationalist.  But the advocate of
| any one of the first three methods, will be able to say (if either
| of those methods will yield a fixed belief) either that he 'knows'
| by his method that fire will burn, so that reasoning is inferior to
| his method in that it may permit a man for a moment to doubt this, or
| else that he 'knows' that fire will not burn, so that reasoning leads
| all astray.  In either case therefore he will conceive that that which
| to the rationalist seems the great advantage of reasoning, to be a great
| fault.  Thus the only ground of a fair decision between the methods must
| be that one actually succeeds while the others break up and dissolve.
| Bryant expresses the philosophy of the matter perfectly:
|
| | Truth struck to earth shall rise again
| | The eternal years of God are hers
| | While error ... writhes in pain
| | And dies amidst her worshippers.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 15-16.
|
| C.S. Peirce, MS 179, 1872, ["Logic, Truth, Settlement of Opinion"], pp. 14-16 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 8

| Chapter 1 (Enlarged Abstract) [MS 182, Winter-Spring 1872]
|
| The very first of distinctions which logic supposes is between doubt and belief,
| a question and a proposition.  Doubt and belief are two states of mind which
| feel different, so that we can distinguish them by immediate sensation.
| We almost always know without any experiment when we are in doubt and
| when we are convinced.  This is such a difference as there is between
| red and blue, or pleasure & pain.  Were this the whole distinction,
| it would be almost without significance.  But in point of fact the
| mere sensible distinguishability is attended with an important
| practical difference.  When we believe there is a proposition
| which according to some rule determines our actions, so that
| our belief being known, the way in which we shall behave
| may be surely deduced, but in the case of doubt we have
| such a proposition more or less distinctly in our minds
| but do not act from it.  There is something further
| removed from belief than doubt, that is to say not
| to conceive the proposition at all.  Nor is doubt
| wholly without effect upon our conduct.  It makes
| us waver.  Conviction determines us to act in a
| particular way while pure unconscious ignorance
| alone which is the true contrary of belief has
| no effect at all.
|
| Belief and doubt may be conceived to be distinguished only in degree.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 20-21.
|
| C.S. Peirce, MS 182, 1872, "Chapter 1 (Enlarged Abstract)", pages 20-21 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 9

| Chapter 2.  Of Inquiry
|
| The irritation of doubt causes a struggle to attain a state of belief.
| This struggle I shall term 'inquiry', though it must be admitted that
| this is sometimes not a very apt designation.
|
| The irritation of doubt is the only immediate motive for the struggle
| to attain belief.  It is certainly best for us that our beliefs should
| be such as may truly guide our actions so as to satisfy our desires;  and
| this reflection will make us reject any belief which does not seem to have
| been so formed as to insure this result.  But it will only do so by creating
| a doubt in place of that belief.  With the doubt therefore the struggle begins
| and with the cessation of doubt it ends.  Hence, the sole object of inquiry is
| the settlement [...]
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, p. 23.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Chapter 2. Of Inquiry", MS 188, May-June 1872, pages 23-24 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 10

| Chapter 3.  Four Methods of Settling Opinion
|
| If the settlement of opinion is the sole object of inquiry, and if belief is
| of the nature of a habit, why should we not attain the desired end, by taking
| any answer to a question which we may fancy, and constantly reiterating it to
| ourselves, by dwelling on all which may conduce to that belief and learning to
| turn with contempt and hatred from anything which might disturb it?  This simple
| and direct method is really pursued by many men.  ...
|
| But this method of fixing belief, which may be called the
| method of obstinacy, will be unable to hold its ground in
| practice.  The social impulse is against it.  ...
|
| Let the will of the state act then, instead of that of the individual.  ...
|
| In judging this method of fixing belief, which may be called
| the method of despotism, we must in the first place allow its
| immeasurable mental and moral superiority to the method of
| obstinacy.  ...
|
| But no institution can undertake to regulate opinions upon every subject.
| Only the most important ones can be attended to, and on the rest men's minds
| must be left to the action of natural causes.  This imperfection [...] may
| affect every man.  And though these affections are necessarily as various
| as are individual conditions yet the method must be such that the ultimate
| conclusion of every man shall be the same.  This is called the scientific
| method.  Its fundamental hypothesis stated in more familiar language is this.
| There are real things, whose characters are entirely independent of our opinions
| about them;  those realities affect our senses, according to regular laws, and
| though our sensations are as different as our relations to the objects, yet by
| taking advantage of the laws which subsist we can ascertain by reasoning how
| the things really are, and any man if he have sufficient experience and reason
| enough about it, will be led to the one true conclusion.  The new conception here
| involved is that of reality.  It may be asked how I know there are any realities.
| If this hypothesis is the sole support of my method of inquiry, my method of
| inquiry must not be used to support my hypothesis.  The reply is this.  1st,
| If investigation cannot be regarded as proving that there are real things,
| it at least does not lead to a contrary conclusion;  but the method and the
| conception on which it is based remain ever in harmony.  No doubts of the
| method, therefore, necessarily arise from its practice, as is the case
| with all the others.  2nd, the feeling which gives rise to any method
| of fixing belief, is a dissatisfaction at two repugnant propositions.
| But here already is a vague concession that there is some one thing to
| which a proposition should conform.  Nobody, therefore, can really doubt
| that there are realities, or if he did, doubt would not be a source of
| dissatisfaction.  The hypothesis therefore is one which every mind admits.
| So that the social impulse does not cause me to doubt it.  3rd, Everybody
| uses the scientific method about a great many things and only ceases to use
| it when he does not know how to apply it.  4th, Experience of the method has
| not led me to doubt it but on the contrary scientific investigation has had
| the most wonderful triumphs in the way of settling opinion.  These afford
| the explanation of my not doubting either the method or the hypothesis
| which it supposes, and not having any doubt nor believing that anybody
| else whom I could influence has, it would be the merest babble for me
| to say more about it.  If there be anybody with a living doubt upon
| the subject, let him consider it.
|
| To describe the method of scientific investigation is the object of this book.
| In this chapter, I shall only notice some points of contrast between it and
| other methods of inquiry.
|
| This is the only one of the four methods which presents any distinction of a right
| and a wrong way.  If I adopt the method of obstinacy and shut myself out from all
| influences, no matter what I think necessary to doing this, is necessary according
| to that method.  So with the method of despotism, the state may try to put down
| heresy by means which from a scientific point of view seem very ill-calculated
| to accomplish its purpose, but the only test 'on that method' is what the state
| thinks, so that it cannot pursue the method wrongly.  So with the 'a priori'
| method.  If I endeavor to lay my susceptibilities of belief perfectly open to
| the influences which work upon them, I cannot on those principles go wrong.
| But with the scientific method, the case is different.  I may start with
| known and observed facts to proceed to the unknown;  and yet the rules
| which I follow in doing so may not be such as investigation would
| approve.  The test of whether I am truly following the method
| is not an immediate appeal to my feelings and purposes,
| but on the contrary itself involves the application
| of the method.  Hence it is that bad reasoning
| as well as good reasoning is possible;  and
| this fact is the foundation of the
| practical side of logic.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 24-28.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Four Methods of Settling Opinion", MS 189, May-June 1872, pp. 24-28 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 11

| Chapter 4.  Of Reality
|
| Investigation supposes a true and a false,
| truth and falsity being independent of all
| opinion upon the matter.  The name 'real'
| is applied to that which is independent
| of how you or I or any number of minds
| think it to be.
|
| It is a truism to say that the character of what I think
| depends entirely on what I think it to be.  The real is
| not, therefore, 'per se' an immediate object of thought,
| even though my thought may happen to coincide with it.
| Yet the real must influence thought or I could not by
| following any rules of reasoning arrive at any truth.
|
| Investigation consists necessarily of two parts, one by which a
| belief is generated from other beliefs, which is called 'reasoning';
| and another by which new elements of belief are brought into the mind,
| which is called 'observation'.  Thus, the conclusions depend entirely
| upon the observations.  But while the ultimate conclusion is one and
| the same in the minds of all who push investigation far enough, the
| observations on which it hangs are for every man private and peculiar.
| The observations which I made yesterday are not the same that I make today;
| nor are simultaneous observations from different situations or with other
| different circumstances the same.  Two men cannot therefore make the same
| observation.  We may go further and say that no two observations are in
| themselves in any degree alike.  The judgment that they are alike is not
| contained in either observation (since they do not relate to one another)
| but is a belief generated by the two beliefs in which the two observations
| immediately result, so that it is an inference of reasoning, as that has just
| been defined.  Thus our reasonings begin with the most various premisses, which
| have not in themselves anything in common, but which so determine our beliefs as
| to lead us at last to one destined conclusion.
|
| Here is the whole statement of facts from which we must infer whatever we can know
| of the mode of being of the real.  But there is no additional fact which we can
| infer from these facts.  For these embrace everything which takes place in
| thought, and as to anything out of thought we can know nothing.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 60-61.
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, "Chapter 4. Of Reality", MS 205, Fall 1872, pp. 60-61 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 12

| Chapter ___.  The List of Categories
|
| In the doctrines which have thus far been developed, are implicitly
| involved certain conceptions of such universal applicability and such
| importance in logic, that I propose to consider them especially in this
| chapter under the name of 'Categories'.
|
| In the ideal final opinion which would perfectly represent the reality of things,
| all possible doubt would be resolved.  It follows that the reality is something
| entirely definite.  'Ens est unum.'  An object may be conceived to have this
| character without being real, that is without being in accord with the
| opinion to which observations are fated to tend, and I shall call this
| the 'being' of things.  A griffin 'is' a fabulous animal.  That is,
| a griffin is supposed to be a definite object.  You may ask as many
| questions as you please about a griffin and supply answers according
| to some rule and if all the questions which could be invented were
| thus answered, the animal would possess as perfect a being as if
| it were real, and yet be a mere creature of the imagination.
|
| In every doubt there is one thing fixed and one thing vague;
| the thing which we doubt something about is fixed, what we
| doubt about it is vague.  These two things must equally be
| distinguished in the belief in which the doubt is resolved.
| Consequently, every being has elements which are distinguished
| from it but which belong to it, in short it has 'qualities'.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, p. 61.
|
| Charles S. Peirce, "The List of Categories", MS 207, Winter 1872-73, p. 61 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 13

| On Representations
|
| A representation is an object which stands for another so that
| an experience of the former affords us a knowledge of the latter.
| There are three essential conditions to which every representation
| must conform.  It must in the first place like any other object have
| qualities independent of its meaning.  It is only through a knowledge
| of these that we acquire any information concerning the object it
| represents.  Thus, the word "man" as printed, has three letters;
| these letters have certain shapes, and are black.  I term such
| characters, the material qualities of the representation.  In the
| 2nd place a representation must have a real causal connection with
| its object.  If a weathercock indicates the direction of the wind
| it is because the wind really turns it round.  If the portrait of
| a man of a past generation tells me how he looked it is because
| his appearance really determined the appearance of the picture
| by a train of causation, acting through the mind of the painter.
| If a prediction is trustworthy it is because those antecedents of
| which the predicted event is the necessary consequence had a real
| effect in producing the prediction.  In the third place, every
| representation addresses itself to a mind.  It is only in so
| far as it does this that it is a representation.  The idea of
| the representation itself excites in the mind another idea and
| in order that it may do this it is necessary that some principle
| of association between the two ideas should already be established
| in that mind.  These three conditions serve to define the nature of
| a representation.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, p. 62.
|
| Charles S. Peirce, "On Representations", MS 212, Winter-Spring 1873, p. 62 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 14

| I begin with the soul of man.  For we first learn that brutes have souls from
| the facts of the human soul.  What brutes and other men do & suffer would be
| quite unintelligible to us, if we had not a standard within ourselves with
| which to measure others.
|
| At the first dawn of cognition we began to compare and consider the objects about us.
| Our thought first assigned to things their right places and reduced the wild chaos
| of sensuous impressions to a luminous order.  But after thought had classified
| everything a residuum was left over, which had no place in the classification.
| This was thought itself.  What is this which is left over?  After thought
| has considered everything, it is obliged next to think of itself.  Here
| it is at once means and end.  The question is, 'what' is thought, --
| and the question can only be answered 'by means of' thought.
|
| This is a noticeable circumstance.  How can thought think of itself, it is
| asked;  that would be an insoluble contradiction.  It is as though a tone
| should be heard of itself, or a beam of light be seen by itself.  But this
| objection reminds one of the efforts of the man who tried to look at his
| own eye.  After great difficulty he got so far as to see the end of his
| nose, forgetting that it would be much simpler to hold up a looking-glass
| to his face.  Common sense, which usually hits the nail on the head, has
| long ago held that looking-glass up to thought.  If I wish to represent to
| myself what my thought is, (says common sense) I have only to act as though
| my thought were an external object which I can consider as I should consider
| something not a part of myself.  Thought thus objectively considered common
| sense terms the soul.  So if we are to investigate in a scientific manner
| the nature of thought, we //need/can// do nothing else than consider the
| soul as if it were an object of experience.
|
| Everyone grants that thought is a sort of experience;  otherwise, we
| could not know that we think.  Everyone further sees that we have in
| thought a very varied experience, for it changes both with the object
| thought of and with mental development which we have attained.  Thus,
| we bring together all the experiences which thought has in itself &
| subject them to the consideration of our thoughts.  There are also
| other experiences, not properly thoughts, such as sensations and
| feelings which we term phenomena of the soul, because we recognize
| them as immediate products of an activity within us, which according
| to our observation cannot be separated from the activity of thought.
|
| C.S. Peirce, CE 3, pp. 10-11.
|
| Charles S. Peirce, "Third Lecture", MS 192, Summer-Fall 1872, pages 10-11 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 15

| Chapter 11.  On Logical Breadth and Depth
|
| As Logic is the study of the laws of signs so far as these denote things --
| those laws of signs which determine what things they denote and what
| they do not -- it is necessary in Logic to pay especial attention to
| those terms which denote signs.  Such terms are genus species &c.
| No thing is a genus but as there are terms such as man and tree
| which denote some one thing leaving it more or less indeterminate
| what one so we may speak of whatever may be denoted by such a general
| term as a genus or class.  Such terms are called 'terms of second intention'.
| The first intention is the mental act by which an object is conceived.  The
| second intention is the mental act by which the first conception is made an
| object of conception in reference to its relation to its object.  A term of
| second intention does not so much signify the sign itself as it signifies
| whatever is denoted by a sign of a certain description.  As signs differ
| in their logical characters we may define an object by means of the
| logical characters of the sign which denotes it and in that case
| it is pointed out with a peculiar kind of generality which
| requires special attention.  Two of the most important
| characters of general terms are their logical breadth
| and depth.  The breadth of a term in general is that of
| which the term can be predicated.  The depth of a term is
| that which can be predicated of it.  The breadth therefore
| may be considered as a collection of objects -- real things --
| though it can also be considered as consisting of the terms
| which may be made subject of a true proposition of which
| the given term is the predicate.  The depth of a term
| cannot be considered as a collection of things but
| can only be considered as a complex of terms or of
| attributes.  The term attribute, character, mark, or
| quality is a term of second intention.  Two things are
| alike in a certain respect that is to say the same predicate
| can be applied to either of them.  Then the capacity of having that
| predicate applied to it with truth is called an attribute that is a thing
| to which it can be applied.  The attribute is therefore an abstract term.
| Terms are divisible into concrete and abstract.  The concrete are such
| as white virtuous &c. the abstract such as whiteness virtue, etc.
| Abstract terms do not denote any real thing but they denote
| fictitious things.  An object's being white is conceived
| as being due to its being in some relation with a certain
| fictitious thing whiteness.  In point of fact that the object
| is white may in a certain sense be said to be due to its connection
| with the sign or predicate white that is to say it must be in such a
| relation to the name white that this name may be applied to it with
| truth or else it cannot be white.  There is no falsity in this
| statement although it is more natural to state the matter
| in the inverse way and to say that its having that
| connection with that name is due to the fact
| that it is white.  One statement is as true
| as the other.  In the latter more natural mode
| of statement the existence of the thing is looked
| upon as the ultimate fact but we have seen in the chapter
| upon reality that the final information is the ultimate fact,
| that final information consisting in applying a certain sign
| to certain objects in the predication and therefore it is
| perfectly correct to say that the thing's being white
| is due to and consists of the applicability of
| a certain predicate to a certain thing.
| A attribute or quality is not precisely
| the same as a predicate inasmuch as when we
| use the word predicate we have in mind the fact
| that the predicate is something extraneous to the thing
| which does not belong to it as it exists but belongs to it as it is
| thought whereas an attribute is considered as belonging to a thing whatever
| is thought.  But upon our view of the nature of reality this is a distinction
| of very slight moment because existence is thus not independent of all thought
| and what is affirmed in the final judgment is the same as what really exists.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 98-99
|
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873, pp. 98-102 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

JITL. Note 16

Cf: JITL 15.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000732.html
In: JITL.     http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/thread.html#712

| Chapter 11.  On Logical Breadth and Depth (cont.)
|
| Thus in considering the breadth and depth of terms
| it is desirable to make a number of distinctions.
|
| By the "informed breadth" of a term I shall mean all the
| real objects of which it is predicable with logical truth
| in the supposed state of information as our knowledge is
| never absolute but consists only of probabilities that
| all the information at hand must be taken into account
| and those things of which there is not on the whole
| reason to believe that the term is truly predicable
| are not to be reckoned as part of its breadth.
|
| If T be a term which is predicable only of S_1, S_2, and S_3
| then the S_1's, S_2's, and S_3's will constitute the informed
| breadth of T.
|
| If there be a second term T' which is predicable only of S_1 and S_2
| and if it is not known that S_3 is entirely included under S_1 and S_2
| then T is considered to have a greater informed breadth than T'.
|
| If it is known that the S_3's are not all among the S_1's and S_2's the
| excess of breadth is certain but if it is not known whether or not this
| is the case it is "doubtful".
|
| If certain S_3's are known to exist which are not known to be either
| S_1's or S_2's, T is said to have a greater actual breadth than T'
| but if all the S_3's which are known to exist are also known to
| be S_1's and S_2's though there are other S_3's which are not
| S_1 or S_2 then T is said to have greater potential breadth
| than T'.
|
| If T and T' are conceptions in different minds
| or in different states of the same mind then T
| may have a doubtful excess of breadth in one
| mind and no excess at all in the other mind.
| In that case the conception is said to be
| more extensively distinct to the latter
| mind.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 99-100
|
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873,
| Chapter 11 from ["Toward a Logic Book, 1872-1873"], pp. 14-108 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Vol. 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

NB.  I have substituted S_1, S_2, S_3 for Peirce's S', S'', S''', respectively.

JITL. Note 17

| Chapter 11.  On Logical Breadth and Depth (cont.)
|
| By the "informed depth" of a term I mean all the real characters in
| contradistinction to mere synonimous names which can be predicated of
| it with logical truth in the supposed state of information no character
| being counted twice over knowingly.  The depth like the breadth will be
| certainly doubtful and there is a comprehensive distinctness corresponding
| to extensive distinctness.
|
| The informed breadth and depth suppose a state of information which lies
| somewhere between two imaginary extremes.  There are first the state of
| knowledge in which no fact should be known but only the meanings of terms
| and, second, the state of information in which every fact should be known.
| This suggests two other sorts of breadth and depth corresponding to the two
| essential states of information which I shall term accordingly the essential
| and the substantial breadth and depth.
|
| The essential depth of a term which is sometimes called
| its essence consists of the really conceivable qualities
| predicated of it in its definition.  This is one of the
| most important features of logic.
|
| Suppose the definition of the term T be this:  "In T is at once
| P_1, P_2, and P_3".  This sums up the whole meaning of T.  It may
| not be known that there is no such thing as P_1 and therefore the
| meaning of T does not imply its existence.  On the other hand we
| must know that P_1, P_2, and P_3 are neither of them coextensive
| with the whole conception of being for we know the qualities of
| things only by comparison with their opposites hence we must
| know that there is something which is not P_1 and that this
| is not T, that there is something which is not P_2 and that
| this is not T, and that there is something which is not P_3
| and that this is not T.
|
| Accordingly if we define the essential breadth of a term as "those real things
| of which according to its every meaning a term is predicable" then "not T" has
| an essential breadth that is to say its very meaning implies that there are
| things of which it is predicable.  Thus T is a term which has essential depth
| but no essential breadth -- "not T" is a term which has essential breadth
| but not essential depth and all terms may be divided into two classes,
| the "essential positive" and "essential negative", the former having
| essential depth but not essential breadth, the latter having essential
| breadth but not essential depth.  There are some terms which are
| affirmative in form but which according to this definition are
| essentially negative and vice versa.  As examples of this we
| may allude particularly to the terms "being" and "nothing"
| both of which are terms of second intention.
|
| As every term has breadth and the breadth of one term is greater
| than that of another we may conceive of a term the breadth of
| which includes that of every other other term so that it is
| predicable of anything whatever.  This is the definition
| of the term "being".  Its definition therefore gives it
| breadth but not depth and accordingly it is essentially
| negative.
|
| We may also conceive of a term whose depth includes the depth of all
| other terms so that anything whatever may be predicated of it without
| any falsity and this is the definition of the term "nothing".  For you
| may say what you please of nothing and if it is clearly understood that
| what you speak of has no existence there is no falsity in what you assert
| because you have not made any assertion whatever.  "Nothing" therefore is
| a term which has essential depth without any breadth and is according to
| our definition essentially affirmative.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 100-101
|
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873,
| Chapter 11 from ["Toward a Logic Book, 1872-1873"], pp. 14-108 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Vol. 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

NB.  I have substituted P_1, P_2, P_3 for Peirce's P', P'', P''', respectively.

JITL. Note 18

| Chapter 11.  On Logical Breadth and Depth (concl.)
|
| If two terms have the same essential breadth or the same essential depth
| logic recognizes no distinction between them.  They are synonimous.  They
| may differ rhetorically.  One of these words may be associated in our minds
| with certain feelings with which the other is not associated but logic has
| nothing to do with such distinctions.  But two terms may be indistinctly
| conceived so that it is not known whether they have the same essential
| breadth and depth or not and in this case the distinction must be
| admitted even in logic.
|
| We now come to the "substantial breadth and depth".
| The substantial breadth is the aggregate of real
| substance of which alone a term is predicable
| with absolute truth.  Substantial depth is
| the real character as it exists in the
| object, which belongs to every thing
| of which a term is predicable with
| absolute truth.
|
| C.S. Peirce, 'Chronological Edition', CE 3, 101-102
|
| C.S. Peirce, "On Logical Breadth and Depth", MS 233, Spring 1873,
| Chapter 11 from ["Toward a Logic Book, 1872-1873"], pp. 14-108 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Vol. 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

NEKS. New Elements • Kaina Stoicheia

NEKS. Note 1


| I now proceed to explain the difference between a theoretical
| and a practical proposition, together with the two important
| parallel distinctions between 'definite' and 'vague', and
| 'individual' and 'general', noting, at the same time,
| some other distinctions connected with these.
|
| A 'sign' is connected with the "Truth", i.e. the entire Universe
| of being, or, as some say, the Absolute, in three distinct ways.
|
| In the first place, a sign is not a real thing.
| It is of such a nature as to exist in 'replicas'.
| Look down a printed page, and every 'the' you see
| is the same word, every 'e' the same letter.  A real
| thing does not so exist in replica.  The being of a
| sign is merely 'being represented'.  Now 'really being'
| and 'being represented' are very different.  Giving to
| the word 'sign' the full scope that reasonably belongs
| to it for logical purposes, a whole book is a sign;  and
| a translation of it is a replica of the same sign.  A whole
| literature is a sign.  The sentence "Roxana was the queen of
| Alexander" is a sign of Roxana and of Alexander, and though
| there is a grammatical emphasis on the former, logically the
| name "Alexander" is as much 'a subject' as is the name "Roxana";
| and the real persons Roxana and Alexander are 'real objects' of
| the sign.
|
| Every sign that is sufficiently complete refers refers to sundry
| real objects.  All these objects, even if we are talking of Hamlet's
| madness, are parts of one and the same Universe of being, the "Truth".
| But so far as the "Truth" is merely the 'object' of a sign, it is merely
| the Aristotelian 'Matter' of it that is so.
|
| In addition however to 'denoting' objects every
| sign sufficiently complete 'signifies characters',
| or qualities.
|
| We have a direct knowledge of real objects in every
| experiential reaction, whether of 'Perception' or of
| 'Exertion' (the one theoretical, the other practical).
| These are directly 'hic et nunc'.  But we extend the
| category, and speak of numberless real objects with
| which we are not in direct reaction.
|
| We have also direct knowledge of qualities in feeling,
| peripheral and visceral.  But we extend this category
| to numberless characters of which we have no immediate
| consciousness.
|
| All these characters are elements of the "Truth".
| Every sign signifies the "Truth".  But it is only
| the Aristotelian 'Form' of the universe that it
| signifies.
| 
| The logician is not concerned with any metaphysical
| theory;  still less, if possible, is the mathematician.
| But it is highly convenient to express ourselves in terms
| of a metaphysical theory;  and we no more bind ourselves to
| an acceptance of it than we do when we use substantives such
| as "humanity", "variety", etc. and speak of them as if they
| were substances, in the metaphysical sense.
|
| But, in the third place, every sign is intended to determine a
| sign of the same object with the same signification or 'meaning'.
| Any sign, 'B', which a sign, 'A', is fitted so to determine, without
| violation of its, 'A's, purpose, that is, in accordance with the "Truth",
| even though it, 'B', denotes but a part of the objects of the sign, 'A', and
| signifies but a part of its, 'A's, characters, I call an 'interpretant' of 'A'.
|
| What we call a "fact" is something having the structure of a proposition,
| but supposed to be an element of the very universe itself.  The purpose
| of every sign is to express "fact", and by being joined with other signs,
| to approach as nearly as possible to determining an interpretant which
| would be the 'perfect Truth', the absolute Truth, and as such (at least,
| we may use this language) would be the very Universe.
|
| Aristotle gropes for a conception of perfection, or 'entelechy',
| which he never succeeds in making clear.  We may adopt the word
| to mean the very fact, that is, the ideal sign which should be
| quite perfect, and so identical, -- in such identity as a sign
| may have, -- with the very matter denoted united with the very
| form signified by it.  The entelechy of the Universe of being,
| then, the Universe 'qua' fact, will be that Universe in its
| aspect as a sign, the "Truth" of being.  The "Truth", the
| fact that is not abstracted but complete, is the ultimate
| interpretant of every sign.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 238-240
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 2


| Of the two great tasks of humanity, 'Theory' and 'Practice', the former sets out
| from a sign of a real object with which it is 'acquainted', passing from this,
| as its 'matter', to successive interpretants embodying more and more fully its
| 'form', wishing ultimately to reach a direct 'perception' of the entelechy;
| while the latter, setting out from a sign signifying a character of which it
| 'has an idea', passes from this, as its 'form', to successive interpretants
| realizing more and more precisely its 'matter', hoping ultimately to be able
| to make a direct 'effort', producing the entelechy.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 240
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 3


| But of these two movements, logic very properly
| prefers to take that of Theory as the primary one.
|
| It speaks of an 'antecedent' as that which being known something else,
| the 'consequent' may 'also' be known.  In our vernacular, the latter
| is inaccurately called a 'consequence', a word that the precise
| terminology of logic reserves for the proposition expressing
| the relation of any consequent to its antecedent, or for
| the fact which this proposition expresses.
|
| The conception of the relation of antecedent and consequent amounts,
| therefore, to a confusion of thought between the reference of a sign
| to its 'meaning', the character which it attributes to its object,
| and its appeal to an interpretant.  But it is the former of these
| which is the more essential.
|
| The knowledge that the sun has always risen about once in each
| 24 hours (sidereal time) is a sign whose object is the sun, and
| (rightly understood) a part of its signification is the rising of
| the sun tomorrow morning.
|
| The relation of an antecedent to its consequent, in its confusion of
| the signification with the interpretent, is nothing but a special case
| of what occurs in all action of one thing upon another, modified so as to
| be merely an affair of being represented instead of really being.  It is the
| representative action of the sign upon its object.  For whenever one thing acts
| upon another it determines in that other a quality that would not otherwise have
| been there.
|
| In the vernacular we often call an effect a "consequence",
| because that which really is may correctly be represented;
| but we should refuse to call a mere logical consequent
| an "effect", because that which is merely represented,
| however legitimately, cannot be said really to be.
|
| If we speak of an argumentation as "producing a great effect",
| it is not the interpretant itself, by any means, to which we
| refer, but only the particular replica of it which is made
| in the minds of those addressed.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 240
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 4


| If a sign, 'B', only signifies characters that
| are elements (or the whole) of the meaning of
| another sign, 'A', then 'B' is said to be a
| 'predicate' (or 'essential part') of 'A'.
|
| If a sign 'A', only denotes real objects that
| are a part or the whole of the objects denoted
| by another sign, 'B', then 'A' is said to be a
| 'subject' (or 'substantial part') of 'B'.
|
| The totality of the predicates of a sign, and also the totality of the
| characters it signifies, are indifferently each called its logical 'depth'.
| This is the oldest and most convenient term.  Synonyms are the 'comprehension'
| of the Port-Royalists, the 'content' ('Inhalt') of the Germans, the 'force'
| of DeMorgan, the 'connotation' of J.S. Mill.  (The last is objectionable.)
|
| The totality of the subjects, and also, indifferently, the totality of the
| real objects of a sign is called the logical 'breadth'.  This is the oldest
| and most convenient term.  Synonyms are the 'extension' of the Port-Royalists
| (ill-called 'extent' by some modern French logicians), the 'sphere' ('Umfang')
| of translators from the German, the 'scope' of DeMorgan, the 'denotation' of
| J.S. Mill.
|
| Besides the logical depth and breadth, I have proposed (in 1867) the terms
| 'information' and 'area' to denote the total of fact (true or false) that
| in a given state of knowledge a sign embodies.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 241
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 5


In our reading of the parts of the "Kaina Stoicheia" that take up --
or take off from -- the subject of "Theory and Practice", we have
covered this much:

KS 1.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003063.html -- NEM 4, 238-240
KS 2.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003065.html -- NEM 4, 240
KS 3.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003075.html   -- NEM 4, 240
KS 4.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003090.html   -- NEM 4, 241

We continue with that reading here:

| Other distinctions depend upon those that we have drawn.
|
| I have spoken of real relations as reactions.  It may be asked how far I
| mean to say that all real relations are reactions.  It is seldom that one
| falls upon so fascinating a subject for a train of thought [as] the analysis
| of that problem in all its ramifications, mathematical, physical, biological,
| sociological, psychological, logical, and so round to the mathematical again.
|
| The answer cannot be satisfactorily given in a few words;  but it lies hidden
| beneath the obvious truth that any exact necessity is expressible by a general
| equation;  and nothing can be added to one side of a general equation without
| an equal addition to the other.  Logical necessity is the necessity that a sign
| should be true to a 'real' object;  and therefore there is 'logical' reaction in
| every real dyadic relation.  If 'A' is in a real relation to 'B', 'B' stands in
| a logically contrary relation to 'A', that is, in a relation at once converse to
| and inconsistent with the direct relation.  For here we speak [not] of a vague
| sign of the relation but of the relation between two individuals, 'A' and 'B'.
|
| This very relation is one in which 'A' alone stands to any individual,
| and it to 'B' only.  There are, however, 'degenerate' dyadic relations, --
| 'degenerate' in the sense in which two coplanar lines form a 'degenerate'
| conic, -- where this is not true.  Namely, they are individual relations
| of identity, such as the relation of 'A' to 'A'.  All mere resemblances
| and relations of reason are of this sort.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 241
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 6


| Of signs there are two different degenerate forms.
| But though I give them this disparaging name, they
| are of the greatest utility, and serve purposes that
| genuine signs could not.
|
| The more degenerate of the two forms (as I look upon it)
| is the 'icon'.  This is defined as a sign of which the
| character that fits it to become a sign of the sort
| that it is, is simply inherent in it as a quality
| of it.
|
| For example, a geometrical figure drawn on paper may
| be an 'icon' of a triangle or other geometrical form.
|
| If one meets a man whose language one does not know
| and resorts to imitative sounds and gestures, these
| approach the character of an icon.  The reason they
| are not pure icons is that the purpose of them is
| emphasized.
|
| A pure icon is independent of any purpose.  It serves as a sign
| solely and simply by exhibiting the quality it serves to signify.
| The relation to its object is a degenerate relation.  It asserts
| nothing.  If it conveys information, it is only in the sense in
| which the object that it is used to represent may be said to
| convey information.  An 'icon' can only be a fragment of
| a completer sign.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 241-242
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 7


| The other form of degenerate sign is to be termed an 'index'.
| It is defined as a sign which is fit to serve as such by
| virtue of being in a real reaction with its object.
|
| For example, a weather-cock is such a sign.  It is fit to
| be taken as an index of the wind for the reason that it is
| physically connected with the wind.  A weather-cock conveys
| information;  but this it does because in facing the very
| quarter from which the wind blows, it resembles the wind
| in this respect, and thus has an icon connected with it.
| In this respect it is not a pure index.
|
| A pure index simply forces attention to the object
| with which it reacts and puts the interpreter into
| mediate reaction with that object, but conveys no
| information.
|
| As an example, take an exclamation "Oh!"
|
| The letters attached to a geometrical figure are another case.
|
| Absolutely unexceptionable examples of degenerate forms must not be expected.
| All that is possible is to give examples which tend sufficiently in towards
| those forms to make the mean suggest what is meant.
|
| It is remarkable that while neither a pure icon nor a pure index
| can assert anything, an index which forces something to be an 'icon',
| as a weather-cock does, or which forces us to regard it as an 'icon',
| as the legend under a portrait does, does make an assertion, and forms
| a 'proposition'.  This suggests the true definition of a proposition,
| which is a question in much dispute at this moment.  A proposition
| is a sign which separately, or independently, indicates its object.
|
| No 'index', however, can be an 'argumentation'.  It may be what many
| writers call an 'argument;  that is, a basis of argumentation;  but an
| argument in the sense of a sign which separately shows what interpretant
| it is intended to determine it cannot be.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 242
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 8


| It will be observed that the icon is very perfect in respect
| to signification, bringing its interpreter face to face with
| the very character signified.  For this reason, it is the
| mathematical sign 'par excellence'.  But in denotation it
| is wanting.  It gives no assurance that any such object
| as it represents really exists.
|
| The index on the other hand does this most perfectly,
| actually bringing to the interpreter the experience
| of the very object denoted.  But it is quite wanting
| in signification unless it involves an iconic part.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 242-243
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 9


| We now come to the genuine sign for which I propose the
| technical designation 'symbol', following a use of that
| word not infrequent among logicians including Aristotle.
|
| A symbol is defined as a sign which is fit to serve
| as such simply because it will be so interpreted.
|
| To recapitulate:
|
|               )                                          ( it possesses
|    An icon    }                                          ( the quality
|               )                                          ( signified.
|               )                                          (
|               )                                          ( it is in real
|               )                                          ( reaction
|    An index   > is a sign fit to be used as such because < with the
|               )                                          ( object
|               )                                          ( denoted.
|               )                                          (
|               )                                          ( it determines
|    A symbol   )                                          ( the interpretant
|               )                                          ( sign.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 243
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 10


| Language and all abstracted thinking, such as belongs
| to minds who think in words, is of the symbolic nature.
|
| Many words, though strictly symbols, are so far iconic that they are apt
| to determine iconic interpretants, or as we say, to call up lively images.
| Such, for example, are those that have a fancied resemblance to sounds
| associated with their objects;  that are 'onomatopoetic', as they say.
|
| There are words, which although symbols, act very much like indices.
| Such are personal, demonstrative, and relative pronouns, for which
| 'A', 'B', 'C', etc. are often substituted.
|
| A 'Proper Name', also, which denotes a single individual well known
| to exist by the utterer and interpreter, differs from an index only
| in that it is a conventional sign.
|
| Other words refer indirectly to indices.  Such is "yard"
| which refers to a certain bar in Westminster, and has no
| meaning unless the interpreter is, directly or indirectly,
| in physical reaction with that bar.
|
| Symbols are particularly remote from the Truth itself.  They are abstracted.
| They neither exhibit the very characters signified as icons do, nor assure us
| of the reality of their objects, as indices do.  Many proverbial sayings express
| a sense of this weakness;  as "Words prove nothing", and the like.  Nevertheless,
| they have a great power of which the degenerate signs are quite destitute.  They
| alone express laws.  Nor are they limited to this theoretical use.  They serve
| to bring about reasonableness and law.  The words 'justice' and 'truth', amid
| a world that habitually neglects these things and utterly derides the words,
| are nevertheless among the very greatest powers the world contains.  They
| create defenders and animate them with their strength.  This is not rhetoric
| or metaphor:  it is a great and solid fact of which it behooves a logician to
| take account.
|
| A symbol is the only kind of sign which can be an argumentation.*
|
|* I commonly call this an argument;  for nothing is more false historically
|  than to say that this word has not at all times been used in this sense.
|  Still, the longer word is a little more definite.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 243-244
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 11


| I have already defined an argument as a sign which separately monstrates
| what its intended interpretant is, and a proposition as a sign which
| separately indicates [what] its object is, and we have seen that
| the icon alone cannot be a proposition while the symbol alone
| can be an argument.
|
| That a sign cannot be an argument without being a proposition is shown
| by attempting to form such an argument.  "Tully, c'est-a-dire a Roman",
| evidently asserts that Tully is a Roman.  Why this is so is plain.  The
| interpretant is a sign which denotes that which the sign of which it is
| interpretant denotes.  But, being a symbol, or genuine sign, it has a
| signification and therefore it represents the object of the principal
| sign as possessing the characters that it, the interpretant, signifies.
|
| It will be observed that an argument is a symbol which separately
| monstrates (in any way) its 'purposed' interpretant.  Owing to
| a symbol being essentially a sign only by virtue of its being
| interpretable as such, the idea of a purpose is not entirely
| separable from it.  The symbol, by the very definition of it,
| has an interpretant in view.  Its very meaning is intended.
| Indeed, a purpose is precisely the interpretant of a symbol.
|
| But the conclusion of an argument is a specially
| monstrated interpretant, singled out from among
| the possible interpretants.  It is, therefore,
| of its nature single, although not necessarily
| simple.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 244
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 12


| If we erase from an argument every monstration of its special purpose,
| it becomes a proposition;  usually a copulate proposition, composed of
| several members whose mode of conjunction is of the kind expressed by
| "and", which the grammarians call a "copulative conjunction".
|
| If from a propositional symbol we erase one or more of the parts which
| separately denote its objects, the remainder is what is called a 'rhema';
| but I shall take the liberty of calling it a 'term'.
|
| Thus, from the proposition "Every man is mortal", we erase "Every man",
| which is shown to be denotative of an object by the circumstance that if
| it be replaced by an indexical symbol, such as "That" or "Socrates", the
| symbol is reconverted into a proposition, we get the 'rhema' or 'term':
|
|    " ___ is mortal".
|
| Most logicians will say that this is not a term.  The term,
| they will say, is "mortal", while I have left the copula "is"
| standing with it.  Now while it is true that one of Aristotle's
| memoirs dissects a proposition into subject, predicate, and verb,
| yet as long as Greek was the language which logicians had in view,
| no importance was attached to the substantive verb, "is", because
| the Greek permits it to be omitted.  It was not until the time of
| Abelard, when Greek was forgotten, and logicians had Latin in mind,
| that the copula was recognized as a constituent part of the logical
| proposition.
|
| I do not, for my part, regard the usages of language
| as forming a satisfactory basis for logical doctrine.
| Logic, for me, is the study of the essential conditions
| to which signs must conform in order to function as such.
| How the constitution of the human mind may compel men to
| think is not the question;  and the appeal to language
| appears to me to be no better than an unsatisfactory
| method of ascertaining psychological facts that are
| of no relevancy to logic.
|
| But if such appeal is to be made (and logicians generally
| do make it;  in particular their doctrine of the copula
| appears to rest solely upon this), it would seem that
| they ought to survey human languages generally and
| not confine themselves to the small and extremely
| peculiar group of Aryan speech.
|
| Without pretending, myself, to an extensive acquaintance with languages,
| I am confident that the majority of non-Aryan languages do not ordinarily
| employ any substantive verb equivalent to "is".  Some place a demonstrative
| or relative pronoun;  as if one should say:
|
|    " ___ is a man 'that' is translated"
|
| for "A man is translated".  Others have a word, syllable, or letter, to show
| that an assertion is intended.  I have been led to believe that in very few
| languages outside the Aryan group is the common noun a well-developed and
| independent part of speech.  Even in the Shemitic languages, which are
| remarkably similar to the Aryan, common nouns are treated as verbal
| forms and are quite separated from proper names.
|
| The ordinary view of a term, however, supposes it to be a common noun in
| the fullest sense of the term.  It is rather odd that of all the languages
| which I have examined in a search for some support of this ordinary view, so
| outlandish a speech as the Basque is the only one I have found that seems to
| be constructed thoroughly in the manner in which the logicians teach us that
| every rational being must think.*
|
|* While I am on the subject of languages I may take occasion to remark
|  with reference to my treatment of the direct and indirect "objects"
|  of a verb as so many subjects of the proposition, that about nine out
|  of every ten languages regularly emphasize one of the subjects, and
|  make it the principal one, by putting it in a special nominative case,
|  or by some equivalent device.  The ordinary logicians seem to think
|  that this, too, is a necessity of thought, although one of the living
|  Aryan languages of Europe habitually puts that subject in the genetive
|  which the Latin puts in the nominative.  This practice was very likely
|  borrowed from a language similar to the Basque spoken by some progenitors
|  of the Gaels.  Some languages employ what is, in effect, an ablative for
|  this purpose.  It no doubt is a rhetorical enrichment of a language to
|  have a form "B is loved by A" in addition to "A loves B".  The language
|  will be still richer if it has a third form in which A and B are treated
|  as equally the subjects of what is said.  But logically, the three are
|  identical.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 244-246
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 13


| What is the difference between " ___ is a man" and "man"?
| The logicians hold that the essence of the latter lies in
| a definition describing its characters;  which doctrine
| virtually makes "man" equivalent to "what is a man".
| It thus differs from " ___ is a man" by the addition*
| of the badly named "indefinite pronoun", 'what'.
| The rhema " ___ is a man" is a fragmentary sign.
| But "man" is never used alone, and would have no
| meaning by itself.  It is sometimes written upon
| an object to show the nature of that object;  but
| in such case, the appearance of the object is an
| index of that object;  and the two taken together
| form a proposition.  In respect to being fragmentary,
| therefore, the two signs are alike.  It may be said
| that "Socrates wise" does not make a sentence in the
| language at present used in logic, although in Greek
| it would.  But it is important not to forget that no
| more do "Socrates" and "is wise" make a proposition
| unless there is something to indicate that they are
| to be taken as signs of the same object.  On the
| whole, it appears to me that the only difference
| between my rhema and the "term" of other logicians
| is that the latter contains no explicit recognition
| of its own fragmentary nature.  But this is as much
| as to say that logically their meaning is the same;
| and it is for that reason that I venture to use the
| old, familiar word "term" to denote the rhema.
|
|* [Missing lines in NEM supplied from EP 2 at this point. -- JA]
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 246
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 14


| It may be asked what is the nature of the sign which joins "Socrates"
| to " ___ is wise", so as to make the proposition "Socrates is wise".
| I reply that it is an index.  But, it may be objected, an index
| has for its object a thing 'hic et nunc', while a sign is not
| such a thing.  This is true, if under "thing" we include
| singular events, which are the only things that are
| strictly 'hic et nunc'.
|
| But it is not the two signs "Socrates" and "wise" that are
| connected, but the 'replicas' of them used in the sentence.
| We do not say that " ___ is wise", as a general sign, is
| connected specially with Socrates, but only that it is so
| as here used.  The two replicas of the words "Socrates"
| and "wise" are 'hic et nunc', and their junction is a
| part of their occurrence 'hic et nunc'.  They form a
| pair of reacting things which the index of connection
| denotes in their present reaction, and not in a general
| way;  although it is possible to generalize the mode of
| this reaction like any other.
|
| There will be no objection to a generalization which shall call the mark
| of junction a 'copula', provided it be recognized that, in itself, it is
| not general, but is an 'index'.  No other kind of sign would answer the
| purpose;  no general verb "is" can express it.  For something would have
| to bring the general sense of that general verb down to the case in hand.
| An index alone can do this.
|
| But how is this index to signify* the connection?
| In the only way in which any index can ever
| signify* anything;  by involving an 'icon'.
| The sign itself is a connection.
|
| I shall be asked how this applies to Latin, where the parts of the sentence are
| arranged solely with a view to rhetorical effect.  I reply that, nevertheless,
| it is obvious that in Latin, as in every language, it is the juxtaposition
| which connects words.  Otherwise they might be left in their places in the
| dictionary.  Inflexion does a little;  but the main work of construction,
| the whole work of connexion, is performed by putting the words together.
|
| In Latin much is left to the good sense of the interpreter.
|
| That is to say, the common stock of knowledge of utterer and interpreter,
| called to mind by the words, is a part of the sign.  That is more or less
| the case in all conversation, oral and scriptal.  It is, thus, clear that
| the vital spark of every proposition, the peculiar propositional element
| of the proposition, is an indexical proposition;  an index involving an
| icon.  The rhema, say " ___ loves ___ ", has blanks which suggest filling;
| and a concrete actual connection of a subject with each blank monstrates
| the connection of ideas.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 246-247
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

* [NB by JA.  Recall that "signify" has a "connotative" connotation here:]

| In addition however to 'denoting' objects every
| sign sufficiently complete 'signifies characters',
| or qualities.
|
| NEM 4, 239.
| Cf: KS 1.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003063.html
| In: KS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3063

NEKS. Note 15


| It is the Proposition which forms the main subject
| of this whole scholium;  for the distinctions of
| 'vague' and 'distinct', 'general' and 'individual'
| are propositional distinctions.
|
| I have endeavored to restrain myself from long discussions of terminology.
| But here we reach a point where a very common terminology overlaps an
| erroneous conception.  Namely those logicians who follow the lead of
| Germans, instead of treating of propositions, speak of "judgments"
| ('Urtheile').  They regard a proposition as merely an expression in
| speech or writing of a judgment.  More than one error is involved in
| this practice.  In the first place, a judgment, as they very correctly
| teach, is a subject of psychology.  Since psychologists, now-a-days,
| not only renounce all pretension to knowledge of the 'soul', but also
| take pains to avoid talking of the 'mind', the latter is at present not
| a scientific term, at all;  and therefore I am not prepared to say that
| logic does not, as such, treat of the mind.  I should like to take mind
| in such a sense that this could be affirmed;  but in any sense in which
| psychology, -- the scientific psychology now recognized, -- treats of
| mind, logic, I maintain, has no concern with it.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 247-248
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 16


| Without stopping here to discuss this large question,
| I will say that psychology is a science which makes
| special observations;  and its whole business is
| to make the phenomena so observed (along with
| familiar facts allied to those things),
| definite and comprehensible.
|
| Logic is a science little removed from pure mathematics.
| It cannot be said to make any positive phenomena known,
| although it takes account and rests upon phenomena of
| daily and hourly experience, which it so analyzes as
| to bring out recondite truths about them.
|
| One might think that a pure mathematician might assume these
| things as an initial hypothesis and deduce logic from these;
| but this turns out, upon trial, not to be the case.
|
| The logician has to be recurring to reexamination of the
| phenomena all along the course of his investigations.
| But logic is all but as far remote from psychology
| as is pure mathematics.
|
| Logic is the study of the essential nature of signs.
|
| A sign is something that exists in replicas.  Whether the sign "it is raining"
| or "all pairs of particles of matter have component accelerations toward one
| another inversely proportional to the square of the distance" happens to have
| a replica in writing, in oral speech, or in silent thought, is a distinction
| of the very minutest interest to logic, which is a study, not of replicas,
| but of signs.
|
| But this is not the only, nor the most serious error involved in making logic
| treat of "judgments" in place of propositions.  It involves confounding two
| things which must be distinguished if a real comprehension of logic is to
| be attained.
|
| A 'proposition', as I have just intimated, is not to be understood as the
| lingual expression of a judgment.  It is, on the contrary, that sign of
| which the judgment is one replica and the lingual expression another.
| But a judgment is distinctly 'more' than the mere mental replica of
| a proposition.  It not merely 'expresses' the proposition, but it
| goes further and 'accepts' it.
|
| I grant that the normal use of a proposition is to affirm it;  and its
| chief logical properties relate to what would result in reference to its
| affirmation.  It is, therefore, convenient in logic to express propositions
| in most cases in the indicative mood.  But the proposition in the sentence,
| "Socrates est sapiens", strictly expressed, is "Socratem sapientum esse".
| The defence of this position is that in this way we distinguish between
| a proposition and the assertion of it;  and without such distinction it
| is impossible to get a distinct notion of the nature of the proposition.
|
| One and the same proposition may be affirmed, denied, judged,
| doubted, inwardly inquired into, put as a question, wished,
| asked for, effectively commanded, taught, or merely expressed,
| and does not thereby become a different proposition.  What is
| the nature of these operations?  The only one that need detain
| us is affirmation, including judgment, or affirmation to oneself.
|
| As an aid in dissecting the constitution of affirmation I shall employ
| a certain logical magnifying-glass that I have often found efficient
| in such business.  Imagine, then, that I write a proposition on a
| piece of paper, perhaps a number of times, simply as a calligraphic
| exercise.  It is not likely to prove a dangerous amusement.  But
| suppose I afterwards carry the paper before a notary public and
| make affidavit to its contents.  That may prove to be a horse
| of another color.  The reason is that this affidavit may be
| used to determine an assent to the proposition it contains
| in the minds of judge and jury; -- an effect that the paper
| would not have had if I had not sworn to it.  For certain
| penalties here and hereafter are attached to swearing to
| a false proposition;  and consequently the fact that
| I have sworn to it will be taken as a negative index
| that it is not false.  This assent in judge and jury's
| minds may effect in the minds of sheriff and posse a
| determination to an act of force to the detriment of
| some innocent man's liberty or property.  Now certain
| ideas of justice and good order are so powerful that
| the ultimate result may be very bad for me.
|
| This is the way that affirmation looks under the microscope;  for the only
| difference between swearing to a proposition and an ordinary affirmation of
| it, such as logic contemplates, is that in the latter case the penalties
| are less and even less certain than those of the law.  The reason there
| are any penalties is, as before, that the affirmation may determine a
| judgment to the same effect in the mind of the interpreter to his cost.
| It cannot be that the sole cause of his believing it is that there are
| such penalties, since two events cannot cause one another, unless they
| are simultaneous.  There must have been, and we well know that there is,
| a sort of hypnotic disposition to believe what one is told with an air [of]
| command.  It is Grimes's credenciveness, which is the essence of hypnotism.
| This disposition produced belief;  belief produced the penalties;  and the
| knowledge of these strengthens the disposition to believe.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 248-249
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 17


| I have discussed the nature of belief
| in the 'Popular Science Monthly' for
| November 1877.  On the whole, we may
| set down the following definitions:
|
| A 'belief' in a proposition is a controlled and contented habit of
| acting in ways that will be productive of desired results only if
| the proposition is true.
|
| An 'affirmation' is an act of an utterer of a proposition to an interpreter,
| and consists, in the first place, in the deliberate exercise, in uttering
| the proposition, of a force tending to determine a belief in it in the
| mind of the interpreter.  Perhaps that is a sufficient definition of it;
| but it involves also a voluntary self-subjection to penalties in the
| event of the interpreter's mind (and still more the general mind of
| society) subsequently becoming decidedly determined to the belief
| at once in the falsity of the proposition and in the additional
| proposition that the utterer believed the proposition to be
| false at that time he uttered it.
|
| A 'judgment' is a mental act deliberately exercising a force tending to
| determine in the mind of the agent a belief in the proposition:  to which
| should perhaps be added that the agent must be aware of his being liable
| to inconvenience in the event of the proposition's proving false in any
| practical aspect.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 249-250
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 18


| In order fully to understand the distinction between a proposition and an argument,
| it will be found important to class these acts, affirmation, etc. and ascertain
| their precise nature.  The question is a purely logical one;  but it happens
| that a false metaphysics is generally current, especially among men who
| are influenced by physics but yet are not physicists enough fully to
| comprehend physics, which metaphysics would disincline those who
| believe in it from readily accepting the purely logical statement
| of the nature of affirmation.  I shall therefore be forced to
| touch upon metaphysics.  Yet I refuse to enter here upon
| a metaphysical discussion;  I shall merely hint at what
| ground it is necessary to take in opposition to
| a common doctrine of that kind.
|
| Affirmation is of the nature of a symbol.
| It will be thought that this cannot be
| the case since an affirmation, as the
| above analysis shows, produces real
| effects, physical effects.  No sign,
| however, is a real thing.  It has no
| real being, but only being represented.
|
| I might more easily persuade readers to think that affirmation was
| an index, since an index is, perhaps, a real thing.  Its replica,
| at any rate, is in real reaction with its object, and it forces
| a reference to that object upon the mind.  But a symbol, a word,
| certainly exists only in replica, contrary to the nature of
| a real thing;  and indeed the symbol only becomes a sign
| because because its interpreter happens to be prepared
| to represent it as such.  Hence, I must and do admit
| that a symbol cannot exert any real force.  Still,
| I maintain that every sufficiently complete symbol
| governs things, and that symbols alone do this.
| I mean that though it is not a force, it is
| a law.
|
| Now those who regard the false metaphysics
| of which I speak as the only clear opinion
| on its subject are in the habit of calling
| laws "uniformities", meaning that what we
| call laws are, in fact, nothing but common
| characters of classes of events.  It is
| true that they hold that they are symbols,
| as I shall endeavor to show that they are;
| but this is to their minds equivalent to
| saying that they are common characters
| of events;  for they entertain a very
| different conception of the nature of
| a symbol from mine.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 250
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 19


| I begin, then, by showing that a law is
| not a mere common character of events.
|
| Suppose that a man throwing a pair of dice, which were
| all that honest dice are supposed to be, were to throw
| sixes a hundred times running.  Every mathematician will
| admit that that would be no ground for expecting the next
| throw to turn up sixes.  It is true that in any actual case
| in which we should see sixes thrown a hundred times running we
| should very rightly be confident that the next throw would turn up
| sixes likewise.  But why should we do so?  Can anybody sincerely deny
| that it would be because we should think the throwing of a hundred
| successive sixes was an almost infallible indication of there
| being some real connection between those throws, so that the
| series not merely a uniformity in the common character of
| turning up sixes, but something more, a result of a real
| circumstance about the dice connecting the throws?
|
| This example illustrates the logical principle that mere community of
| character between the members of a collection is no argument, however
| slender, tending to show that the same character belongs to another
| object not a member of that collection and not (as far as we have
| any reason to think) having any real connection with it, unless
| perchance it be in having the character in question.  For the
| usual supposition that we make about honest dice is that there
| will be no real connection (or none of the least significance)
| between their different throws.  I know that writer has copied
| writer in the feeble analysis of chance as consisting in our
| ignorance.  But the calculus of probabilities is pure nonsense
| unless it affords assurance in the long run.  Now what assurance
| could there be concerning a long run of throws of a pair of dice,
| if, instead of knowing they were honest dice, we merely did not
| know whether they were or not, or if, instead of knowing that
| there would be no important connection between the throws,
| we merely did not know that there would be.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 250-251
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 20


| That certain objects 'A', 'B', 'C', etc. are known to have
| a certain character is not the slightest reason for supposing
| that another object [Xi], quite unconnected with the others so
| far as we know, has that character.  Nor has this self evident
| proposition ever been denied.  A "law", however, is taken very
| rightly by everybody to be a reason for predicting that an event
| will have a certain character although the events known to have
| that character have no other real connection with it than the law.
|
| This shows that the law is not a mere uniformity but involves a real connection.
| It is true that those metaphysicians say that if 'A', 'B', 'C', etc. are known
| to have two common characters and [Xi] is known to have one of these, this is
| a reason for believing that it has the other.  But this is quite untenable.
| Merely having a common character does not constitute a real connection;
| and those very writers virtually acknowledge this, in reducing law to
| uniformity, that is, to the possession of a common character, as a
| way of denying that "law" implies any real connection.
|
| What is a law, then?  It is a formula to which real events truly conform.
| By "conform", I mean that, taking the formula as a general principle,
| if experience shows that the formula applies to a given event, then
| the result will be confirmed by experience.  But that such a general
| formula is a symbol, and more particularly, an asserted symbolical
| proposition, is evident.  Whether or not this symbol is a reality,
| even if not recognized by you or me or any generations of men, and
| whether, if so, it implies an Utterer, are metaphysical questions
| into which I will not now enter.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 251-252
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 21


| One distinguished writer seems to hold that, although events
| conform to the formula, or rather, although it conforms to the
| Truth of facts, yet it does not influence the facts.  This comes
| perilously near to being pure verbiage;  for, seeing that nobody
| pretends that the formula exerts a compulsive force on the events,
| what definite meaning can attach to this emphatic denial of the
| law's influencing the facts?  The law had such mode of being as
| it ever has before all the facts had come into existence, for it
| might already be experientially known;  and then the law existing,
| when the facts happen there is agreement between them and the law.
|
| What is it, then, that this writer has in mind?  If it were not
| for the extraordinary misconception of the word "cause" by Mill,
| I should say that the idea of metaphysical sequence implied in that
| word, in "influence", and in other similar words was perfectly clear.
| Mill's singularity is that he speaks of the cause of a singular event.
| Everybody else speaks of the cause of a "fact", which is an element of
| the event.  But, with Mill, it is the event in its entirety which is
| caused.  The consequence is that Mill is obliged to define the cause
| as the totality of all the circumstances attending the event.  This is,
| strictly speaking, the Universe of being in its totality.  But any event,
| just as it exists, in its entirety, is nothing else but the same Universe
| of being in its totality.  It strictly follows, therefore, from Mill's use
| of the words, that the only 'causatum' is the entire Universe of being and
| that its only cause is itself.  He thus deprives the word of all utility.
|
| As everybody else but Mill and his school more or less clearly
| understands the word, it is a highly useful one.  That which
| is caused, the 'causatum', is, not the entire event, but
| such abstracted element of an event as is expressible
| in a proposition, or what we call a "fact".  The cause
| is another "fact".  Namely, it is, in the first place,
| a fact which could, within the range of possibility,
| have its being without the being of the 'causatum';
| but, secondly, it could not be a real fact while
| a certain third complementary fact, expressed
| or understood, was realized, without the being
| of the causatum;  and thirdly, although the
| actually realized causatum might perhaps be
| realized by other causes or by accident,
| yet the existence of the entire possible
| causatum could not be realized without
| the cause in question.
|
| It may be added that a part of a cause, if a part in
| that respect in which the cause is a cause, is also
| called a 'cause'.  In other respects, too, the scope
| of the word will be somewhat widened in the sequel.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 252
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 22


| If the cause so defined is a part of the causatum, in the sense that
| the causatum could not logically be without the cause, it is called
| an 'internal cause';  otherwise, it is called an 'external cause'.
|
| If the cause is of the nature of an individual thing or fact,
| and the other factor requisite to the necessitation of the
| 'causatum' is a general principle, I would call the cause
| a 'minor', or 'individuating', or perhaps a 'physical cause'.
|
| If, on the other hand, it is the general principle which is
| regarded as the cause and the individual fact to which it is
| applied is taken as the understood factor, I would call the
| cause a 'major', or 'defining', or perhaps a 'psychical cause'.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 252-253
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 23


| The individuating internal cause is called the 'material cause'.
| Thus the integrant parts of a subject or fact form its 'matter',
| or material cause.
|
| The individuating external cause is called the 'efficient',
| or 'efficient cause';  and the causatum is called the 'effect'.
|
| The defining internal cause is called the 'formal' cause,
| or 'form'.  All those facts which constitute the definition
| of a subject or fact make up its form.
|
| The defining external cause is called the 'final cause',
| or 'end'.
|
| It is hoped that these statements will be found to hit
| a little more squarely than did those of Aristotle and
| the scholastics the same bull's eye at which they aimed.
| From scholasticism and the medieval universities, these
| conceptions passed in vaguer form into the common mind
| and vernacular of Western Europe, and especially so in
| England.
|
| Consequently by the aid of these definitions I think
| I can make out what it is that the writer mentioned
| has in mind in saying that it is not the law which
| influences, or is the final cause of, the facts,
| but the facts that make up the cause of the law.
|
| He means that the general fact which the law of gravitation
| expresses is composed of the special facts that this stone at
| such a time fell to the ground as soon as it was free to do so
| and its upward velocity was exhausted, that each other stone did
| the same, that each planet at each moment was describing an ellipse
| having the centre of mass of the solar system at a focus, etc. etc.;
| so that the individual facts are the material cause of the general fact
| expressed by the law;  while the propositions expressing those facts are
| the efficient cause of the law itself.
|
| This is a possible meaning in harmony with the writer's sect of thought;
| and I believe it is his intended meaning.  But this is easily seen not
| to be true.  For the formula relates to all possible events of a given
| description;  which is the same as to say that it relates to all possible
| events.  Now no collection of actual individual events or other objects of
| any general description can amount to all possible events or objects of that
| description;  for it is possible that an addition should be made to that
| collection.  The individuals do not constitute the matter of a general;
| those who with Kant, or long before him, said that they do were wanting in
| the keen edge of thought requisite for such discussions.  On the contrary,
| the truth of the formula, its really being a sign of the indicated object,
| is the defining cause of the agreement of the individual facts with it.
|
| Namely, this truth fulfills the first condition, which is that it might
| logically be although there were no such agreement.  For it might be true,
| that is, contains no falsity, that whatever stone there might be on earth
| would have a real downward component [of] acceleration even although no stone
| actually existed on earth.  It fulfills the second condition, that as soon as the
| other factor (in this case the actual existence of each stone on earth) was present,
| the result of the formula, the real downward component of acceleration would exist.
| Finally, it fulfills the third condition, that while all existing stones might
| be accelerated downwards by other causes or by an accidental concurrence of
| circumstances, yet the downward acceleration of every possible stone would
| involve the truth of the formula.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 253-254
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. Note 24


...

| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 254
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

NEKS. New Elements • Kaina Stoicheia • Commentary

NEKS. Commentary Note 1


Here's one for all you Neo-Plots out there.
Rummaging about the web I find that the phrase
"Utter Indetermination" appears in the Enneads:

| Everything the Soul engenders down to this point comes into being shapeless,
| and takes form by orientation towards its author and supporter:  therefore
| the thing engendered on the further side can be no image of the Soul,
| since it is not even alive;  it must be an utter Indetermination.
|
| http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/plotenn/enn214.htm

Pretty scary ...

As I suspected, we'll probably end up hashing out the whole
KS/NE paper before we can get a clue what it's talking about.
Here's a sample of some previous encounters:

QUAGS.  Questions About Genuine Signs

00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/thread.html#268
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/thread.html#2926

01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002658.html
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002659.html
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002662.html
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002926.html

QUAGS.  Questions About Genuine Signs -- Commentary

00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/thread.html#2923
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002923.html
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002929.html
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002930.html
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002931.html
05.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002932.html

QUAGS.  Questions About Genuine Signs -- Discussion

00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/thread.html#2663
01.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002663.html
02.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002664.html
03.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002665.html
04.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002666.html
05.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002668.html
06.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002669.html
07.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002670.html

QUIPS.  Questions Involving Pure Symbols -- Discussion

00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/thread.html#2602
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-June/thread.html#2766
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-July/thread.html#2866
00.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/thread.html#2927
24.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002690.html
74.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002927.html

It looks like this'll be one of those "eternal return" type questions.
I just hope it won't be one of those "eternal repetition" type issues.

NEKS. Commentary Note 2


Let me try to bring some measure of concreteness to this discussion
of "various orders of determination or information" (VOODOI) and its
possible relation to "higher order propositional expressions" (HOPE's).
To keep things simple let's consider a discrete order of determinations
and put off worrying about a continuous order of determinations until we
have understood the discrete case well enough to deal with anything more.

Again for the sake of simplicity, let's start with a universe of discourse
that is constructed on the basis of just two predicates, let's say p and q.
Anything in this universe is determined with respect to these predicates by
saying whether p is true or false of it and whether q is true or false of it.

Thus we have the following four propositions of maximal determination:

   0.  (p)(q), meaning "not p and not q"

   1.  (p) q , meaning "not p and q"

   2.   p (q), meaning "p and not q"

   3.   p  q , meaning "p and q"

It's customary to refer to these 4 propositions as the "cells" of
the universe of discourse that is built on the predicates p and q.

If we don't know enough to determine a thing to the full extent that's
permitted by the predicates in this universe of discourse, then other
propositions, of less than maximal determination, may serve to say
how much we know about the thing in question.

For example, if we know that a thing is either p or q, but don't know
any more than that, then the proposition "p or q" pins it down to the
best of our knowledge.  Using only negation and conjunction, we have:

   ((p)(q))

As we know, there are 16 distinct propositions that we can make
about any given thing, relative to the given frame of reference.
These 16 propositions exhaust the variety of things that can be
said in the language that we will call the "zeroth order logic"
based on p and q.

Thus we can express an order of determination, or a lack thereof,
that hesitates or vacillates among any number of the four "cells"
of the universe of discourse in view.  That is all well and good,
but what if the order of our indetermination is not exactly that,
not to be measured by our vacillation among a subset of the above
four cells, but more like a state of indecision among some subset
of the 16 propositions, as if a hesitation among actual universes?

Next time we'll explore a way to express
the next higher order of indetermination,
or the next lower order of determination.

NEKS. Commentary Note 3


Re: KS 1.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003063.html
In: KS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3063

In the matter of Theory and Practice, Peirce begins by explaining the
difference between theoretical propositions and practical propositions,
which he couches in the terms of a semiotic or sign relational framework.
We come almost immediately to several problems of interpretation, coming
to a head in the following passage:

| In the first place, a sign is not a real thing.
| It is of such a nature as to exist in 'replicas'.
| Look down a printed page, and every 'the' you see
| is the same word, every 'e' the same letter.  A real
| thing does not so exist in replica.  The being of a
| sign is merely 'being represented'.  Now 'really being'
| and 'being represented' are very different.  Giving to
| the word 'sign' the full scope that reasonably belongs
| to it for logical purposes, a whole book is a sign;  and
| a translation of it is a replica of the same sign.  A whole
| literature is a sign.  The sentence "Roxana was the queen of
| Alexander" is a sign of Roxana and of Alexander, and though
| there is a grammatical emphasis on the former, logically the
| name "Alexander" is as much 'a subject' as is the name "Roxana";
| and the real persons Roxana and Alexander are 'real objects' of
| the sign.
|
| Every sign that is sufficiently complete refers refers to sundry
| real objects.  All these objects, even if we are talking of Hamlet's
| madness, are parts of one and the same Universe of being, the "Truth".
| But so far as the "Truth" is merely the 'object' of a sign, it is merely
| the Aristotelian 'Matter' of it that is so.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Kaina Stoicheia", NEM 4, 238-239
| Also appears in "New Elements", EP 2, 303-304

At first it seems obvious enough that the Peirce who says
"a sign is not a real thing" is not the Peirce who speaks
as a Platonic or Scholastic realist, but one is using the
phrases "real thing" and "real object" in accord with the
more streetwise values that they bear in mundane parlance,
however pre-reflective and pre-critical those uses may be.
We may have some difficulty extending this street meaning
to the case of Hamlet's madness, but the problem does not
seem insurmountable in itself, as all the groundlings wot.

Read this way, Peirce is simply pointing out the familiar dual use of
the word "sign" to refer to a very concrete thing and also to a very
abstract thing, the relationship between the two being more or less
well treated in terms of the token/type relation.  Here the tokens
or replicas are awarded the titular honor of a cave-internal sort
of reality, whereas in other lights, more cave-external, it'd be
the types or the equivalence classes of tokens that are said to
be the real realities.  I think most folks know the variations
on this theme, all independently of the particular words that
are used to play it out, so I think it's safe to proceed on
the grounds of that prior understanding.

NEKS. Commentary Note 4


Re: KS-COM 2.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003067.html
In: KS-COM.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3066

To save a few words in the remainder of this discussion, let's notate
the "universe of discourse based on the predicates p and q" as [p, q].
The universe [p, q] is layed down in two layers:

   1.  There is the set of 4 cells, that may be enumerated in terms of the
       basic propositions that describe them as {(p)(q), (p) q, p (q), p q},
       a set that it will be convenient to notate as <<p, q>>.  Considered
       in regard to its abstract type, <<p, q>> has the type of B^2 = B x B.

   2.  There is the set of 16 propositions on <<p, q>>, notated as <<p, q>>^.
       Each of these propositions is a function of the form f : <<p, q>> -> B.
       Thus the space of propositions <<p, q>>^ has the abstract type B^2 -> B.

In the notation just introduced we can say that [p, q] = {<<p, q>>, <<p, q>>^}.

It is important to note that each of the 4 cells in <<p, q>> corresponds so
uniquely to a proposition in <<p, q>>^ = <<p, q>> -> B that we shall seldom
bother to distinguish between them.

The most that we can pin down a thing in the universe [p, q] is by
giving one of the basic propositions, cells, or points in <<p, q>>.
When we find ourselves less certain than that, we can describe our
state of information about a thing by stating any one of the other
propositions in <<p, q>>^.

The thing to notice here is that the step to a lower order of determination
is associated with a passage from a space of points X, in this case <<p, q>>,
to a space of functions X -> B, in the present case <<p, q>>^ = <<p, q>> -> B.

This is the sort of step that we will iterate in order to reach
ever lower orders of determination, or to put it the other way,
ever higher orders of vacillation.

NEKS. Commentary Note 5


The venn diagram shown below presents a familiar way of picturing
the universe of discourse [p, q].  The propositional expressions
inscribed in the cells represent the four elements of <<p, q>>.
The 16 propositions of the form <<p, q>> -> B can be pictured
as all the ways of shading the cells of the diagram, given
the two colors that correspond to the boolean values in B.
One observes that 4 cells shaded in 2 colors produces
2^4 = 16 different patterns altogether.

o-------------------------------------------------o
| ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` |
| ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` |
| ` ` ` ` `o-----------o` `o-----------o` ` ` ` ` |
| ` ` ` ` / ` ` ` ` ` ` \ / ` ` ` ` ` ` \ ` ` ` ` |
| ` ` ` `/` ` ` ` ` ` ` `o` ` ` ` ` ` ` `\` ` ` ` |
| ` ` ` / ` ` ` ` ` ` ` / \ ` ` ` ` ` ` ` \ ` ` ` |
| ` ` `/` ` ` ` ` ` ` `/` `\` ` ` ` ` ` ` `\` ` ` |
| ` ` o ` ` ` ` ` ` ` o ` ` o ` ` ` ` ` ` ` o ` ` |
| ` ` | ` ` ` ` ` ` ` | ` ` | ` ` ` ` ` ` ` | ` ` |
| ` ` | ` ` p (q) ` ` | p q | ` ` (p) q ` ` | ` ` |
| ` ` | ` ` ` ` ` ` ` | ` ` | ` ` ` ` ` ` ` | ` ` |
| ` ` o ` ` ` ` ` ` ` o ` ` o ` ` ` ` ` ` ` o ` ` |
| ` ` `\` ` ` ` ` ` ` `\` `/` ` ` ` ` ` ` `/` ` ` |
| ` ` ` \ ` ` ` ` ` ` ` \ / ` ` ` ` ` ` ` / ` ` ` |
| ` ` ` `\` ` ` ` ` ` ` `o` ` ` ` ` ` ` `/` ` ` ` |
| ` ` ` ` \ ` ` ` ` ` ` / \ ` ` ` ` ` ` / ` ` ` ` |
| ` ` ` ` `o-----------o` `o-----------o` ` ` ` ` |
| ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` |
| ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` (p) (q) ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` |
| ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` ` |
o-------------------------------------------------o

Each way of coloring the universe of discourse [p, q]
may be thought of as an actual state of that universe
or a contingent realization of its inherent potential.
This is just another way of interpreting the abstract
elements of <<p, q>> -> B, which can now be conceived
as "possible universes" of type [p, q].

Suppose we walk into the gallery of possible universes of type [p, q]
and find ourselves in a condition of indeterminate choice that ranges
over a particular subset of the 16 possible pictures.  There are just
2^16 subsets of 16 things, in this case corresponding to the space of
propositions of type (<<p, q>> -> B) -> B, which are naturally enough
referred to as "higher order propositions" since they can be regarded
as propositions about propositions.

This brings us to the verge of the next higher order of indetermination.

NEKS. Commentary Note 6


When Peirce starts talking about Aristotle's concept of entelechy
it brings to mind some of the issues that I was wrestling with in
my work on "Inquiry Driven Systems" or the "Inquiry Into Inquiry",
some of which is recorded at the Arisbe website, and some further
explorations of which are serialized at my Inquiry Archive.  Here
is a pertinent selection:

Cf: IDS 114.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2004-May/001553.html
Cf: IDS 115.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2004-May/001554.html
Cf: IDS 116.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2004-May/001555.html
In: IDS.      http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2004-May/thread.html#1434

I'll copy this much of it below, as it may do some of us
some good to consider these issues again in this setting.

1.3.9.3.  The Formative Tension

The incidental arena or the informal context is presently described in
casual, derivative, and negative terms, simply as the "not yet formal",
and so this admittedly unruly region is currently depicted in ways that
suggest a purely unformed and a wholly formless chaos, which it is not.
But increasing experience with the formalization process can help one
to develop a better appreciation of the informal context, and in time
one can argue for a more positive characterization of this realm as
a truly "formative context".  The formal domain is where risks are
contemplated, but the formative context is where risks are taken.

In this view, the informal context is more clearly seen as the off-stage
staging ground where everything that appears on the formal scene is first
assembled for a formal presentation.  In taking this view, one steps back
a bit in one's imagination from the scene that presses on one's attention,
gets a sense of its frame and its stage, and becomes accustomed to see what
appears in ever dimmer lights, in effect, one is learning to reflect on the
more obvious actions, to read their pretexts, and to detect the motives that
end in them.

It is fair to assume that an agent of inquiry possesses a faculty of inquiry
that is available for exercise in the informal context, that is, without the
agent being required to formalize its properties prior to their initial use.
If this faculty of inquiry is a unity, then it appears as a whole on both
sides of the "glass", that is, on both sides of the imaginary line that
one pretends to draw between a formal arena and its informal context.

1.3.9.3.  The Formative Tension (cont.)

Recognizing the positive value of an informal context as
an open forum or a formative space, it is possible to form
the alignments of capacities that are indicated in Table 5.

Table 5.  Alignments of Capacities
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
|      Formal       |          Formative          |
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
|     Objective     |        Instrumental         |
|      Passive      |           Active            |
o-------------------o--------------o--------------o
|     Afforded      |  Possessed   |  Exercised   |
o-------------------o--------------o--------------o

This arrangement of capacities, based on the distinction between
possession and exercise that arises so naturally in this context,
stems from a root that is old indeed.  In this connection, it is
instructive to compare these alignments with those that we find
in Aristotle's treatise 'On the Soul', a germinal textbook of
psychology that ventures to analyze the concept of the mind,
psyche, or soul to the point of arriving at a definition.
The alignments of capacites, analogous correspondences,
and illustrative materials outlined by Aristotle are
summarized in Table 6.

Table 6.  Alignments of Capacities in Aristotle
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
|      Matter       |            Form             |
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
|   Potentiality    |          Actuality          |
|    Receptivity    |  Possession  |   Exercise   |
|       Life        |    Sleep     |    Waking    |
|        Wax        |         Impression          |
|        Axe        |    Edge      |   Cutting    |
|        Eye        |   Vision     |    Seeing    |
|       Body        |            Soul             |
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
|       Ship?       |           Sailor?           |
o-------------------o-----------------------------o

An attempt to synthesize the materials and the schemes that are given
in Tables 5 and 6 leads to the alignments of capacities that are shown
in Table 7.  I do not pretend that the resulting alignments are perfect,
since there is clearly some sort of twist taking place between the top
and the bottom of this synthetic arrangement.  Perhaps this is due to
the modifications of case, tense, and grammatical category that occur
throughout the paradigm, or perhaps it has to do with the fact that
the relations through the middle of the Table are more analogical
than categorical.  For the moment I am content to leave all of
these paradoxes intact, taking the pattern of tensions and
torsions as a puzzle for future study.

Table 7.  Synthesis of Alignments
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
|      Formal       |          Formative          |
o-------------------o-----------------------------o
|     Objective     |        Instrumental         |
|      Passive      |           Active            |
|     Afforded      |  Possessed   |  Exercised   |
|      To Hold      |   To Have    |    To Use    |
|    Receptivity    |  Possession  |   Exercise   |
|   Potentiality    |          Actuality          |
|      Matter       |            Form             |
o-------------------o-----------------------------o

1.3.9.3.  The Formative Tension (concl.)

Due to the importance of Aristotle's account for every discussion that
follows it, not to mention for those that follow it without knowing it,
and because the issues that it raises arise repeatedly throughout this
project, I am going to cite an extended extract from the relevant text
(Aristotle, 'Peri Psyche', 2.1), breaking up the argument into a number
of individual premisses, stages, and examples.

Aristotle wrote (W.S. Hett translation):

| a.  The theories of the soul (psyche)
|     handed down by our predecessors have
|     been sufficiently discussed;  now let
|     us start afresh, as it were, and try to
|     determine (diorisai) what the soul is,
|     and what definition (logos) of it will
|     be most comprehensive (koinotatos).
|
| b.  We describe one class of existing things as
|     substance (ousia), and this we subdivide into
|     three:  (1) matter (hyle), which in itself is
|     not an individual thing, (2) shape (morphe) or
|     form (eidos), in virtue of which individuality
|     is directly attributed, and (3) the compound
|     of the two.
| 
| c.  Matter is potentiality (dynamis), while form is
|     realization or actuality (entelecheia), and the
|     word actuality is used in two senses, illustrated
|     by the possession of knowledge (episteme) and the
|     exercise of it (theorein).
|
| d.  Bodies (somata) seem to be pre-eminently
|     substances, and most particularly those
|     which are of natural origin (physica),
|     for these are the sources (archai)
|     from which the rest are derived.
|
| e.  But of natural bodies some have life (zoe)
|     and some have not;  by life we mean the
|     capacity for self-sustenance, growth,
|     and decay.
|
| f.  Every natural body (soma physikon), then,
|     which possesses life must be substance, and
|     substance of the compound type (synthete).
|
| g.  But since it is a body of a definite kind, viz.,
|     having life, the body (soma) cannot be soul (psyche),
|     for the body is not something predicated of a subject,
|     but rather is itself to be regarded as a subject,
|     i.e., as matter.
|
| h.  So the soul must be substance in the sense of being
|     the form of a natural body, which potentially has life.
|     And substance in this sense is actuality.
|
| i.  The soul, then, is the actuality of the kind of body we
|     have described.  But actuality has two senses, analogous
|     to the possession of knowledge and the exercise of it.
|
| j.  Clearly (phaneron), actuality in our present sense
|     is analogous to the possession of knowledge;  for both
|     sleep (hypnos) and waking (egregorsis) depend upon the
|     presence of the soul, and waking is analogous to the
|     exercise of knowledge, sleep to its possession (echein)
|     but not its exercise (energein).
|
| k.  Now in one and the same person the
|     possession of knowledge comes first.
|
| l.  The soul may therefore be defined as the first actuality
|     of a natural body potentially possessing life;  and such
|     will be any body which possesses organs (organikon).
|
| m.  The parts of plants are organs too, though very
|     simple ones:  e.g., the leaf protects the pericarp,
|     and the pericarp protects the seed;  the roots are
|     analogous to the mouth, for both these absorb food.
|
| n.  If then one is to find a definition which will apply
|     to every soul, it will be "the first actuality of
|     a natural body possessed of organs".
|
| o.  So one need no more ask (zetein) whether body and
|     soul are one than whether the wax (keros) and the
|     impression (schema) it receives are one, or in
|     general whether the matter of each thing is
|     the same as that of which it is the matter;
|     for admitting that the terms unity and being
|     are used in many senses, the paramount (kyrios)
|     sense is that of actuality.
|
| p.  We have, then, given a general definition
|     of what the soul is:  it is substance in
|     the sense of formula (logos), i.e., the
|     essence of such-and-such a body.
|
| q.  Suppose that an implement (organon), e.g. an axe,
|     were a natural body;  the substance of the axe
|     would be that which makes it an axe, and this
|     would be its soul;  suppose this removed, and
|     it would no longer be an axe, except equivocally.
|     As it is, it remains an axe, because it is not of
|     this kind of body that the soul is the essence or
|     formula, but only of a certain kind of natural body
|     which has in itself a principle of movement and rest.
|
| r.  We must, however, investigate our definition
|     in relation to the parts of the body.
|
| s.  If the eye were a living creature, its soul would be
|     its vision;  for this is the substance in the sense
|     of formula of the eye.  But the eye is the matter
|     of vision, and if vision fails there is no eye,
|     except in an equivocal sense, as for instance
|     a stone or painted eye.
|
| t.  Now we must apply what we have found true of the part
|     to the whole living body.  For the same relation must
|     hold good of the whole of sensation to the whole sentient
|     body qua sentient as obtains between their respective parts.
|
| u.  That which has the capacity to live is not the body
|     which has lost its soul, but that which possesses
|     its soul;  so seed and fruit are potentially bodies
|     of this kind.
|
| v.  The waking state is actuality in the same sense
|     as the cutting of the axe or the seeing of the eye,
|     while the soul is actuality in the same sense as the
|     faculty of the eye for seeing, or of the implement for
|     doing its work.
|
| w.  The body is that which exists potentially;  but just as
|     the pupil and the faculty of seeing make an eye, so in
|     the other case the soul and body make a living creature.
|
| x.  It is quite clear, then, that neither the soul nor
|     certain parts of it, if it has parts, can be separated
|     from the body;  for in some cases the actuality belongs
|     to the parts themselves.  Not but what there is nothing
|     to prevent some parts being separated, because they are
|     not actualities of any body.
|
| y.  It is also uncertain (adelon) whether the soul as an
|     actuality bears the same relation to the body as the
|     sailor (ploter) to the ship (ploion).
|
| z.  This must suffice as an attempt to determine
|     in rough outline the nature of the soul.

NEKS. Commentary Note 7


Re: KS 3.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003075.html
In: KS-Oct.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/thread.html#3075
Cf: KS-Sep.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3063

In part:

| But of these two movements, logic very properly
| prefers to take that of Theory as the primary one.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 240

I confess to being a little puzzled by this emphasis.
Does Peirce forget that logic is a normative science?
Does a normative science not work to know what ought
to be done in actual practice to achieve our objects?
Well, I'll leave my puzzlement in suspension for now,
and continue with the reading in hopes of resolution.

NEKS. Commentary Note 8


Re: KS-COM 5.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003073.html
In: KS-COM.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/thread.html#3070

Cf: QUIPS-DIS 24.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-May/002690.html
Cf: QUAGS 4.       http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-August/002926.html

The use of "higher order propositional expressions" (HOPE's) is one way
to bring some order of concrete modeling -- concreteness being relative,
of course -- to bear on the following species of statements from Peirce:

| If we are to explain the universe, we must assume that there was in the
| beginning a state of things in which there was nothing, no reaction and no
| quality, no matter, no consciousness, no space and no time, but just nothing
| at all.  Not determinately nothing.  For that which is determinately not 'A'
| supposes the being of 'A' in some mode.  Utter indetermination.  But a symbol
| alone is indeterminate.  Therefore Nothing, the indeterminate of the absolute
| beginning is a symbol.
|
| That is the way in which the beginning of things can alone be understood.
|
| What logically follows?
|
| We are not to content ourselves with our instinctive sense of logicality.
| That is logical which comes from the essential nature of a symbol.  Now it
| is of the essential nature of a symbol that it determines an interpretant,
| which is itself a symbol.  A symbol, therefore, produces an endless series
| of interpretants.
|
| Does anybody suspect all this of being sheer nonsense.  'Distinguo.'
| There can, it is true, be no positive information about what antedated
| the entire Universe of being;  because, to begin with, there was nothing
| to have information about.  But the universe is intelligible;  and therefore
| it is possible to give a general account of it and its origin.  This general
| account is a symbol;  and from the nature of a symbol, it must begin with the
| formal assertion that there was an indeterminate nothing of the nature of a
| symbol.  This would be false if it conveyed any information.  But it is
| the correct and logical manner of beginning an account of the universe.
|
| As a symbol it produced its infinite series of interpretants, which in the
| beginning were absolutely vague like itself.  But the direct interpretant
| of any symbol must in the first stage of it be merely the 'tabula rasa'
| for an interpretant.  Hence the immediate interpretant of this vague
| Nothing was not even determinately vague, but only vaguely hovering
| between determinacy and vagueness;  and 'its' immediate interpretant
| was vaguely hovering between vaguely hovering between vagueness and
| determinacy and determinate vagueness or determinacy, and so on,
| 'ad infinitum'.  But every endless series must logically have a
| limit.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Kaina Stoicheia", NEM 4, 260-261
| Also appears in "New Elements", EP 2, 322-323

Very roughly speaking, we can model the condition of "vaguely hovering"
over a set F = {f_1, ..., f_m} of "states of (in)determination" f_j by
modeling each f_j as a proposition in a suitable universe of discourse,
and then by modeling the set F as a proposition one level higher than
the highest of the f_j in F.  It will be best if we start with a few
simple examples, going back to our base camp in the universe [p, q],
just to see if everything works out in a moderately reasonable way.

NEKS. Commentary Note 9


It appears that many misunderstandings of what's being said
at the end of Peirce's "Kaina Stoicheia"/"New Elements" essay
arise from a failure to keep in mind what was being said at the
beginning, especially with regard to the original model on which
Peirce's innovation is designed, to wit, the "Old Elements" of the
eponymous Euclid that motivated Peirce's own attempts at emulation.

Thus, as I have always suspected, it will be necessary to return to
the beginning in order to place the end, that is to say, the object,
in its proper perspective.

What the editors of the version in 'The Essential Peirce' say by
way of orientation is apt enough to bear repeating at this point:

| New Elements [Kaina Stoicheia]
|
| MS 517.  [First published in NEM 4:235-63.  This document was most
| probably written in early 1904, as a preface to an intended book on
| the foundations of mathematics.]  Peirce begins with a discussion of
| "the Euclidean style" he planned to follow in his book.  Euclid's
| 'Elements' presuppose an understanding of the logical structure
| of mathematics (geometry) that Peirce, in his "New Elements",
| wants to explicate.
|
| Headnote to Selection 22, "New Elements", p. 300 in:
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), 'The Essential Peirce,
| Selected Philosophical Writings, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

Da capo, al fine ...

NEKS. Commentary Note 10


We can now complete the following syllogism:

 Peirce's "Kaina Stoicheia" is a Preface.               (NEM 4, 235 & EP 2, Headnote)
 This very same Preface is a Scholium.                  (NEM 4, 238 & EP 2, 303)
 The main Subject of this Scholium is the Proposition.  (NEM 4, 247 & EP 2, 311)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 The main Subject of Peirce's "Kaina Stoicheia" is the Proposition.  QED.

The pure symbol remains pure until proven otherwise.

The defense rests.

NEKS. Commentary Note 11


Re: KS 16.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003265.html
In: KS.     http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/thread.html#3183

It is only that untoward bent of reading, that reads Peirce
just barely in impatient anticipation of Frege, that could
manage to warp Peirce's avowedly "non-psychological" view
of logic into a supposed doctrine of "anti-psychologism".

Still, it's important to notice that Peirce employs his "logical microscope" --
the magnifying-glasses of the consulting detective, sheriff, posse comitatus,
judge, jury, the many long arms of conscientious, divine, and social sanction --
primarily in the service to distinguish the logical matter of the proposition
from a motley array of psycho-litigious-socio-politico-eschatological matters:
acceptance, acknowledgment, affidavit, affirmation, assent, assertion, avowal,
belief, certainty, certification, cognition, conation, consensus, credence,
denial, didaction, disposition, doubt, execution, expression, indication,
injunction, inquisition, judgment, knowledge, recognizance, salvation,
and so on and so forth, if not necessarily in that order, of course.

This has consequences that we must needs explore.

NEKS. Commentary Note 12


Re: KS 17.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003274.html
In: KS.     http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3274

For context:

KS-Sep.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/thread.html#3063
KS-Oct.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/thread.html#3075
KS-Nov.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/thread.html#3183

I call attention to the fact that Peirce here defines "belief", "affirmation",
and "judgment" -- as a habit of acting, an act of uttering, and a mental act,
respectively, and thus as what can only be called pragmatic-psychological
concepts -- partly with reference to the logical concepts of proposition,
proof, and truth, partly in terms of the partly formal partly material
concept of determination, and partly in terms of the broadly pragmatic,
psychological, sociological, semiotic, and linguistic concepts, not
all of them yet defined, of action, affect (contentedness), agency,
awareness, conation (desire), control, (in-)convenience, decision,
deliberation, disposition (tendency), event, exercise, force,
habit, interpretation, mind, pain (penalty), probability
(liability), product, result, simultaneity, society,
time, utterance, and volition.

I think that it requires further examination to sort out the relation
of logic, that is, formal (normative or quasi-necessary) semiotics,
to this more broadly conceived wildwood of descriptive semiotics.

| I have discussed the nature of belief
| in the 'Popular Science Monthly' for
| November 1877.  On the whole, we may
| set down the following definitions:
|
| A 'belief' in a proposition is a controlled and contented habit of
| acting in ways that will be productive of desired results only if
| the proposition is true.
|
| An 'affirmation' is an act of an utterer of a proposition to an interpreter,
| and consists, in the first place, in the deliberate exercise, in uttering
| the proposition, of a force tending to determine a belief in it in the
| mind of the interpreter.  Perhaps that is a sufficient definition of it;
| but it involves also a voluntary self-subjection to penalties in the
| event of the interpreter's mind (and still more the general mind of
| society) subsequently becoming decidedly determined to the belief
| at once in the falsity of the proposition and in the additional
| proposition that the utterer believed the proposition to be
| false at that time he uttered it.
|
| A 'judgment' is a mental act deliberately exercising a force tending to
| determine in the mind of the agent a belief in the proposition:  to which
| should perhaps be added that the agent must be aware of his being liable
| to inconvenience in the event of the proposition's proving false in any
| practical aspect.
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 249-250

NEKS. Commentary Note 13


Rummaging about our Polis with Perseus, I find these glosses:

| arithmos, as etym. of Stoichadeus, Sch.D.T.p.192 H.
| Stoicha^deus , eôs, ho, title of Zeus at Sicyon, Sch.D.T. p.192 H.
| Stoicheia , hê, epith. of Athena at Epidaurus, IG42(1).487.
|
| Perseus at Tufts: http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0057:entry=%2396930

NEKS. Commentary Note 14


| Incidental Muse ~~~ Loreena McKennitt, ''Elemental'' ~~~
| http://www.quinlanroad.com/explorethemusic/elemental.asp

NEKS. Commentary Work Area

NEKS. Commentary Work Area 1


Some folks have yet to discover the basic
fact of life that conception is an action.

NEKS. Commentary Work Area 2


Re: KS 15.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003264.html
In: KS.     http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/thread.html#3183

In light of ever-renewed evidence that icons of argument and indices of reason,
the xylem and phloem of those hyloid lumberings that we log as syllogism, make
for a roughage that's vegetatively insufficient in its own rick to animate the
aimed for sign of interpretant entelechy, I'll pile more wood on the bael-fire.

NEKS. New Elements • Kaina Stoicheia • Discussion

NEKS. Discussion Note 1


SL = Søren Lund

Re: KS-COM 11.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003269.html
In: KS-COM.     http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/thread.html#3263

Recall that we are working in the context of Peirce's theory of sign relations,
where a proposition is a type of symbol, a symbol is a type of sign, a sign is
defined by its participation in a specified role of a particular sign relation,
and a sign relation in general is defined as a 3-adic relation that satisfies
a particular definition, for instance, this one:

| A sign is something, A, which brings something, B,
| its interpretant sign determined or created by it,
| into the same sort of correspondence with something,
| C, its object, as that in which itself stands to C.
|
| C.S. Peirce, NEM 4, pp. 20-21, cf. p. 54 (1902).
|
| C.S. Peirce, [Application to the Carnegie Institution], L 75, pp. 13-73 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by Charles S. Peirce,
| Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy', Mouton, The Hague, 1976.  Available here:
| Arisbe Website, http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/l75/l75.htm

You give us an able summary of a host of classical and modern aporias
that affect various attempts to say what a proposition is, but all of
those stagmas, so far as I can tell, appear to arise from the attempt
to form a particular order of "wholly useless abstractions" (WUA'a).
Given the obvious utility of many abstractions, that leaves us the
task of saying what exactly pushes an abstraction over the edge
of use.  This can be difficult to diagnose, but it's easier to
diagnose than it is to identify the underlying causes thereof.

One factor that strikes me at present is the fact that some
abstractions are "absolutized" or "decontextualized" past
the point of usefulness, and the inclination to do that
appears to arise from a habit of "essentializing" that
may indeed be innate to our evolutionary inheritance,
or at least built into our most familiar languages.

Essentialism is the tendency of thought that tends to seek an explanation
of everything in "categories of unstructured things" (COUT's).  In effect,
it tends to think that the end of explanation has been reached once we've
nominated the monadic predicate that classifies the thing to be explained.

This is such a persistent tendency of the human mind that it can be observed
to influence the thinking even of those who more reflectively might know better --
who might know better from reading Peirce, who might know better from being Peirce --
but it is not overall the thrust of Peirce's efforts in logic and semiotics, which
are indeed partly intended as a remedy for the condition of overweaned essentialism.

SL: Speaking of the proposition and Peirce's conception of it.
    I think there is good reasons for attacking this curious
    logical unit and even better to abandon it.
 
SL: If "proposition" is not a fancy term for "sentence", what is it?  One suggestion
    is that the proposition is the meaning of the sentence, or at least of the type
    of sentence that grammarians call "declarative".  But this will hardly do, for
    the reasons already pointed out by the author of the 'Dissoi Logoi'.  (The
    author of the ancient text known as the 'Dissoi Logoi' points out that the
    words "I am an initiate" may be uttered both by an initiate and by one who
    is not (W. Kneale and M. Kneale, 'The Development of Logic', rev. ed.,
    Oxford Clarendon, 1984, p. 16).  If this is accepted, it seems that
    we have to conclude either that one and the same form of words may
    be both true and false, or else that what is true or false is not
    the form of words itself.  If the former is the case, it frustrates
    any enterprise of formulating the principles of valid inference on
    the basis of relations between sentences.  If the latter is the case,
    then the metalinguistic terms "true" and "false" cannot properly apply
    to sentences at all, but must be deemed to apply to something else.
    Western logic chose the latter option, and thereby conjured into
    existence what was later called the "proposition".)  That is to say,
    if the grounds for rejecting the sentence are valid (i.e. that the
    same sentence can be uttered on one occasion to express a truth, but
    on another occasion to express a falsehood), then the objection must
    carry over to the meaning of the sentence, unless we are prepared to
    divorce the meaning from the sentence.  But if we do that, we have in
    effect ushered in two even more mysterious metalinguistic entities, i.e.
    sentences without (permanent) meanings, and sentence-meaning that float
    free of their sentences.  It is difficult to see where the explanatory
    gain lies, let alone how the two cohere.
 
SL: Another suggestion is that the proposition is the use
    made of the (declarative) sentence.  Thus if A and B both
    utter the sentence I am an initiate, they may be said to be
    putting it to different uses; viz in one case to claim that A
    is an initiate, and in the other to claim that B is an initiate.
    But this does not get us much further either.  For all that has
    been achieved here is the proposal of an arbitrarily restricted
    employment of the term use.  When we investigate the nature of
    the restriction, the "use" of the sentence turns out to be
    whatever it is that results in something true or false --
    e.g. A's claim or B's claim.  Here one metalinguistic
    term (use) simply hides behind another (claim).
 
SL: Is the "proposition", then, more plausibly regarded as what it is
    that is claimed when a claim is made, asserted when an assertion is
    made, stated when a statement is made, etc.?  But here we start another
    metalinguistic wild goose chase.  For claim, assertion and statement are
    all metalinguistic terms with no better credentials than proposition itself.
    To define the proposition as the "object" or "content" of claims, assertions,
    statements, etc. is simply to substitute one obscurity for another.
 
SL: Why do these and similar attempts to rescue the proposition all come to grief
    in this way?  Because what is being attempted is a metalinguistic impossibility.
    The source of the trouble can be traced back to the original culprit, i.e. the
    sentence, deemed to be unsuitable as the basis for logic.  The trouble is that
    the sentences belong to particular languages (English, Greek, Latin, etc.).
    What the logician seeks to substitute for the sentence is an entity which will
    afford the same scope for identification, reidentification, generalization and
    classification, but independently of the particular languages or words used.
    The trouble is that this cannot be done -- or at least, not within the
    Western metalinguistic framework.  For that framework only allows us
    to identify propositions, statements, assertions, etc. by citing
    some sentence or part of a sentence.  
 
SL: The moment this strategy fails, any formalization of logic collapses.
    In other words, the logician cannot, under pain of undermining the
    whole professional enterprise, claim that there are propositions
    that cannot be unambiguously expressed in words.
 
SL: Herculean efforts to move this obstacle merely show how immovable it is.
    For instance, some theorists have conjured up an entity which is supposed
    to be what there is in common between an English declarative sentence and
    its correct translation into any (or all) other language(s).  This proposal
    is either vacuous or circular.  For then either there are no propositions at
    all or else we are off after another metalinguistic will-o'-the wisp, namely
    the criteria for "correct translation".

NEKS. Discussion Note 2


BM = Bernard Morand

BM: I think I have been unable to understand clearly
    what is really at stake in the dispute between
    Jon and Joe on the matter of pure symbols,
    despite the large exchange of messages
    on the topic.

Aside from the focal issue, which I will reserve until I can get focussed on it again,
I believe that there are most likely constitutionally different attitudes as to what
constitutes a definition, a theory, and a science.  If logic is a normative science,
or, as Peirce says, "formal semiotics", and if there is to be a part of semiotics
that is a science, then it's very likely to undergo the sort of development that
other sciences have enjoyed.  In other sciences, there is a division of labor
where mathematical models are developed in a speculative fashion, taking off
from and being brought home again to practical application.  In that world,
definitions are equivalent explications of a concept, that is, necessary
and sufficient conditions for falling under a concept.  Definitions of
this sort, once a good portion of the research community accepts them,
have a character of "standing on their own feet".  This means that
they serve as a platform for generating all sorts of never-before
suspected consequences, that can be explored by deductive means,
and also evaluated for empirical adequacy, uberty, and truth.

Measured against that scientific standard, which is well understood in
all of the developed sciences, only a few of the so-called "definitions"
of signs are real definitions, the sorts of formulations that are clear
and explicit enough to draw any necessary conclusions from.  Most of the
rest are more properly called "descriptions", and they fall into the dual
classes of (1) sufficient descriptions, that say things which are true of
special classes of signs, and (2) necessary descriptions, that say things
which are true of all signs, but which are also true of many things that
are not signs.  But only those descriptions which are both necessary and
sufficient count as real definitions.  Of course, a good definition must
also have many other virtues in order to support a consistent, effective,
and empirically adequate scientific theory.

This definition of definition will tend to be dismissed in undeveloped sciences,
and by many brands of philosophies -- and of course there are many domains where
we are still mainly arguing 'toward' definitions rather than mainly 'from' them --
so it's a matter of opinion where we are in semiotics today.  For my part I am
content with a few of Peirce's more genuine definitions of signs, and I have
been busy reasoning on their basis ever since I first came to notice them.

On that basis, my main reason for thinking that there are sign relations
that do not involve icons or indices is simply that I can see no way to
deduce the involvement of icons or indices by necessary reasoning from
Peirce's most genuine and most general definitions of sign relations,
and so far nobody has even suggested a plausible way of doing this.

NEKS. Discussion Note 3


JP = Jim Piat

Re: KS-DIS 2.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003282.html
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272

Replies interspersed.

JP: Would you give me an example of one of Peirce's genuine, necessary and sufficient,
    descriptions of a sign, and perhaps for the purpose of contrast one of his
    non-genuine definitions that fails to meet these criteria.  Also would
    you give me the necessary and sufficient conditions for discerning
    which is which.

Yes, if you Google(TM) -- or Transcendental Meditate (TM) if you prefer --
on +Awbrey "Sign Relation" and its pluralization (Google has taken lately
to using fuzzy conjunctions, so you now have to put in the "+" to force the
old-fangled logical conjunction), you'll get my e-tire e-lected e-corpus of
writings on the subject, but to make a long story clear I can do no better
than recommend the standards of clarity demanded by my co-author in this
'Hermeneutics and Human Science' conference paper from 1992, revised for
the journal 'Inquiry:  Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines' in 1995:

| Jon Awbrey & Susan Awbrey, "Interpretation as Action:  The Risk of Inquiry"
| http://www.chss.montclair.edu/inquiry/fall95/awbrey.html
| NB.  The reference to "Habermas" should be "Gadamer".

In most of those places I will probably allude to the dynamic duo of variants of
the definition in NEM 4 as being my pets for adequacy, clarity, and completeness.
One of the reasons that I remember those so fondly is that it wasn't until rather
late, when I chanced on a copy of the NEM volumes in a used book store in the mid
80's and was actually fortunate enough to have the spare cash on hand to buy them.
I have to tell you that up until that time I had always wondered why Peirce never
bothered to define this most important concept of a sign -- I know, but only now,
that this will sound shocking to many people, but they would need to understand
that the only definition of definition that had been engrained into my engrams
was the one that I knew from logic and math courses, and since it's so common
in loose speech and writing for all of us to say "definition" when we really
mean "something that's more or less true of a special case of the thing",
I had probably developed the automatic habit of reading the looser uses
as "descriptions", not true "definitions".  That was my consciousness.

I made the mistake of going to bed early last night,
which only led to my waking up at 3 AM, and so I'll
need to break fast for coffee before I can continue.

NEKS. Discussion Note 4


JP = Jim Piat

Re: KS-DIS 3.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003296.html
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272

Replies interspersed.

JP: Would you give me an example of one of Peirce's genuine, necessary and sufficient,
    descriptions of a sign, and perhaps for the purpose of contrast one of his
    non-genuine definitions that fails to meet these criteria.  Also would
    you give me the necessary and sufficient conditions for discerning
    which is which.

So let me haul out the "Carnegie" definitions of a sign relation one more time
and try to tell you why I think they ought to win friends and influence people.

Here's the first link that came up on Google:

SR.  Sign Relations
SR.  http://forum.wolframscience.com/showthread.php?threadid=647

| A sign is something, 'A',
| which brings something, 'B',
| its 'interpretant' sign
| determined or created by it,
| into the same sort of correspondence
| with something, 'C', its 'object',
| as that in which itself stands to 'C'.
|
| C.S. Peirce, NEM 4, pp. 20-21, cf. p. 54, also available here:
| http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/l75/l75.htm

More details on how the definition of a sign relation bears on
the definition of logic are given in the contexts of this text:

| On the Definition of Logic [Version 1]
|
| Logic will here be defined as 'formal semiotic'.
| A definition of a sign will be given which no more
| refers to human thought than does the definition
| of a line as the place which a particle occupies,
| part by part, during a lapse of time. Namely,
| a sign is something, 'A', which brings something,
| 'B', its 'interpretant' sign determined or created
| by it, into the same sort of correspondence with
| something, 'C', its 'object', as that in which it
| itself stands to 'C'. It is from this definition,
| together with a definition of "formal", that I
| deduce mathematically the principles of logic.
| I also make a historical review of all the
| definitions and conceptions of logic, and show,
| not merely that my definition is no novelty, but
| that my non-psychological conception of logic has
| 'virtually' been quite generally held, though not
| generally recognized. (CSP, NEM 4, 20-21).
|
| On the Definition of Logic [Version 2]
|
| Logic is 'formal semiotic'. A sign is something,
| 'A', which brings something, 'B', its 'interpretant'
| sign, determined or created by it, into the same
| sort of correspondence (or a lower implied sort)
| with something, 'C', its 'object', as that in
| which itself stands to 'C'.  This definition no
| more involves any reference to human thought than
| does the definition of a line as the place within
| which a particle lies during a lapse of time.
| It is from this definition that I deduce the
| principles of logic by mathematical reasoning,
| and by mathematical reasoning that, I aver, will
| support criticism of Weierstrassian severity, and
| that is perfectly evident. The word "formal" in
| the definition is also defined. (CSP, NEM 4, 54).
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce,
|'The New Elements of Mathematics', Volume 4,
| Edited by Carolyn Eisele, Mouton, The Hague, 1976.

Partly I like these statements because they place the
matter of defining "sign" within its due contexts of
defining "formal" and defining "logic", which helps
to "comprehend", in both senses of that term, some
of the purposes and utilities of the definition.

With respect to the question of contrast, Peirce in this instance
explictly contrasts this definition with the most popular host of
sufficient but not necessary descriptions, namely, those that use
some of our common but typically unexamined introspections and/or
intuitions about our own psychological processes in order to fill
in a motley assortment of intuitive blind spots and logical holes
in the description.  This affords a significant correction to the
psychologically-biased descriptions, for instance, those deriving
from the "New List" account.

But probably the most important feature of this definition is that
it does not invoke too large a variety of undefined terms as a part
of its try at definition, and the few significant terms that it does
pass the buck to, like "correspondence" and "determination", are ones
for which we find fairly fast definitions elsewhere in Peirce's works.

The reason why these criteria are important is that they give us what we need
in order to carry out any measure of deductive or necessary reasoning on the
basis of the definition alone -- the "standing on its own feet" character
of a genuine definition.

NEKS. Discussion Note 5


JP = Jim Piat

Re: KS-DIS 4.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003297.html
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272

Replies interspersed.

JP: Would you give me an example of one of Peirce's genuine, necessary and sufficient,
    descriptions of a sign, and perhaps for the purpose of contrast one of his
    non-genuine definitions that fails to meet these criteria.  Also would
    you give me the necessary and sufficient conditions for discerning
    which is which.

I've given what I think is one of Peirce's better definitions of a sign relation.
It is by no means perfect, but it does provide enough of a basis to start up the
business of drawing necessary conclusions.  The nice thing about a good-enough
definition, if you catch my object-relational drift, is that it affords us
the ontological security to begin thinking for ourselves, as we may hope
to do in scientific inquiry, instead of constantly needing to run back
to our primal source for the assurance of some scriptural quotation
that we have not strayed from the path of right-group-thinking and
remain in conformity with the established doctrine, in that most
likely exaggerated caricature of the medieval seminary scholar,
but just as likely a graphic icon with a hint of truth to it.

As I've indicated, some of the descriptions that fall short of this standard
are those that rely on undefined psychological or sociological notions, for
all the possibility of their still being useful in application to specific
subjects, when taken with the due grain of salt.  Other descriptions that
tend to lead us astray are those that are afflicted with the residual
biases of essentialism, in spite of all the work that Peirce did to
make clear that the minimal unit of description is a sign relation,
not the isolated sign in itself, which is a meaningless concept.

With respect to the last part of your question, yes, we can give
a logically necessary and sufficient definition of "definition".
For instance, the following from Peirce will do as well as any:

| A 'definition' is the logical analysis of a predicate in general terms.

He immediately elaborates this definition of definition as follows:

| It has two branches, the one asserting that the definitum is
| applicable to whatever there may be to which the definition is
| applicable;  the other (which ordinarily has several clauses),
| that the definition is applicable to whatever there may be to
| which the definitum is applicable.  'A definition does not
| assert that anything exists.'
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], NEM 4, 237
|
| C.S. Peirce, ["Kaina Stoicheia"], MS 517 (1904), pp. 235-263 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by
| Charles S. Peirce, Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy',
| Mouton, The Hague, 1976.
|
| Cf. "New Elements", pp. 300-324 in 'The Essential Peirce, Volume 2 (1893-1913)',
| Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.

What we cannot provide so easily is a definition of a 'good' definition,
because that is more properly an applied, empirical, pragmatic matter,
not just a logical or a mathematical question.  Here we are "reduced"
to "holism", whereby only models as a whole of theories as a whole
can be judged by their empirical fertility and logical integrity.

NEKS. Discussion Note 6


JA = Jon Awbrey
JP = Jim Piat

Re: KS-DIS 5.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003298.html
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272

Supplying a missing article:

JA: What we cannot provide so easily is a definition of a 'good' definition,
    because that is more properly an applied, empirical, pragmatic matter,
    not just a logical or a mathematical question.  Here we are "reduced"
    to "holism", whereby only models as a whole of theories as a whole
    can be judged by their empirical fertility and logical integrity.

Replies interspersed.

JP: I don't mean to sound so confrontational or abrupt.  Fact is I seem to recall
    you have already posted (maybe a number of times) some of what you felt were
    Peirce's most useful sign definitions.  So what I'm really trying to ask is
    how can we separate our sign selection criteria from our preconceptions of
    what a sign is.  My concern is that our definitions may beg the questions
    we hope they will help us answer.  Just as every question presupposes an
    assertion that is being doubted, it seems to me that every definition
    presupposes a question that is being answered.

I just now notice that I had posted one at the top of this discussion thread,
and had already forgotten it, partly because I did not get my copy back from
the Peirce List -- I sure hope this isn't what made Soren so irate that time --
anyway here's a link to an archive copy:

KS-DIS 1.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003272.html

I'm not quite sure what you're asking, where the emphasis is meant to be
when you say:  "how can we separate our sign selection criteria from our
preconceptions of what a sign is".  If by "begging the question" you are
saying that a definition evades the question by assuming what's supposed
to be proved, I don't see how that is, as definitions aren't supposed to
prove anything, only supply a potential clarification of one thing meant
by a term.  But if you are emphasizing the difference between unexamined
preconception and clarifying "logical analysis of a predicate in general
terms", in Peirce's phrase, then that again is just what a definition is
supposed to be doing.

JP: Sitting here writing this, Jon, I've come up with what is perhaps a more helpful
    question for me -- would you explain a bit more (in so far as possible in layman's
    terms for me) why you are trying to translate Peirce's definitions into some sort
    of graphic formalization.  I don't really understand your goal.  I guess in part
    what I don't understand is what is meant by a formal definition if in fact that
    is part of your goal.  I realize you are putting a lot of care into what you
    are doing and are trying to move in careful well considered small steps.
    That much I think I understand and appreciate.  But I don't understand
    your methodological goal.  My sense is you are attempting some sort
    of formalization but I don't really know what constitutes a formal
    definition -- what it achieves and what it avoids.  I'm not trying
    to trap you into some premature formulations -- I just want to get
    a better understanding in very informal terms for starters of what
    your general methodological goal is so that maybe I can better
    understand the steps you are taking.  Even off line if you
    don't want to be held accountable for some very quick and
    dirty, off hand, rough translation of your methodological
    goals designed solely for a friend who is largely clueless.

For this one I will have to hunt up that old thinking cap and get back to you ...

P.S.  I don't know why the Internet has been so funky the
last couple of weeks -- Sue said there was some kind of
major D.O.S. attack that had their servers bogged down
for a while, or maybe it's just the traffic from the
<insert your denominational festivity>'s holiday
online shopping frenzy -- but if I don't answer
you or anybody for a day or so I won't mind if
you send me a copy by my own email address.

NEKS. Discussion Note 7


JA = Jon Awbrey
JP = Jim Piat

Re: KS-DIS 4.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003297.html
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272

In substance:

| A sign is something, A, which brings something, B,
| its interpretant sign determined or created by it,
| into the same sort of correspondence with something,
| C, its object, as that in which itself stands to C.
|
| C.S. Peirce, NEM 4, pp. 20-21, cf. p. 54 (1902).
|
| C.S. Peirce, [Application to the Carnegie Institution], L 75, pp. 13-73 in:
| Carolyn Eisele (ed.), 'The New Elements of Mathematics by Charles S. Peirce,
| Volume 4, Mathematical Philosophy', Mouton, The Hague, 1976.  Available here:
| Arisbe Website, http://members.door.net/arisbe/menu/library/bycsp/l75/l75.htm

JA: More details on how the definition of a sign relation bears on
    the definition of logic are given in the contexts of this text:

| On the Definition of Logic [Version 1]
|
| Logic will here be defined as 'formal semiotic'.
| A definition of a sign will be given which no more
| refers to human thought than does the definition
| of a line as the place which a particle occupies,
| part by part, during a lapse of time.  Namely,
| a sign is something, 'A', which brings something,
| 'B', its 'interpretant' sign determined or created
| by it, into the same sort of correspondence with
| something, 'C', its 'object', as that in which it
| itself stands to 'C'.  It is from this definition,
| together with a definition of "formal", that I
| deduce mathematically the principles of logic.
| I also make a historical review of all the
| definitions and conceptions of logic, and show,
| not merely that my definition is no novelty, but
| that my non-psychological conception of logic has
| 'virtually' been quite generally held, though not
| generally recognized.  (CSP, NEM 4, 20-21).
|
| On the Definition of Logic [Version 2]
|
| Logic is 'formal semiotic'.  A sign is something,
| 'A', which brings something, 'B', its 'interpretant'
| sign, determined or created by it, into the same
| sort of correspondence (or a lower implied sort)
| with something, 'C', its 'object', as that in
| which itself stands to 'C'.  This definition no
| more involves any reference to human thought than
| does the definition of a line as the place within
| which a particle lies during a lapse of time.
| It is from this definition that I deduce the
| principles of logic by mathematical reasoning,
| and by mathematical reasoning that, I aver, will
| support criticism of Weierstrassian severity, and
| that is perfectly evident.  The word "formal" in
| the definition is also defined. (CSP, NEM 4, 54).
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce,
|'The New Elements of Mathematics', Volume 4,
| Edited by Carolyn Eisele, Mouton, The Hague, 1976.

JP: I don't want to lose the moment so I'm risking accuracy/depth etc. for haste --

JP: In immediately above definition I notice particularly two comments.
    One is the remark about correspondence "(or a lower implied sort)"
    and the other is the reference to a definition of "formal".  I'm
    thinking that correspondence is either iconic or indexical and
    that a lower implied sort of correspondence has at least the
    same function.  And I'm also wondering if you might have
    off hand a reference to Peirce's definition of formal
    ref in his comment.

Here is the relevant part of the second variant:

| Logic is 'formal semiotic'.  A sign is something, 'A',
| which brings something, 'B', its 'interpretant' sign,
| determined or created by it, into the same sort of
| correspondence (or a lower implied sort) with
| something, 'C', its 'object', as that in
| which itself stands to 'C'.

I took the "lower implied sort" as modifying the "same"
in "the same sort of correspondence", and I further took
the word "implied" as intended to generalize the definition
by weakening the condition in question, much in the way that
we would weaken the "sameness" of the equivalence "<=>" into
the lower implied sort of the implication "=>".  I will think
about the reading of "lower" as "degenerate" as in the castes
of icons and indices, but the "implied" seems to rule that out,
just off hand, as being as sign does not imply being either one.

The "correspondence" I take in the sense of the phrase "triple correspondence"
that he uses elsewhere for a 3-adic relation, but definitely not anything like
a one-to-one correspondence, which is a 2-adic relation, and thus not intended
to suggest any hint of a "correspondence theory" of meaning or truth.  In this
way of reading it, the "correspondence" is just a rhetorical alternate for the
sign relation itself.  This interpretation also comports with that "recursive"
definition of the sign relation that Peirce often gives.

A little bit under the weather today --
we've been in the deep freeze for
a couple of weeks hereabouts --
so I'll need to take a rest.

NEKS. Discussion Note 8


JA = Jon Awbrey
JP = Jim Piat

Re: KS-DIS 7.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003300.html
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272

JA: Partly I like these statements because they place the
    matter of defining "sign" within its due contexts of
    defining "formal" and defining "logic", which helps
    to "comprehend", in both senses of that term, some
    of the purposes and utilities of the definition.

JA: With respect to the question of contrast, Peirce in this instance
    explictly contrasts this definition with the most popular host of
    sufficient but not necessary descriptions, namely, those that use
    some of our common but typically unexamined introspections and/or
    intuitions about our own psychological processes in order to fill
    in a motley assortment of intuitive blind spots and logical holes
    in the description.  This affords a significant correction to the
    psychologically-biased descriptions, for instance, those deriving
    from the "New List" account.

JP: Ha!  Yes, I've always thought that the New List relied a bit on unexamined 
    psychological notions such as "attention" but then again I wonder if any 
    human endeavor (inquiry, defintion, thought or whatever) can completely 
    escape this sort of reliance.  Being a psychologist (whatever that is)
    this has never bothered me.  In fact it just now occurs to me that that
    for me is a good account of what I mean when I say I am a psychologist --
    that for me what is left undefined or the starting point if you will --
    is what in common parlance people mostly call psychological.

I have no brief against psychology -- it is a fascinating study, one of those
that I passed through several times in the "cycle of majors" that I had as an
undergrad and even spent a parallel life during the 80's taking a Master's in.
And I do not confound "psychological" or even "introspective" with "unexamind" --
it's merely that many of our most intuitive concepts remain as yet "primitive" --
in both the "logical undefind" and the "savage mind" senses of the word.  And
it's entirely appropriate to use the concepts that we have until we arrive at
clearer and distincter ideas, as the saying goes -- like you say, there is no
escaping that, not at the outset anyways.

JP: It's always struct me that Peirce's eschewing of psychologogism
    was no big deal -- mostly just a reaction to the excesses of the
    psychologizing in vogue at the time he was writing.  Something
    psychologists of the time eventually reacted against (to the
    point of excesses in the other direction) themselves.

"Struct" -- a sly alusion to Aristotle's 'pathemeta'
and the classical theory of being tutored by nature,
the mode of instruction via hard knocks impressions.
I like it, ergo, I think I'll steal it.

JA: But probably the most important feature of this definition is that
    it does not invoke too large a variety of undefined terms as a part
    of its try at definition, and the few significant terms that it does
    pass the buck to, like "correspondence" and "determination", are ones
    for which we find fairly fast definitions elsewhere in Peirce's works.

JA: The reason why these criteria are important is that they give us what we need
    in order to carry out any measure of deductive or necessary reasoning on the
    basis of the definition alone -- the "standing on its own feet" character
    of a genuine definition.

JA: To be continued ...

JP: Looking forward to that!

WOWYWF, somebody may be keeping a list ...

NEKS. Discussion Note 9


JP = Jim Piat

Re: KS-DIS 4.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003297.html
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272

I see that the following query fell to
the cutting room floor of my "attention"
somewhere in the process of cut and haste.

JP: And I'm also wondering if you might have
    off hand a reference to Peirce's definition
    of formal ref[erred to?] in his comment.

The one that comes to mind, the way that I'm forced to recall most
things these days, by Googling on +Awbrey +Peirce "Quasi-Necessary"
is this one:

Cf: SR 3.  http://forum.wolframscience.com/showthread.php?postid=2395#post2395
In: SR.    http://forum.wolframscience.com/showthread.php?threadid=647

| Logic, in its general sense, is, as I believe I have shown, only another
| name for 'semiotic' [Greek: 'semeiotike'], the quasi-necessary, or formal,
| doctrine of signs.  By describing the doctrine as "quasi-necessary", or
| formal, I mean that we observe the characters of such signs as we know,
| and from such an observation, by a process which I will not object to
| naming Abstraction, we are led to statements, eminently fallible, and
| therefore in one sense by no means necessary, as to what 'must be' the
| characters of all signs used by a "scientific" intelligence, that is to say,
| by an intelligence capable of learning by experience.  As to that process of
| abstraction, it is itself a sort of observation.  The faculty which I call
| abstractive observation is one which ordinary people perfectly recognize,
| but for which the theories of philosophers sometimes hardly leave room.
| It is a familiar experience to every human being to wish for something
| quite beyond his present means, and to follow that wish by the question,
| "Should I wish for that thing just the same, if I had ample means to gratify it?"
| To answer that question, he searches his heart, and in doing so makes what I term
| an abstractive observation.  He makes in his imagination a sort of skeleton diagram,
| or outline sketch, of himself, considers what modifications the hypothetical state
| of things would require to be made in that picture, and then examines it, that is,
| 'observes' what he has imagined, to see whether the same ardent desire is there to
| be discerned.  By such a process, which is at bottom very much like mathematical
| reasoning, we can reach conclusions as to what 'would be' true of signs in all
| cases, so long as the intelligence using them was scientific.  (CP 2.227).
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 2.227,
| Editor Data:  From An Unidentified Fragment, c. 1897.

P.S.  I just now got your message from 7:59
this morning, but will save it for tomorrow.

NEKS. Discussion Note 10


JP = Jim Piat

Re: KS-DIS 3.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003296.html
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272

JP: An early response to an early response.  Ah yes, of course, I've read your paper
    on interpretation as action before -- but apparently now I'm ready to read it
    with more understanding and profit.  Strange how some things that I just
    glossed over before (thinking them unnecessary filler) now jump out at
    me as key concepts!  Reminds me of Joe's recent comments about how
    successive iterations of philosophical inquiry (in this case my
    own) legitimately must keep revisiting old "settled" issues in
    the light of new understandings.  So I'm going to give your
    paper a fresh slow read -- and thanks for the re-minder!
    I look forward to any further comments you may wish
    to add.

A random response to a random distribution.
Thanks for the once or thrice over.  And I
will not reguard it a hermeneutic violence
if you look beneath the subtitles and risk
the wine-dark see-change of look-out-world
that every old grit of your hermenaut wits.

But serially, folks, things take care of themselves as far as raising new doubts.
It's what we do to after that that makes all the difference in styles of inquiry.
Does our peerage into the skies open eyes, or refuse to peer through the 'scopes?
Does our revistation of old friends and familiars bring about a truly new vision,
or merely the sort of apologetic revisal that led Henry Ford to say that History
is post hoc revisionary casuistry of a specious quo, or something to that effect?
Think of a real example, say Galileo, Bellarmine, Descartes.  In what sense were
they peers, in what sense not?  More to the point, how would it have been viewed
at the time, how sundry and variously, by who?  Now let's imagine in our darkest
imaginings that the "Continuous Young Creation" (CYC) theory of the universe can
win out in the next "Tribunal Of The Inquisition" (TOTI), and prevail over minds
for the remains of the Third Millennium.  Will not-now people not then look back
on a wholly different "Topology Of Peers" (TOP) than what now transits sic, what
the Scientism of the future will chastise as our benighted age of seculahilarity?
These dim reflections make it clear that the notion of peerage is no explanation,
but concocted after the fact to rationalize whatever fashion or fascism preveils.

NEKS. Discussion Note 11


JP = Jim Piat

Re: KS-DIS 3.  http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003296.html
In: KS-DIS.    http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/thread.html#3272

I see that some idiom from another language -- Algol or Forth I think --
has muffed my text for the English ear, so speaking of revision, like
speaking of the devil, I guess, here is the revised, extended edition:

But serially, folks, things take care of themselves as far as raising new doubts.
It's what we do to after that that makes all the difference in styles of inquiry.
Does our peerage into the skies open eyes, or refuse to peer through the 'scopes?
Does our revistation of old friends and familiars bring about a truly new vision,
or merely the sort of apologetic revisal that led Henry Ford to say that History
is post hoc revisionary casuistry of a specious quo, or something to that effect?
Think of a real example, say Galileo, Bellarmine, Descartes.  In what sense were
they peers, in what sense not?  More to the point, how would it have been viewed
at the time, how sundry and variously, by who?  Now let's imagine in our darkest
imaginings that the "Continuous Young Creation" (CYC) theory of the universe can
win out in the next "Tribunal Of The Inquisition" (TOTI), and prevail over minds
for the remains of the Third Millennium.  Will not-now people not then look back
on a wholly different "Topology Of Peers" (TOP) than what now transits sic, what
the Scientism of the future will chastise as our benighted age of seculahilarity?
These dim reflections make it clear that the notion of peerage is no explanation,
but concocted after the fact to rationalize whatever fashion or fascism preveils.

The spirit of inquiry comes from the heart.
Where it lives there's no need to force it.
Where it's dead there's no way to argue it
into being -- it demands an external shock
or an internal quake, a sense of anharmony
to kick-start it back to the realm of life.
But don't underestimate the persistence of
a static status quo to insulate its static
atmospherics from all hope of resuscitance,
by all the available routines of authority,
parochial isolation, not to say xenophobia.

OLOD. Quine On The Limits Of Decision

OLOD. Note 1

| On the Limits of Decision
|
| Because these congresses occur at intervals of five years, they make
| for retrospection.  I find myself thinking back over a century of logic.
| A hundred years ago George Boole's algebra of classes was at hand.  Like
| so many inventions, it had been needlessly clumsy when it first appeared;
| but meanwhile, in 1864, W.S. Jevons had taken the kinks out of it.  It was
| only in that same year, 1864, that DeMorgan published his crude algebra of
| relations.  Then, around a century ago, C.S. Peirce published three papers
| refining and extending these two algebras -- Boole's of classes and DeMorgan's
| of relations.  These papers of Peirce's appeared in 1867 and 1870.  Even our
| conception of truth-function logic in terms of truth tables, which is so clear
| and obvious as to seem inevitable today, was not yet explicit in the writings
| of that time.  As for the logic of quantification, it remained unknown until
| 1879, when Frege published his 'Begriffsschrift';  and it was around three
| years later still that Peirce began to become aware of this idea, through
| independent efforts.  And even down to litle more than a half century ago
| we were weak on decision procedures.  It was only in 1915 that Löwenheim
| published a decision procedure for the Boolean algebra of classes, or,
| what is equivalent, monadic quantification theory.  It was a clumsy
| procedure, and obscure in the presentation -- the way, again, with
| new inventions.  And it was less than a third of a century ago that
| we were at last forced, by results of Gödel, Turing, and Church, to
| despair of a decision procedure for the rest of quantification theory.
|
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", pp. 156-157.
|
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
| MA, 1981.  A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
| vol. 3, 1969.

OLOD. Note 2

| On the Limits of Decision (cont.)
|
| It is hard now to imagine not seeing truth-function logic
| as a trivial matter of truth tables, and it is becoming hard
| even to imagine the decidability of monadic quantification theory
| as other than obvious.  For monadic quantification theory in a modern
| perspective is essentially just an elaboration of truth-function logic.
| I want now to spend a few minutes developing this connection.
|
| What makes truth-function logic decidable by truth tables
| is that the truth value of a truth function can be computed
| from the truth values of the arguments.  But is a formula of
| quantification theory not a truth-function of quantifications?
| Its truth vaue can be computed from whatever truth values may be
| assigned to its component quantifications.  Why does this not make
| quantification theory decidable by truth tables?  Why not test a
| formula of quantification theory for validity by assigning all
| combinations of truth values to its component quantifications
| and seeing whether the whole comes out true every time?
| 
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", p. 157.
|
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
| MA, 1981.  A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
| vol. 3, 1969.

OLOD. Note 3

| On the Limits of Decision (cont.)
|
| The answer obviously is that this criterion is too
| severe, because the component quantifications are
| not always independent of one another.  A formula
| of quantification theory might be valid in spite
| of failing this truth-table test.  It might fail
| the test by turning out false for some assignment
| of truth values to its component quantifications,
| but that assignment might be undeserving of notice
| because incompatible with certain interdependences
| of the component quantifications.
|
| If, on the other hand, we can put a formula of quantification
| theory into the form of a truth function of quantifications
| which are independent of one another, then the truth table
| will indeed serve as a validity test.  And this is just
| what we can do for monadic formulas of quantification
| theory.  Herbrand showed this in 1930.
|
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", p. 157.
|
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
| MA, 1981.  A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
| vol. 3, 1969.

OLOD. Note 4

| On the Limits of Decision (cont.)
|
| ...
| 
| Quine, "Limits of Decision", pp. 157-158.
|
| W.V. Quine, "On the Limits of Decision", pp. 156-163 in
|'Theories and Things, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
| MA, 1981.  A shorter version of this paper appeared in the
|'Akten des XIV. internationalen Kongresses für Philosophie',
| vol. 3, 1969.

POLA. Philosophy Of Logical Atomism

I am going to collect here a number of excerpts from the papers that Bertrand Russell wrote in the years 1910–1920, my interest being focused on the logical characters of belief and knowledge. I will take the liberty of breaking up some of Russell's longer paragraphs in whatever fashion serves to facilitate their study.

POLA. Note 1

The Philosophy of Logical Atomism (1918)

The following [is the text] of a course of eight lectures delivered in [Gordon Square] London, in the first months of 1918, [which] are very largely concerned with explaining certain ideas which I learnt from my friend and former pupil Ludwig Wittgenstein. I have had no opportunity of knowing his views since August 1914, and I do not even know whether he is alive or dead. He has therefore no responsibility for what is said in these lectures beyond that of having originally supplied many of the theories contained in them. (Russell, POLA, p. 35).

Bertrand Russell, “The Philosophy of Logical Atomism”, pp. 35–155 in The Philosophy of Logical Atomism, edited with an introduction by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985. First published 1918.

POLA. Note 2

| 1.  Facts and Propositions
|
| This course of lectures which I am now beginning I have called
| the Philosophy of Logical Atomism.  Perhaps I had better begin
| by saying a word or two as to what I understand by that title.
| The kind of philosophy that I wish to advocate, which I call
| Logical Atomism, is one which has forced itself upon me in the
| course of thinking about the philosophy of mathematics, although
| I should find it hard to say exactly how far there is a definite
| logical connection between the two.  The things I am going to say
| in these lectures are mainly my own personal opinions and I do not
| claim that they are more than that.
|
| As I have attempted to prove in 'The Principles of Mathematics', when
| we analyse mathematics we bring it all back to logic.  It all comes back
| to logic in the strictest and most formal sense.  In the present lectures,
| I shall try to set forth in a sort of outline, rather briefly and rather
| unsatisfactorily, a kind of logical doctrine which seems to me to result
| from the philosophy of mathematics -- not exactly logically, but as what
| emerges as one reflects:  a certain kind of logical doctrine, and on the
| basis of this a certain kind of metaphysic.
|
| The logic which I shall advocate is atomistic, as opposed to
| the monistic logic of the people who more or less follow Hegel.
| When I say that my logic is atomistic, I mean that I share the
| common-sense belief that there are many separate things;  I do
| not regard the apparent multiplicity of the world as consisting
| merely in phases and unreal divisions of a single indivisible
| Reality.  It results from that, that a considerable part of
| what one would have to do to justify the sort of philosophy
| I wish to advocate would consist in justifying the process
| of analysis.
|
| One is often told that the process of analysis is falsification, that
| when you analyse any given concrete whole you falsify it and that the
| results of analysis are not true.  I do not think that is a right view.
| I do not mean to say, of course, and nobody would maintain, that when you
| have analysed you keep everything that you had before you analysed.  If you
| did, you would never attain anything in analysing.  I do not propose to meet
| the views that I disagree with by controversy, by arguing against those views,
| but rather by positively setting forth what I believe to be the truth about the
| matter, and endeavouring all the way through to make the views that I advocate
| result inevitably from absolutely undeniable data.
|
| When I talk of "undeniable data" that is not to be regarded as synonymous
| with "true data", because "undeniable" is a psychological term and "true"
| is not.  When I say that something is "undeniable", I mean that it is not
| the sort of thing that anybody is going to deny;  it does not follow from
| that that it is true, though it does follow that we shall all think it true --
| and that is as near to truth as we seem able to get.
|
| When you are considering any sort of theory of knowledge, you are more or less
| tied to a certain unavoidable subjectivity, because you are not concerned simply
| with the question what is true of the world, but "What can I know of the world?"
| You always have to start any kind of argument from something which appears to
| you to be true;  if it appears to you to be true, there is no more to be done.
| You cannot go outside yourself and consider abstractly whether the things that
| appear to you to be true are true;  you may do this in a particular case, where
| one of your beliefs is changed in consequence of others among your beliefs.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 35-37.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 3

| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
|
| The reason that I call my doctrine 'logical' atomism is because
| the atoms that I wish to arrive at as the sort of last residue
| in analysis are logical atoms and not physical atoms.  Some of
| them will be what I call "particulars" -- such things as little
| patches of colour or sounds, momentary things -- and some of them
| will be predicates or relations and so on.  The point is that the
| atom I wish to arrive at is the atom of logical analysis, not the
| atom of physical analysis.
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 37.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 4

| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
|
| It is a rather curious fact in philosophy that the data which are
| undeniable to start with are always rather vague and ambiguous.
| You can, for instance, say:  "There are a number of people in
| this room at this moment".  That is obviously in some sense
| undeniable.  But when you come to try and define what this
| room is, and what it is for a person to be in a room, and
| how you are going to distinguish one person from another,
| and so forth, you find that what you have said is most
| fearfully vague and that you really do not know what
| you meant.  That is a rather singular fact, that
| everything you are really sure of, right off is
| something that you do not know the meaning of,
| and the moment you get a precise statement
| you will not be sure whether it is true
| or false, at least right off.
|
| The process of sound philosophizing, to my mind, consists mainly
| in passing from those obvious, vague, ambiguous things, that we
| feel quite sure of, to something precise, clear, definite, which
| by reflection and analysis we find is involved in the vague thing
| that we start from, and is, so to speak, the real truth of which
| that vague thing is a sort of shadow.
|
| I should like, if time were longer and if I knew more than I do,
| to spend a whole lecture on the conception of vagueness.  I think
| vagueness is very much more important in the theory of knowledge
| than you would judge it to be from the writings of most people.
| Everything is vague to a degree you do not realize till you
| have tried to make it precise, and everything precise is
| so remote from everything that we normally think, that
| you cannot for a moment suppose that is what we really
| mean when we say what we think.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 37-38.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 5

| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
|
| The first truism to which I wish to draw your attention -- and I hope
| you will agree with me that these things that I call truisms are so
| obvious that it is almost laughable to mention them -- is that the
| world contains 'facts', which are what they are whatever we may
| choose to think about them, and that there are also 'beliefs',
| which have reference to facts, and by reference to facts are
| either true or false.
|
| I will try first of all to give you a preliminary explanation of what
| I mean by a "fact".  When I speak of a fact -- I do not propose to
| attempt an exact definition, but an explanation, so that you will
| know what I am talking about -- I mean the kind of thing that
| makes a proposition true or false.
|
| If I say "It is raining", what I say is true in a certain condition of
| weather and is false in other conditions of weather.  The condition of
| weather that makes my statement true (or false as the case may be), is
| what I should call a "fact".
|
| If I say, "Socrates is dead", my statement will be true owing to a
| certain physiological occurrence which happened in Athens long ago.
|
| If I say, "Gravitation varies inversely as the square of the distance",
| my statement is rendered true by astronomical fact.
|
| If I say, "Two and two are four", it is arithmetical fact that makes
| my statement true.
|
| On the other hand, if I say, "Socrates is alive",
| or "Gravitation varies directly as the distance",
| or "Two and two are five", the very same facts
| which made my previous statements true show
| that these new statements are false.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 40-41.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 6

| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
|
| I want you to realize that when I speak of a fact I do not mean a
| particular existing thing, such as Socrates or the rain or the sun.
| Socrates himself does not render any statement true of false.  You
| might be inclined to suppose that all by himself he would give truth
| to the statement "Socrates existed", but as a matter of fact that is a
| mistake.  It is due to a confusion which I shall try to explain in the
| sixth lecture of this course, when I come to deal with the notion of
| existence.  Socrates himself, or any particular thing just by itself,
| does not make any proposition true or false.  "Socrates is dead" and
| "Socrates is alive" are both of them statements about Socrates.  One is
| true and the other false.  What I call a fact is the sort of thing that
| is expressed by a whole sentence, not by a single name like "Socrates".
| When a single word does come to express a fact, like "fire" or "wolf",
| it is always due to an unexpressed context, and the full expression of
| a fact will always involve a sentence.  We express a fact, for example,
| when we say that a certain thing has a certain property, or that it
| has a certain relation to another thing;  but the thing which has
| the property or the relation is not what I call a "fact".
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 41.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 7

| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
|
| It is important to observe that facts belong to the objective world.
| They are not created by our thought or beliefs except in special cases.
| That is one of the sort of things which I should set up as an obvious truism,
| but, of course, one is aware, the moment one has read any philosophy at all,
| how very much there is to be said before such a statement as that can become
| the kind of position that you want.  The first thing I want to emphasize is
| that the outer world -- the world, so to speak, which knowledge is aiming
| at knowing -- is not completely described by a lot of "particulars", but
| that you must also take account of these things that I call facts, which
| are the sort of things that you express by a sentence, and that these,
| just as much as particular chairs and tables, are part of the real world.
|
| Except in psychology, most of our statements are not intended merely to
| express our condition of mind, though that is often all that they succeed
| in doing.  They are intended to express facts, which (except when they are
| psychological facts) will be about the outer world.  There are such facts
| involved, equally when we speak truly and when we speak falsely.  When we
| speak falsely it is an objective fact that makes what we say false, and
| it is an objective fact which makes what we say true when we speak truly.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 41-42.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 8

| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
|
| There are a great many different kinds of facts, and we shall be
| concerned in later lectures with a certain amount of classification
| of facts.  I will just point out a few kinds of facts to begin with,
| so that you may not imagine that facts are all very much alike.
|
| There are 'particular facts', such as "This is white";  then there
| are 'general facts', such as "All men are mortal".  Of course, the
| distinction between particular and general facts is one of the most
| important.
|
| There again it would be a very great mistake to suppose that
| you could describe the world completely by means of particular
| facts alone.  Suppose that you had succeeded in chronicling every
| single particular fact throughout the universe, and that there did
| not exist a single particular fact of any sort anywhere that you had
| not chronicled, you still would not have got a complete description of
| the universe unless you also added:  "These that I have chronicled are
| all the particular facts there are".  So you cannot hope to describe the
| world completely without having general facts as well as particular facts.
|
| Another distinction, which is perhaps a little more difficult to make, is
| between positive facts and negative facts, such as "Socrates was alive" --
| a positive fact -- and "Socrates is not alive" -- you might say a negative
| fact.  But the distinction is difficult to make precise.
|
| Then there are facts concerning particular things or particular qualities
| or relations, and, apart from them, the completely general facts of the sort
| that you have in logic, where there is no mention of any constituent whatever
| of the actual world, no mention of any particular thing or particular quality
| or particular relation, indeed strictly you may say no mention of anything.
|
| That is one of the characteristics
| of logical propositions, that they
| mention nothing.
|
| Such a proposition is:  "If one class is
| part of another, a term which is a member
| of the one is also a member of the other".
|
| All those words that come in the statement of a pure logical proposition
| are words really belonging to syntax.  They are words merely expressing
| form or connection, not mentioning any particular constituent of the
| proposition in which they occur.  This is, of course, a thing that
| wants to be proved;  I am not laying it down as self-evident.
|
| Then there are facts about the properties of single things;  and facts
| about the relations between two things, three things, and so on;  and
| any number of different classifications of some of the facts in the
| world, which are important for different purposes.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 42-43.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 9

| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
|
| It is obvious that there is not a dualism of true and false facts;
| there are only just facts.  It would be a mistake, of course, to
| say that all facts are true.  That would be a mistake because
| true and false are correlatives, and you would only say of
| a thing that it was true if it was the sort of thing that
| 'might' be false.  A fact cannot be either true or false.
|
| That brings us on to the question of statements or propositions or
| judgments, all those things that do have the quality of truth and
| falsehood.  For the purposes of logic, though not, I think, for the
| purposes of theory of knowledge, it is natural to concentrate upon
| the proposition as the thing which is going to be our typical vehicle
| on the duality of truth and falsehood.
|
| A proposition, one may say, is a sentence in the indicative,
| a sentence asserting something, not questioning or commanding
| or wishing.  It may also be a sentence of that sort preceded
| by the word "that".  For example, "That Socrates is alive",
| "That two and two are four", "That two and two are five",
| anything of that sort will be a proposition.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 43-44.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 10

| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
|
| A proposition is just a symbol.  It is a complex symbol in the
| sense that it has parts which are also symbols:  a symbol may
| be defined as complex when it has parts that are symbols.
|
| In a sentence containing several words, the several words are each symbols,
| and the sentence comprising them is therefore a complex symbol in that sense.
|
| There is a good deal of importance to philosophy in the theory of symbolism,
| a good deal more than one time I thought.  I think the importance is almost
| entirely negative, i.e., the importance lies in the fact that unless you
| are fairly self-conscious about symbols, unless you are fairly aware of
| the relation of the symbol to what it symbolizes, you will find yourself
| attributing to the thing properties which only belong to the symbol.
|
| That, of course, is especially likely in very abstract studies such as
| philosophical logic, because the subject-matter that you are supposed
| to be thinking of is so exceedingly difficult and elusive that any
| person who has ever tried to think about it knows you do not think
| about it except perhaps once in six months for half a minute.
| The rest of the time you think about the symbols, because
| they are tangible, but the thing you are supposed to be
| thinking about is fearfully difficult and one does not
| often manage to think about it.
|
| The really good philosopher is the one who does
| once in six months think about it for a minute.
| Bad philosophers never do.  That is why the
| theory of symbolism has a certain importance,
| because otherwise you are so certain to
| mistake the properties of the symbolism
| for the properties of the thing.
|
| It has other interesting sides to it too.
| There are different kinds of symbols,
| different kinds of relation between
| symbol and what is symbolized, and
| very important fallacies arise
| from not realizing this.
|
| The sort of contradictions about which
| I shall be speaking in connection with
| types in a later lecture all arise from
| mistakes in symbolism, from putting one
| sort of symbol in the place where another
| sort of symbol ought to be.
|
| Some of the notions that have been thought absolutely fundamental in philosophy
| have arisen, I believe, entirely through mistakes as to symbolism -- e.g. the
| notion of existence, or, if you like, reality.  Those two words stand for a
| great deal that has been discussed in philosophy.  There has been the theory
| about every proposition being really a description of reality as a whole and
| so on, and altogther these notions of reality and existence have played a
| very prominent part in philosophy.  Now my own belief is that as they have
| occurred in philosophy, they have been entirely the outcome of a muddle
| about symbolism, and that when you have cleared up that muddle, you find
| that practically everything that has been said about existence is sheer
| and simple mistake, and that is all you can say about it.  I shall go
| into that in a later lecture, but it is an example of the way in which
| symbolism is important.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 44-45.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 11

| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
|
| Perhaps I ought to say a word or two about what I am
| understanding by symbolism, because I think some people
| think you only mean mathematical symbols when you talk
| about symbolism.  I am using it in a sense to include
| all language of every sort and kind, so that every
| word is a symbol, and every sentence, and so forth.
|
| When I speak of a symbol I simply mean something that "means" something else,
| and as to what I mean by "meaning" I am not prepared to tell you.  I will in
| the course of time enumerate a strictly infinite number of different things
| that "meaning" may mean but I shall not consider that I have exhausted the
| discussion by doing that.  I think that the notion of meaning is always
| more or less psychological, and that it is not possible to get a pure
| logical theory of meaning, nor therefore of symbolism.  I think that
| it is of the very essence of the explanation of what you mean by a
| symbol to take account of such things as knowing, of cognitive
| relations, and probably also of association.  At any rate
| I am pretty clear that the theory of symbolism and the
| use of symbolism is not a thing that can be explained
| in pure logic without taking account of the various
| cognitive relations that you may have to things.
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 45.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 12

| 1.  Facts and Propositions (cont.)
|
| As to what one means by "meaning", I will give a few illustrations.
| For instance, the word "Socrates", you will say, means a certain man;
| the word "mortal" means a certain quality;  and the sentence "Socrates
| is mortal" means a certain fact.  But these three sorts of meaning are
| entirely distinct, and you will get into the most hopeless contradictions
| if you think the word "meaning" has the same meaning in each of these three
| cases.  It is very important not to suppose that there is just one thing which
| is meant by "meaning", and that therefore there is just one sort of relation of
| the symbol to what is symbolized.  A name would be a proper symbol to use for
| a person;  a sentence (or a proposition) is the proper symbol for a fact.
|
| A belief or a statement has duality of truth and falsehood, which the
| fact does not have.  A belief or a statement always involves a proposition.
| You say that a man believes that so and so is the case.  A man believes that
| Socrates is dead.  What he believes is a proposition on the face of it, and
| for formal purposes it is convenient to take the proposition as the essential
| thing having the duality of truth and falsehood.
|
| It is very important to realize such things, for instance,
| as that 'propositions are not names for facts'.  It is quite
| obvious as soon as it is pointed out to you, but as a matter
| of fact I never had realized it until it was pointed out to
| me by a former pupil of mine, Wittgenstein.  It is perfectly
| evident as soon as you think of it, that a proposition is not
| a name for a fact, from the mere circumstance that there are
| 'two' propositions corresponding to each fact.  Suppose it
| is a fact that Socrates is dead.  You have two propositions:
| "Socrates is dead" and "Socrates is not dead".  And those two
| propositions corresponding to the same fact;  there is one fact
| in the world which makes one true and one false.  That is not
| accidental, and illustrates how the relation of proposition
| to fact is a totally different one from the relation of name
| to the thing named.  For each fact there are two propositions,
| one true and one false, and there is nothing in the nature of
| the symbol to show us which is the true one and which is the
| false one.  If there were, you could ascertain the truth
| about the world by examining propositions without looking
| around you.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 46-47.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 13

| 1.  Facts and Propositions (concl.)
|
| There are two different relations, as you see, that a proposition
| may have to a fact:  the one the relation that you may call being
| true to the fact, and the other being false to the fact.  Both are
| equally essentially logical relations which may subsist between the
| two, whereas in the case of a name, there is only one relation that
| it can have to what it names.  A name can just name a particular,
| or, if it does not, it is not a name at all, it is a noise.  It
| cannot be a name without having just that one particular relation
| of naming a certain thing, whereas a proposition does not cease
| to be a proposition if it is false.  It has two ways, of being
| true and being false, which together correspond to the property
| of being a name.  Just as a word may be a name or be not a name
| but just a meaningless noise, so a phrase which is apparently a
| proposition may be either true or false, or may be meaningless,
| but the true and false belong together as against the meaningless.
| That shows, of course, that the formal logical characterictics of
| propositions are quite different from those of names, and that the
| relations they have to facts are quite different, and therefore
| propositions are not names for facts.  You must not run away with
| the idea that you can name facts in any other way;  you cannot.
| You cannot name them at all.  You cannot properly name a fact.
| The only thing you can do is to assert it, or deny it, or
| desire it, or will it, or wish it, or question it, but all
| those are things involving the whole proposition.  You can
| never put the sort of thing that makes a proposition to be
| true or false in the position of a logical subject.  You can
| only have it there as something to be asserted or denied or
| something of that sort, but not something to be named.
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 47.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 14

| 4.  Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb:  Beliefs, Etc.
|
| You will remember that after speaking about atomic propositions
| I pointed out two more complicated forms of propositions which
| arise immediately on proceeding further than that:  the 'first',
| which I call molecular propositions, which I dealt with last time,
| involving such words as "or", "and", "if", and the 'second' involving
| two or more verbs such as believing, wishing, willing, and so forth.
|
| In the case of molecular propositions it was not clear that we had to deal with
| any new form of fact, but only with a new form of proposition, i.e. if you have
| a disjunctive proposition such as "p or q" it does not seem very plausible to
| say that there is in the world a disjunctive fact corresponding to "p or q"
| but merely that there is a fact corresponding to p and a fact corresponding
| to q, and the disjunctive proposition derives its truth or falsehood from
| those two separate facts.  Therefore in that case one was dealing only
| with a new form of proposition and not with new form of fact.  Today
| we have to deal with a new form of fact.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 79-80.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 15

| 4.  Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb:  Beliefs, Etc. (cont.)
|
| I think that one might describe philosophical logic, the philosophical portion
| of logic which is the portion that I am concerned with in these lectures since
| Christmas (1917), as an inventory, or if you like a more humble word, a "zoo"
| containing all the different forms that facts may have.  I should prefer to
| say "forms of facts" rather than "forms of propositions".
|
| To apply that to the case of molecular propositions which I dealt with
| last time, if one were pursuing this analysis of the forms of facts,
| it would be 'belief in' a molecular proposition that one would deal
| with rather than the molecular proposition itself.  In accordance
| with the sort of realistic bias that should put into all study
| of metaphysics, I should always wish to be engaged in the
| investigation of some actual fact or set of facts, and it
| seems to me that that is so in logic just as much as it
| is in zoology.  In logic you are concerned with the
| forms of facts, with getting hold of the different
| sorts of facts, different 'logical' sorts of facts,
| that there are in the world.
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 80.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 16

| 4.  Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb:  Beliefs, Etc. (cont.)
|
| Now I want to point out today that the facts that occur when one
| believes or wishes or wills have a different logical form from
| the atomic facts containing a single verb which I dealt with
| in my second lecture.  (There are, of course, a good many
| forms that facts that may have, a strictly infinite number,
| and I do not wish you to suppose that I pretend to deal
| with all of them.)
|
| Suppose you take any actual occurrence of a belief.  I want you to
| understand that I am not talking about beliefs in the sort of way
| in which judgment is spoken of in theory of knowledge, in which
| you would say there is 'the' judgment that two and two are four.
| I am talking of the actual occurrence of a belief in a particular
| person's mind at a particular moment, and discussing what sort of
| fact that is.
|
| If I say "What day of the week is this?" and you say "Tuesday",
| there occurs in your mind at that moment the belief that this is
| Tuesday.  The thing I want to deal with today is the question:
|
| What is the form of the fact which occurs when a person has a belief?
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 80-81.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 17

| 4.  Propositions and Facts with More than One Verb:  Beliefs, Etc. (cont.)
|
| Of course you see that the sort of obvious first notion that one would
| naturally arrive at would be that a belief is a relation to the proposition.
| "I believe the proposition p."  "I believe that today is Tuesday."  "I believe
| that two and two are four."  Something like that.  It seems on the face of it
| as if you had there a relation of the believing subject to a proposition.
|
| That view won't do for various reasons which I shall go into.  But you
| have, therefore, got to have a theory of belief which is not exactly that.
| Take any sort of proposition, say "I believe Socrates is mortal".  Suppose
| that that belief does actually occur.  The statement that it occurs is a
| statement of fact.  You have there two verbs.  You may have more than two
| verbs, you may have any number greater than one.  I may believe that Jones
| is of the opinion that Socrates is mortal.  There you have more than two
| verbs.  You may have any number, but you cannot have less than two.
|
| You will perceive that it is not only the proposition that has the two verbs,
| but also the fact, which is expressed by the proposition, has two constituents
| corresponding to verbs.  I shall call those constituents verbs for the sake
| of shortness, as it is very difficult to find any word to describe all those
| objects which one denotes by verbs.  Of course, that is strictly using the
| word "verb" in two different senses, but I do not think it can lead to any
| confusion if you understand that it is being so used.
|
| This fact (the belief) is one fact.  It is not like what you had in molecular
| propositions where you had (say) "p or q".  It is just one single fact that
| you have a belief.  That is obvious from the fact that you can believe a
| falsehood.  It is obvious from the fact of false belief that you cannot
| cut off one part;  you cannot have:
|
| I believe / Socrates is mortal.
|
| There are certain questions that arise about such facts,
| and the first that arises is, Are they undeniable facts
| or can you reduce them in some way to relations of other
| facts?  Is it really necessary to suppose that there
| are irreducible facts, of which that sort of thing
| is a verbal expression?
|
| On that question until fairly lately I should certainly not have
| supposed that any doubt could arise.  It had not really seemed to
| me until fairly lately that that was a debatable point.  I still
| believe that there are facts of that form, but I see that it is
| a substantial question that needs to be discussed.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 81-82.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 18

| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts?
|
| "Etc." covers understanding a proposition;  it covers desiring, willing,
| any other attitude of that sort that you may think of that involves
| a proposition.  It seems natural to say one believes a proposition
| and unnatural to say one desires a proposition, but as a matter
| of fact that is only a prejudice.  What you believe and what
| you desire are of exactly the same nature.  You may desire
| to get some sugar tomorrow and of course you may possibly
| believe that you will.  I am not sure that the logical
| form is the same in the case of will.  I am inclined
| to think that the case of will is more analogous to
| that of perception, in going direct to facts, and
| excluding the possibility of falsehood.  In any
| case desire and belief are of exactly the same
| form logically.
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 82.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 19

| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (cont.)
|
| Pragmatists and some of the American realists, the school whom one calls
| neutral monists, deny altogether that there is such a phenomenon as belief
| in the sense I am dealing with.  They do not deny it in words, they do not
| use the same sort of language that I am using, and that makes it difficult
| to compare their views with the views I am speaking about.  One has really
| to translate what they say into language more or less analogous to ours
| before one can make out where the points of contact or difference are.
|
| If you take the works of James in his 'Essays in Radical Empiricism'
| or Dewey in his 'Essays in Experimental Logic' you will find that they
| are denying altogether that there is such a phenomenon as belief in the
| sense I am talking of.  They use the word "believe" but they mean something
| different.  You come to the view called "behaviourism", according to which
| you mean, if you say a person believes a thing, that he behaves in a certain
| fashion;  and that hangs together with James's pragmatism.  James and Dewey
| would say:  when I believe a proposition, that 'means' that I act in a certain
| fashion, that my behaviour has certain characteristics, and my belief is a true
| one if the behaviour leads to the desired result and is a false one if it does
| not.  That, if it is true, makes their pragmatism a perfectly rational account
| of truth and falsehood, if you do accept their view that belief as an isolated
| phenomenon does not occur.
|
| That is therefore the first thing one has to consider.
| It would take me too far from logic to consider that
| subject as it deserves to be considered, because it
| is a subject belonging to psychology, and it is only
| relevant to logic in this one way that it raises a
| doubt whether there are any facts having the logical
| form that I am speaking of.
|
| In the question of this logical form that involves two or more verbs you
| have a curious interlacing of logic with empirical studies, and of course
| that may occur elsewhere, in this way, that an empirical study gives you
| an example of a thing having a certain logical form, and you cannot really
| be sure that there are things having a given logical form except by finding
| an example, and the finding of an example is itself empirical.  Therefore in
| that way empirical facts are relevant to logic at certain points.  I think
| theoretically one might know that there were those forms without knowing
| any instance of them, but practically, situated as we are, that does not
| seem to occur.  Practically, unless you can find an example of the form
| you won't know that there is that form.  If I cannot find an example
| containing two or more verbs, you will not have reason to believe
| in the theory that such a form occurs.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 82-83.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 20

| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (cont.)
|
| When you read the words of people like James and Dewey on the subject of belief,
| one thing that strikes you at once is that the sort of thing they are thinking of
| as the object of belief is quite different from the sort of thing I am thinking of.
| They think of it always as a thing.  They think you believe in God or Homer:  you
| believe in an object.  That is the picture they have in their minds.  It is common
| enough, in common parlance, to talk that way, and they would say, the first crude
| approximation that they would suggest would be that you believe truly when there
| is such an object and that you believe falsely when there is not.  I do not mean
| they would say that exactly, but that would be the crude view from which they
| would start.  They do not seem to have grasped the fact that the objective side
| in belief is better expressed by a proposition than by a single word, and that,
| I think, has a great deal to do with their whole outlook on the matter of what
| belief consists of.  The object of belief in their view is generally, not
| relations between things, or things having qualities, or what not, but
| just single things which may or may not exist.  That view seems to me
| radically and absolutely mistaken.
|
| In the 'first' place there are a great many judgments you cannot possibly fit into
| that scheme, and in the 'second' place it cannot possibly give any explanation to
| false beliefs, because when you believe that a thing exists and it does not exist,
| the thing is not there, it is nothing, and it cannot be the right analysis of a
| false belief to regard it as a relation to what is really nothing.
|
| This an objection to supposing that belief consists simply in relation
| to the object.  It is obvious that if you say "I believe in Homer" and
| there was no such person as Homer, your belief cannot be a relation to
| Homer, since there is no "Homer".
|
| Every fact that occurs in the world must be composed entirely of constituents
| that there are, and not of constituents that there are not.  Therefore when
| you say "I believe in Homer" it cannot be the right analysis of the thing
| to put it like that.  What the right analysis is I shall come on to in
| the theory of descriptions.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 83-84.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 21

| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (cont.)
|
| I come back now to the theory of behaviourism which I spoke of a moment ago.
| Suppose, e.g. that you are said to believe that there is a train at 10.25.
| This means, we are told, that you start for the station at a certain time.
| When you reach the station you see it is 10.24 and you run.  That behaviour
| constitutes your belief that there is a train at that time.  If you catch
| your train by running, your belief was true.  If the train went at 10.23,
| you miss it, and your belief was false.  That is the sort of thing that
| they would say constitutes belief.  There is not a single state of mind
| which consists in contemplating this eternal verity, that the train
| starts at 10.25.
|
| They would apply that even to the most abstract things.
| I do not myself feel that that view of things is tenable.
| It is a difficult one to refute because it goes very deep
| and one has the feeling that perhaps, if one thought it
| out long enough and became sufficiently aware of all
| its implications, one might find after all that it
| was a feasible view;  but yet I do not 'feel' it
| feasible.
|
| It hangs together, of course, with the theory of neutral monism, with
| the theory that the material constituting the mental is the same as the
| material constituting the physical, just like the Post Office directory
| which gives you people arranged geographically and alphabetically.  This
| whole theory hangs together with that.  I do not mean necessarily that
| all the people that profess the one profess the other, but that the
| two do essentially belong together.
|
| If you are going to take that view, you have to explain away belief
| and desire, because things of that sort do seem to be mental phenomena.
| They do seem rather far removed from the sort of thing that happens in
| the physical world.  Therefore people will set to work to explain away
| such things as belief, and reduce them to bodily behaviour;  and your
| belief in a certain proposition will consist in the behaviour of your
| body.  In the crudest terms that is what that view amounts to.  It
| does enable you to get on very well without mind.
|
| Truth and falsehood in that case consist in the relation of your
| bodily behaviour to a certain fact, the sort of distant fact which
| is the purpose of your behaviour, as it were, and when your behaviour
| is satisfactory in regard to that fact your belief is true, and when
| your behaviour is unsatisfactory in regard to that fact your belief
| is false.
|
| The logical essence, in that view, will be a relation between two facts
| having the same sort of form as a causal relation, i.e. on the one hand
| there will be your bodily behaviour which is one fact, and on the other
| hand the fact that the train starts at such and such a time, which is
| another fact, and out of a relation of those two the whole phenomenon
| is constituted.
|
| The thing you will get will be logically of the same form as you have
| in cause, where you have "This fact causes that fact".  It is quite
| a different logical form from the facts containing two verbs that
| I am talking of today.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 84-86.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 22

| 4.1.  Are Beliefs, Etc., Irreducible Facts? (concl.)
|
| I have naturally a bias in favour of the theory of neutral monism
| because it exemplifies Occam's razor.  I always wish to get on in
| philosophy with the smallest possible apparatus, partly because
| it diminishes the risk of error, because it is not necessary to
| deny the entities you do not assert, and therefore you run less
| risk of error the fewer entities you assume.  The other reason --
| perhaps a somewhat frivolous one -- is that every diminution
| in the number of entities increases the amount of work for
| mathematical logic to do in building up things that look
| like the entities you used to assume.  Therefore the
| whole theory of neutral monism is pleasing to me,
| but I do find so far very great difficulty in
| believing it.
|
| You will find a discussion of the whole question in some
| articles I wrote in 'The Monist'*, especially in July 1914,
| and in the two previous numbers also.  I should really want
| to rewrite them rather because I think some of the arguments
| I used against neutral monism are not valid.  I place most
| reliance on the argument about "emphatic particulars", "this",
| "I", all that class of words, that pick out certain particulars
| from the universe by their relation to oneself, and I think by
| the fact that they, or particulars related to them, are present
| to you at the moment of speaking.  "This", of course, is what
| I call an "emphatic particular".  It is simply a proper name
| for the present object of attention, a proper name, meaning
| nothing.  It is ambiguous, because, of course, the object
| of attention is always changing from moment to moment
| and from person to person.
|
| I think it is extremely difficult, if you get rid of consciousness
| altogether, to explain what you mean by such a word as "this", what
| it is that makes the absence of impartiality.  You would say that in
| a purely physical world there would be a complete impartiality.  All
| parts of time and all regions of space would seem equally emphatic.
| But what really happens is that we pick out certain facts, past and
| future and all that sort of thing;  they all radiate out from "this",
| and I have not myself seen how one can deal with the notion of "this"
| on the basis of neutral monism.  I do not lay that down dogmatically,
| only I do not see how it can be done.  I shall assume for the rest of
| this lecture that there are such facts as beliefs and wishes and so
| forth.  It would take me really the whole of my course to go into the
| question fully.  Thus we come back to more purely logical questions
| from this excursion into psychology, for which I apologize.
|
|*Reprinted as:  "On the Nature of Acquaintance", pp. 127-174
| in Bertrand Russell, 'Logic and Knowledge: Essays 1901-1950',
| edited by Robert Charles Marsh, Routledge, London, UK, 1992.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 86-87.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 23

| 4.2.  What is the Status of 'p' in "I believe 'p'"?
|
| You cannot say that you believe 'facts', because your beliefs are
| sometimes wrong.  You can say that you 'perceive' facts, because
| perceiving is not liable to error.  Wherever it is facts alone
| that are involved, error is impossible.  Therefore you cannot
| say you believe facts.  You have to say that you believe
| propositions.  The awkwardness of that is that obviously
| propositions are nothing.  Therefore that cannot be the
| true account of the matter.
|
| When I say "Obviously propositions are nothing" it is not perhaps
| quite obvious.  Time was when I thought there were propositions,
| but it does not seem to me very plausible to say that in addition
| to facts there are also these curious shadowy things going about
| such as "That today is Wednesday" when in fact it is Tuesday.
| I cannot believe they go about the real world.  It is more
| than one can manage to believe, and I do think no person
| with a vivid sense of reality can imagine it.
|
| One of the difficulties of the study of logic is that it is an
| exceedingly abstract study dealing with the most abstract things
| imaginable, and yet you cannot pursue it properly unless you have
| a vivid instinct as to what is real.  You must have that instinct
| rather well developed in logic.  I think otherwise you will get
| into fantastic things.
|
| I think Meinong is rather deficient in just that instinct for reality.
| Meinong maintains that there is such an object as the round square only
| it does not exist, and it does not even subsist, but nevertheless there
| is such an object, and when you say "The round square is a fiction",
| he takes it that there is an object "the round square" and there is
| a predicate "fiction".  No one with a sense of reality would so
| analyse that proposition.  He would see that the proposition
| wants analysing in such a way that you won't have to regard
| the round square as a constituent of that proposition.
|
| To suppose that in the actual world of nature there is a whole set of false
| propositions going about is to my mind monstrous.  I cannot bring myself
| to suppose it.  I cannot believe that they are there in the sense in
| which facts are there.  There seems to me something about the fact
| that "Today is Tuesday" on a different level of reality from the
| supposition "That today is Wednesday".  When I speak of the
| proposition "That today is Wednesday" I do not mean the
| occurrence in future of a state of mind in which you
| think it is Wednesday, but I am talking about the
| theory that there is something quite logical,
| something not involving mind in any way;  and
| such a thing as that I do not think you can
| take a false proposition to be.  I think a
| false proposition must, wherever it occurs,
| be subject to analysis, be taken to pieces,
| pulled to bits, and shown to be simply
| separate pieces of one fact in which
| the false proposition has been
| analysed away.  I say that
| simply on the ground of
| what I should call an
| instinct of reality.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 87-88.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 24

| 4.2.  What is the Status of 'p' in "I believe 'p'"? (concl.)
|
| I ought to say a word or two about "reality".  It is a vague word,
| and most of its uses are improper.  When I talk about reality as
| I am now doing, I can explain best what I mean by saying that
| I mean everything you would have to mention in a complete
| description of the world;  that will convey to you what
| I mean.
|
| Now I do 'not' think that false propositions would have to be
| mentioned in a complete description of the world.  False beliefs
| would, of course, false suppositions would, and desires for what
| does not come to pass, but not false propositions all alone, and
| therefore when you, as one says, believe a false proposition, that
| cannot be an accurate account of what occurs.
|
| It is not accurate to say "I believe the proposition 'p'" and
| regard the occurrence as a twofold relation between me and 'p'.
| The logical form is just the same whether you believe a false or
| a true proposition.  Therefore in all cases you are not to regard
| belief as a two-term relation between yourself and a proposition,
| and you have to analyse up the proposition and treat your belief
| differently.
|
| Therefore the belief does not really contain a proposition as a constituent
| but only contains the constituents of the proposition as constituents.  You
| cannot say when you believe, "What is it that you believe?"  There is no
| answer to that question, i.e. there is not a single thing that you are
| believing.  "I believe that today is Tuesday."  You must not suppose
| that "That today is Tuesday" is a single object which I am believing.
| That would be an error.  That is not the right way to analyse the
| occurrence, although that analysis is linguistically convenient,
| and one may keep it provided one knows that it is not the truth.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 88-89.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 25

4.3. How shall we describe the logical form of a belief?

I want to try to get an account of the way that a belief is made up. That is not an easy question at all. You cannot make what I should call a map-in-space of a belief. You can make a map of an atomic fact but not of a belief, for the simple reason that space-relations always are of the atomic sort or complications of the atomic sort. I will try to illustrate what I mean.

The point is in connexion with there being two verbs in the judgment and with the fact that both verbs have got to occur as verbs, because if a thing is a verb it cannot occur otherwise than as a verb.

Suppose I take ‘A believes that B loves C’. ‘Othello believes that Desdemona loves Cassio’. There you have a false belief. You have this odd state of affairs that the verb ‘loves’ occurs in that proposition and seems to occur as relating Desdemona to Cassio whereas in fact it does not do so, but yet it does occur as a verb, it does occur in the sort of way that a verb should do.

I mean that when A believes that B loves C, you have to have a verb in the place where ‘loves’ occurs. You cannot put a substantive in its place. Therefore it is clear that the subordinate verb (i.e. the verb other than believing) is functioning as a verb, and seems to be relating two terms, but as a matter of fact does not when a judgment happens to be false. That is what constitutes the puzzle about the nature of belief.

You will notice that whenever one gets to really close quarters with the theory of error one has the puzzle of how to deal with error without assuming the existence of the non-existent.

I mean that every theory of error sooner or later wrecks itself by assuming the existence of the non-existent. As when I say ‘Desdemona loves Cassio’, it seems as if you have a non-existent love between Desdemona and Cassio, but that is just as wrong as a non-existent unicorn. So you have to explain the whole theory of judgment in some other way.

I come now to this question of a map. Suppose you try such a map as this:

                                 
             Othello             
                |                
                |                
             believes            
                |                
                v                
 Desdemona -----------> Cassio   
              loves              
                                 

This question of making a map is not so strange as you might suppose because it is part of the whole theory of symbolism. It is important to realize where and how a symbolism of that sort would be wrong:

Where and how it is wrong is that in the symbol you have this relationship relating these two things and in the fact it doesn't really relate them. You cannot get in space any occurrence which is logically of the same form as belief.

When I say ‘logically of the same form’ I mean that one can be obtained from the other by replacing the constituents of the one by the new terms.

If I say ‘Desdemona loves Cassio’ that is of the same form as ‘A is to the right of B’.

Those are of the same form, and I say that nothing that occurs in space is of the same form as belief.

I have got on here to a new sort of thing, a new beast for our zoo, not another member of our former species but a new species.

The discovery of this fact is due to Mr. Wittgenstein.

Russell, POLA, pp. 89–91.

Bertrand Russell, “The Philosophy of Logical Atomism”, pp. 35–155 in The Philosophy of Logical Atomism, edited with an introduction by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985. First published 1918.

POLA. Note 26

| 4.3.  How shall we describe the logical form of a belief? (cont.)
|
| There is a great deal that is odd about belief from a
| logical point of view.  One of the things that are odd
| is that you can believe propositions of all sorts of forms.
| I can believe that "This is white" and "Two and two are four".
| They are quite different forms, yet one can believe both.  The
| actual occurrence can hardly be of exactly the same logical form
| in those two cases because of the great difference in the forms
| of the propositions believed.  Therefore it would seem that
| belief cannot strictly be logically one in all different
| cases but must be distinguished according to the nature
| of the proposition that you believe.
|
| If you have "I believe p" and I believe q" those two facts, if p and q are
| not of the same logical form, are not of the same logical form in the sense
| I was speaking of a moment ago, that is in the sense that from "I believe p"
| you can derive "I believe q" by replacing the constituents of one by the
| constituents of the other.
|
| That means that belief itself cannot be treated as being a proper sort of
| single term.  Belief will really have to have different logical forms
| according to the nature of what is believed.  So that the apparent
| sameness of believing in different cases is more or less illusory.
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 91.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 27

| 4.3.  How shall we describe the logical form of a belief? (concl.)
|
| There are really two main things that one wants to notice in this matter that
| I am treating of just now.  The 'first' is the impossibility of treating the
| proposition believed as an independent entity, entering as a unit into the
| occurrence of the belief, and the 'other' is the impossibility of putting
| the subordinate verb on a level with its terms as an object term in the
| belief.  That is a point in which I think that the theory of judgment
| which I set forth once in print some years ago was a little unduly
| simple, because I did then treat the object verb as if one could
| put it as just an object like the terms, as if one could put
| "loves" on a level with Desdemona and Cassio as a term for
| the relation "believe".  That is why I have been laying
| such an emphasis on this lecture today on the fact
| that there are two verbs at least.
|
| I hope you will forgive the fact that so much of what I say today is tentative
| and consists of pointing out difficulties.  The subject is not very easy and
| it has not been much dealt with or discussed.  Practically nobody has until
| quite lately begun to consider the problem of the nature of belief with
| anything like a proper logical apparatus and therefore one has very
| little to help one in any discussion and so one has to be content
| on many points at present with pointing out difficulties rather
| than laying down quite clear solutions.
|
| Russell, POLA, pp. 91-92.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 28

| 4.4.  The Question of Nomenclature
|
| What sort of name shall we give to verbs like "believe"
| and "wish" and so forth?  I should be inclined to call
| them "propositional verbs".  This is merely a suggested
| name for convenience, because they are verbs which have
| the 'form' of relating an object to a proposition.  As
| I have been explaining, that is not what they really do,
| but it is convenient to call them propositional verbs.
|
| Of course you might call them "attitudes", but I should not like that
| because it is a psychological term, and although all the instances in
| our experience are psychological, there is no reason to suppose that
| all the verbs I am talking of are psychological.  There is never any
| reason to suppose that sort of thing.
|
| One should always remember Spinoza's infinite attributes of Deity.
| It is quite likely that there are in the world the analogues of his
| infinite attributes.  We have no acquaintance with them, but there is
| no reason to suppose that the mental and the physical exhaust the whole
| universe, so one can never say that all the instances of any logical sort
| of thing are of such and such a nature which is not a logical nature:  you
| do not know enough about the world for that.  Therefore I should not suggest
| that all the verbs that have the form exemplified by believing and willing are
| psychological.  I can only say all I know are.
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 92.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

POLA. Note 29

| 4.4.  The Question of Nomenclature (concl.)
|
| I notice that in my syllabus I said I was going to deal with truth and
| falsehood today, but there is not much to say about them specifically
| as they are coming in all the time.  The thing one first thinks of as
| true or false is a proposition, and a proposition is nothing.  But a
| belief is true or false in the same way as a proposition is, so that
| you do have facts in the world that are true or false.
|
| I said a while back that there was no distinction of true and false among
| facts, but as regards that special class of facts that we call "beliefs",
| there is, in that sense that a belief which occurs may be true or false,
| though it is equally a fact in either case.
|
| One 'might' call wishes false in the same sense when one wishes
| something that does not happen.  The truth or falsehood depends
| upon the proposition that enters in.
|
| I am inclined to think that perception, as opposed to belief, does go
| straight to the fact and not through the proposition.  When you perceive
| the fact you do not, of course, have error coming in, because the moment it
| is a fact that is your object error is excluded.  I think that verification
| in the last resort would always reduce itself to the perception of facts.
| Therefore the logical form of perception will be different from the logical
| form of believing, just because of that circumstance that it is a 'fact' that
| comes in.  That raises also a number of logical difficulties which I do not
| propose to go into, but I think you can see for yourself that perceiving
| would also involve two verbs just as believing does.  I am inclined to
| think that volition differs from desire logically, in a way strictly
| analogous to that in which perception differs from belief.  But it
| would take us too far from logic to discuss this view.
|
| Russell, POLA, p. 93.
|
| Bertrand Russell, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism", pp. 35-155
| in 'The Philosophy of Logical Atomism', edited with an introduction
| by David Pears, Open Court, La Salle, IL, 1985.  First published 1918.

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

RTOK. Russell's Theory Of Knowledge

RTOK. Note 1

To anchor this thread I will copy out a focal passage from Russell's 1913 manuscript on the “Theory of Knowledge”, that was not published in full until 1984. If there is time, I will then go back and trace more of the development that sets out the background of this excerpt.

RTOK. Note 2

We come now to the last problem which has to be treated in this chapter, namely: What is the logical structure of the fact which consists in a given subject understanding a given proposition? The structure of an understanding varies according to the proposition understood. At present, we are only concerned with the understanding of atomic propositions; the understanding of molecular propositions will be dealt with in Part 3.

Let us again take the proposition "A and B are similar".

It is plain, to begin with, that the 'complex' "A and B being similar", even if it exists, does not enter in, for if it did, we could not understand false propositions, because in their case there is no such complex.

It is plain, also, from what has been said, that we cannot understand the proposition unless we are acquainted with A and B and similarity and the form "something and something have some relation". Apart from these four objects, there does not appear, so far as we can see, to be any object with which we need be acquainted in order to understand the proposition.

It seems to follow that these four objects, and these only, must be united with the subject in one complex when the subject understands the proposition. It cannot be any complex composed of them that enters in, since they need not form any complex, and if they do, we need not be acquainted with it. But they themselves must all enter in, since if they did not, it would be at least theoretically possible to understand the proposition without being acquainted with them.

In this argument, I appeal to the principle that, when we understand, those objects with which we must be acquainted when we understand, and those only, are object-constituents (i.e. constituents other than understanding itself and the subject) of the understanding-complex.

(Russell, TOK, pp. 116–117).

Bertrand Russell, Theory of Knowledge : The 1913 Manuscript, edited by Elizabeth Ramsden Eames in collaboration with Kenneth Blackwell, Routledge, London, UK, 1992. First published, George Allen and Unwin, 1984.

RTOK. Note 3

It follows that, when a subject S understands "A and B are similar", "understanding" is the relating relation, and the terms are S and A and B and similarity and R(x, y), where R(x, y) stands for the form "something and something have some relation". Thus a first symbol for the complex will be:

U{S, A, B, similarity, R(x, y)}.

This symbol, however, by no means exhausts the analysis of the form of the understanding-complex. There are many kinds of five-term complexes, and we have to decide what the kind is.

It is obvious, in the first place, that S is related to the four other terms in a way different from that in which any of the four other terms are related to each other.

(It is to be observed that we can derive from our five-term complex a complex having any smaller number of terms by replacing any one or more of the terms by "something". If S is replaced by "something", the resulting complex is of a different form from that which results from replacing any other term by "something". This explains what is meant by saying that S enters in a different way from the other constituents.)

It is obvious, in the second place, that R(x, y) enters in a different way from the other three objects, and that "similarity" has a different relation to R(x, y) from that which A and B have, while A and B have the same relation to R(x, y). Also, because we are dealing with a proposition asserting a symmetrical relation between A and B, A and B have each the same relation to "similarity", whereas, if we had been dealing with an asymmetrical relation, they would have had different relations to it. Thus we are led to the following map of our five-term complex:


     A o
        \   <
        ^\       *
          \           *
         % \               *
            \                   *
          %  \    R(x, y)            *
              o------o------>             o---------<---------o Similarity
           % /       ^               *                       ^
            /        |          *                          /
           /%        |     *                             /
          /          |*                                /
         /   %   *   |                               /
        /   <        |                             /
     B o      %      |                           /
        ^            |                         /
         \     %     |                       /
          \          |                     /
           \    %    |                   /
            \        |                 /
             \   %   |               /
              \      |             /
               \  %  |           /
                \    |         /
                 \ % |       /
                  \  |     /
                   \%|   /
                    \| /
                     o
                     S

In this figure, one relation goes from S to the four objects; one relation goes from R(x, y) to similarity, and another to A and B, while one relation goes from similarity to A and B.

This figure, I hope, will help to make clearer the map of our five-term complex. But to explain in detail the exact abstract meaning of the various items in the figure would demand a lengthy formal logical discussion. Meanwhile the above attempt must suffice, for the present, as an analysis of what is meant by "understanding a proposition".

(Russell, TOK, pp. 117–118).

Bertrand Russell, Theory of Knowledge : The 1913 Manuscript, edited by Elizabeth Ramsden Eames in collaboration with Kenneth Blackwell, Routledge, London, UK, 1992. First published, George Allen and Unwin, 1984.

RTOP. Russell's Treatise On Propositions

RTOP. Note 1

September creeps forward on little cheetah's feet, and I cannot say when I will be able to return to these issues in any detail, so for the time being I'll just record what I regard as one significant passage from Russell's paper “On Propositions”.

RTOP. Note 2

| On Propositions:  What They Are and How They Mean (1919)
|
| Let us illustrate the content of a belief
| by an example.  Suppose I am believing,
| but not in words, that "it will rain".
| What is happening?
|
| (1) Images, say, of the visual appearance of rain,
|     the feeling of wetness, the patter of drops,
|     interrelated, roughly, as the sensations
|     would be if it were raining, i.e., there
|     is a complex 'fact composed of images',
|     having a structure analogous to that
|     of the objective fact which would
|     make the belief true.
|
| (2) There is 'expectation', i.e.,
|     that form of belief which
|     refers to the future;
|     we shall examine
|     this shortly.
|
| (3) There is a relation between (1) and (2),
|     making us say that (1) is "what is expected".
|     This relation also demands investigation.
|
| The most important thing about a proposition is that, whether
| it consists of images or of words, it is, whenever it occurs, an
| actual fact, having a certain analogy -- to be further investigated --
| with the fact which makes it true or false.  A word-proposition, apart
| from niceties, "means" the corresponding image-proposition, and an
| image-proposition has an objective reference dependent upon the
| meanings of its constituent images.
|
| Russell, OP, p. 309.
|
| Bertrand Russell,
|"On Propositions:  What They Are And How They Mean" (1919),
| pp. 285-320 in 'Logic and Knowledge:  Essays, 1901-1950',
| edited by Robert Charles Marsh, Routledge, London, UK, 1956.

SABI. Synthetic/Analytic ≟ Boundary/Interior


Let's go back to Quine's topological metaphor:
the "web of belief", "fabric of knowledge",
or "epistemological field theory" picture,
and see if we can extract something that
might be useful in our present task,
settling on a robust architecture
for generic knowledge bases.

| 6.  Empiricism without the Dogmas
|
| The totality of our so-called knowledge or beliefs, from the most
| casual matters of geography and history to the profoundest laws of
| atomic physics or even of pure mathematics and logic, is a man-made
| fabric which impinges on experience only along the edges.  Or, to
| change the figure, total science is like a field of force whose
| boundary conditions are experience.  A conflict with experience at
| the periphery occasions readjustments in the interior of the field.
| Truth values have to be redistributed over some of our statements.
| Re-evaluation of some statements entails re-evaluation of others,
| because of their logical interconnections -- the logical laws
| being in turn simply certain further statements of the system,
| certain further elements of the field.  Having re-evaluated one
| statement we must re-evaluate some others, which may be statements
| logically connected with the first or may be the statements of logical
| connections themselves.  But the total field is so underdetermined by
| its boundary conditions, experience, that there is much latitude of
| choice as to what statements to re-evaluate in the light of any
| single contrary experience.  No particular experiences are
| linked with any particular statements in the interior of
| the field, except indirectly through considerations
| of equilibrium affecting the field as a whole.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 42-43.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.
|
| http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04935.html

There are some things that I am not trying to do.
One of them is reducing natural language to math,
and another is reducing math to natural language.
So I tend to regard the usual sorts of examples,
Bachelors and Hesperus and Phosphorus and so on,
as being useful for stock illustrations only so
long as nobody imagines that all we do with our
natural languages can really be ruled that way.
The semantics of natural language is more like
the semantics of music, and it would take many
octaves of 8-track tapes just to keep track of
all the meaning that is being layered into it.

So let me resort to a mathematical example, where Frege really lived,
and where all of this formal semantics stuff really has Frege's ghost
of a chance of actually making sense someday, if hardly come what may.

There is a "clear" distinction between equations like 2 = 0 and x = x,
that are called "noncontingent equations", because they have constant
truth values for all values of whatever variables they may have, and
equations like x^2 + 1 = 0, that are called "contingent equations",
because they are have different truth values for different values
of their variables.

But wait a minute, you or somebody says, the equation x^2 + 1 = 0 is false
for all values of its variables, and of course I remind you that it does
have solutions in the complex domain C.  So models of numbers really
are as fleeting as models of cars.  And this explains the annoying
habit that mathematicians have of constantly indexing formulas
with the names of the mathematical domains over which they
are intended to be interpreted as having their values.

And then someone else reminds us that 2 = 0 is true mod 2.

Those are the types of examples that I would like to keep in mind when we examime
the relativity of the analytic/synthetic distinction, or, to put a finer point on
this slippery slope, the contingency of the noncontingent/contingent distinction.

SYNF. Syntactic Fallacy


A syntactic fallacy is an error of mistaking
the properties of signs for the properties
of objects (that they may or may not have).

For example, from the fact that signs exist, are actual,
possible, necessary, or related in various syntactic ways,
nothing follows about the existence, actuality, possibility,
necessity, or objective relationships of their objects, since
it is conceivable that a sign does not denote anything at all.

Notice that a syntactic fallacy is an error even when signs are icons,
that is, when they propose a denotation of their objects by virtue of
sharing certain properties with them.

So watch out for that ...

TDOE. Quine's Two Dogmas Of Empiricism

TDOE. Note 1


| Two Dogmas of Empiricism
|
| Modern empiricism has been conditioned in large part by two dogmas.
| One is a belief in some fundamental cleavage between truths which
| are 'analytic', or grounded in meanings independently of matters
| of fact, and truths which are 'synthetic', or grounded in fact.
| The other dogma is 'reductionism':  the belief that each
| meaningful statement is equivalent to some logical
| construct upon terms which refer to immediate
| experience.  Both dogmas, I shall argue, are
| ill-founded.  One effect of abandoning them
| is, as we shall see, a blurring of the
| supposed boundary between speculative
| metaphysics and natural science.
| Another effect is a shift
| toward pragmatism.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 20.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 2


| 1.  Background for Analyticity
|
| Kant's cleavage between analytic and synthetic truths
| was foreshadowed in Hume's distinction between relations
| of ideas and matters of fact, and in Leibniz's distinction
| between truths of reason and truths of fact.  Leibniz spoke
| of the truths of reason as true in all possible worlds.
| Picturesqueness aside, this is to say that the truths
| of reason are those which could not possibly be false.
| In the same vein we hear analytic statements defined as
| statements whose denials are self-contradictory.  But this
| definition has small explanatory value;  for the notion of
| self-contradictoriness, in the quite broad sense needed for
| this definition of analyticity, stands in exactly the same
| need of clarification as does the notion of analyticity
| itself.  The two notions are the two sides of a single
| dubious coin.
|
| Kant conceived of an analytic statement as one that attributes to its
| subject no more than is already conceptually contained in the subject.
| This formulation has two shortcomings:  it limits itself to statements of
| subject-predicate form, and it appeals to a notion of containment which is
| left at a metaphorical level.  But Kant's intent, evident more from the use
| he makes of the notion of analyticity than from his definition of it, can be
| restated thus:  a statement is analytic when it is true by virtue of meanings
| and independently of fact.  Pursuing this line, let us examine the concept of
| 'meaning' which is presupposed.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 20-21.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 3


| 1.  Background for Analyticity (cont.)
|
| Meaning, let us remember, is not to be identified with naming.
| Frege's example of "Evening Star" and "Morning Star", and Russell's
| of "Scott" and "the author of 'Waverley'", illustrate that terms can
| name the same thing but differ in meaning.  The distinction between
| meaning and naming is no less important at the level of abstract
| terms.  The terms "9" and "the number of the planets" name one
| and the same abstract entity but presumably must be regarded as
| unlike in meaning;  for astronomical observation was needed, and
| not mere reflection on meanings, to determine the sameness of the
| entity in question.
|
| The above examples consists of singular terms, concrete and
| abstract.  With general terms, or predicates, the situation
| is somewhat different but parallel.  Whereas a singular term
| purports to name an entity, abstract or concrete, a general
| term does not;  but a general term is 'true of' an entity,
| or of each of many, or of none.  The class of all entities
| of which a general term is true is called the 'extension'
| of the term.  Now paralleling the contrast between the
| meaning of a singular term and the entity named, we
| must distinguish equally between the meaning of a
| general term and its extension.  The general terms
| "creature with a heart" and "creature with kidneys",
| for example, are perhaps alike in extension but unlike
| in meaning.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 21.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 4


| 1.  Background for Analyticity (cont.)
|
| Confusion of meaning with extension, in the case of general terms,
| is less common than confusion of meaning with naming in the case
| of singular terms.  It is indeed a commonplace in philosophy to
| oppose intension (or meaning) to extension, or, in a variant
| vocabulary, connotation to denotation.
|
| The Aristotelian notion of essence was the forerunner, no doubt,
| of the modern notion of intension or meaning.  For Aristotle it
| was essential in men to be rational, accidental to be two-legged.
| But there is an important difference between this attitude and the
| doctrine of meaning.  From the latter point of view it may indeed
| be conceded (if only for the sake of argument) that rationality is
| involved in the meaning of the word "man" while two-leggedness is
| not;  but two-leggedness may at the same time be viewed as involved
| in the meaning of "biped" while rationality is not.  Thus from the
| point of view of the doctrine of meaning it makes no sense to say
| of the actual individual, who is at once a man and a biped, that
| his rationality is essential and his two-leggedness accidental
| or vice versa.  Things had essences, for Aristotle, but only
| linguistic forms have meanings.  Meaning is what essence
| becomes when it is divorced from the object of reference
| and wedded to the word.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 21-22.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 5


| 1.  Background for Analyticity (cont.)
|
| For the theory of meaning a conspicuous question is the nature
| of its objects:  what sort of things are meanings?  A felt need
| for meant entities may derive from an earlier failure to appreciate
| that meaning and reference are distinct.  Once the theory of meaning
| is sharply separated from the theory of reference, it is a short step
| to recognizing as the primary business of the theory of meaning simply
| the synonymy of linguistic forms and the analyticity of statements;
| meanings themselves, as obscure intermediary entities, may well be
| abandoned.
|
| The problem of analyticity then confronts us anew.  Statements which are
| analytic by general philosophical acclaim are not, indeed, far to seek.
| They fall into two classes.  Those of the first class, which may be
| called 'logically true', are typified by:
|
| (1)  No unmarried man is married.
|
| The relevant feature of this example is that it not merely
| is true as it stands, but remains true under any and all
| reinterpretations of "man" and "married".  If we suppose
| a prior inventory of 'logical' particles, comprising "no",
| "un-", "not", "if", "then", "and", etc., then in general
| a logical truth is a statement which is true and remains
| true under all reinterpretations of its components than
| than the logical particles.
|
| But there is also a second class of analytic statements,
| typified by:
|
| (2)  No bachelor is married.
|
| The characteristic of such a statement is that it can be
| turned into a logical truth by putting synonyms for synonyms;
| thus (2) can be turned into (1) by putting "unmarried man" for
| its synonym "bachelor".  We still lack a proper characterization
| of this second class of analytic statements, and therewith of
| analyticity generally, inasmuch as we have had in the above
| description to lean on a notion of "synonymy" which is no
| less in need of clarification than analyticity itself.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 22-23.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 6


| 1.  Background for Analyticity (concl.)
|
| In recent years Carnap has tended to explain analyticity by appeal to
| what he calls state-descriptions.  A state-description is any exhaustive
| assignment of truth values to the atomic, or noncompound, statements of
| the language.  All other statements of the language are, Carnap assumes,
| built up of their component clauses by means of familiar logical devices,
| in such a way that the truth value of any complex statement is fixed for
| each state-description by specifiable logical laws.  A statement is then
| explained as analytic when it comes out true under every state-description.
| This account is an adaptation of Leibniz's "true in all possible worlds".
| But note that this version of analyticity serves its purpose only if the
| atomic statements of the language are, unlike "John is a bachelor" and
| "John is married", mutually independent.  Otherwise there would be a
| state-description which assigned truth to "John is a bachelor" and to
| "John is married", and consequently "No bachelors are married" would
| turn out synthetic rather than analytic under the proposed criterion.
| Thus the criterion of analyticity in terms of state-descriptions
| serves only for languages devoid of extralogical synonym-pairs,
| such as "bachelor" and "unmarried man" -- synonym-pairs of the
| type which give rise to the "second class" of analytic statements.
| The criterion in terms of state-descriptions is a reconstruction
| at best of logical truth, not of analyticity.
|
| I do not mean to suggest that Carnap is under any illusions on this
| point.  His simplified model language with its state-descriptions
| is aimed primarily not at the general problem of analyticity but
| at another purpose, the clarification of probability and induction.
| Our problem, however, is analyticity;  and here the major difficulty
| lies not in the first class of analytic statements, the logical truths,
| but rather in the second class, which depends on the notion of synonymy.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 23-24.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 7


| 2.  Definition
|
| There are those who find it soothing to say that the analytic statements
| of the second class reduce to those of the first class, the logical truths,
| by 'definition';  "bachelor", for example, is 'defined' as "unmarried man".
| But how do we find that "bachelor" is defined as "unmarried man"?  Who
| defined it thus, and when?  Are we to appeal to the nearest dictionary,
| and accept the lexicographer's formulation as law?  Clearly this would
| be to put the cart before the horse.  The lexicographer is an empirical
| scientist, whose business is the recording of antecedent facts;  and if
| he glosses "bachelor" as "unmarried man" it is because of his belief that
| there is a relation of synonymy between those forms, implicit in general or
| preferred usage prior to his own work.  The notion of synonymy presupposed
| here has still to be clarified, presumably in terms relating to linguistic
| behavior.  Certainly the "definition" which is the lexicographer's report
| of an observed synonymy cannot be taken as the ground of the synonymy.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 24.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 8


| 2.  Definition (cont.)
|
| Definition is not, indeed, an activity exclusively of philologists.
| Philosophers and scientists frequently have occasion to "define"
| a recondite term by paraphrasing it into terms of a more familiar
| vocabulary.  But ordinarily such a definition, like the philologist's,
| is pure lexicography, affirming a relation of synonymy antecedent to
| the exposition in hand.
|
| Just what it means to affirm synonymy, just what the interconnections
| may be which are necessary and sufficient in order that two linguistic
| forms be properly describable as synonymous, is far from clear;  but,
| whatever these interconnections may be, ordinarily they are grounded
| in usage.  Definitions reporting selected instances of synonymy come
| then as reports upon usage.
|
| There is also, however, a variant type of definitional activity which does
| not limit itself to the reporting of pre-existing synonymies.  I have in
| mind what Carnap calls 'explication' -- an activity to which philosophers
| are given, and scientists also in their more philosophical moments.  In
| explication the purpose is not merely to paraphrase the definiendum into
| an outright synonym, but actually to improve upon the definiendum by
| refining or supplementing its meaning.  But even explication, though
| not merely reporting a pre-existing synonymy between definiendum and
| definiens, does rest nevertheless on 'other' pre-existing synonymies.
| The matter might be viewed as follows.  Any word worth explicating
| has some contexts which, as wholes, are clear and precise enough
| to be useful;  and the purpose of explication is to preserve the
| usage of these favored contexts while sharpening the usage of
| other contexts.  In order that a given definition be suitable
| for purposes of explication, therefore, what is required is not
| that the definiendum in its antecedent usage be synonymous with
| the definiens, but just that each of these favored contexts of
| the definiendum, taken as a whole in its antecedent usage, be
| synonymous with the corrsponding context of the definiens.
| 
| Two alternative definientia may be equally appropriate for the purposes
| of a given task of explication and yet not be synonymous with each other;
| for they may serve interchangeably within the favored contexts but diverge
| elsewhere.  By cleaving to one of these definientia rather than the other,
| a definition of explicative kind generates, by fiat, a relation of synonymy
| between definiendum and definiens which did not hold before.  But such a
| definition still owes its explicative function, as seen, to pre-existing
| synonymies.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 24-25.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 9


| 2.  Definition (cont.)
|
| There does, however, remain still an extreme sort of definition
| which does not hark back to prior synonymies at all:  namely,
| the explicitly conventional introduction of novel notations
| for purposes of sheer abbreviation.  Here the definiendum
| becomes synonymous with the definiens simply because it
| has been created expressly for the purpose of being
| synonymous with the definiens.  Here we have a
| really transparent case of synonymy created
| by definition;  would that all species of
| synonymy were as intelligible.  For the
| rest, definition rests on synonymy
| rather than explaining it.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 25-26.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 10


| 2.  Definition (concl.)
|
| The word "definition" has come to have a dangerously reassuring sound,
| owing no doubt to its frequent occurrence in logical and mathematical
| writings.  We shall do well to digress now into a brief appraisal of
| the role of definition in formal work.
|
| In logical and mathematical systems either of two mutually antagonistic
| types of economy may be striven for, and each has its peculiar practical
| utility.  On the one hand we may seek economy of practical expression --
| ease and brevity in the statement of multifarious relations.  This sort
| of economy calls usually for distinctive concise notations for a wealth
| of concepts.  Second, however, and oppositely, we may seek economy in
| grammar and vocabulary;  we may try to find a minimum of basic concepts
| such that, once a distinctive notation has been appropriated to each of
| them, it becomes possible to express any desired further concept by mere
| combination and iteration of our basic notations.  This second sort of
| economy is impractical in one way, since a poverty in basic idioms tends
| to a necessary lengthening of discourse.  But it is practical in another
| way:  it greatly simplifies theoretical discourse 'about' the language,
| through minimizing the terms and the forms of construction wherein the
| language consists.
|
| Both sorts of economy, though prima facie incompatible, are valuable in
| their separate ways.  The custom has consequently arisen of combining
| both sorts of economy by forging in effect two langauges, the one
| a part of the other.  The inclsuive language, though redundant
| in grammar and vocabulary, is economical in message lengths,
| while the part, called primitive notation, is economical in
| grammar and vocabulary.  Whole and part are correlated by
| rules of translation whereby each idiom not in primitive
| notation is equated to some complex built up of primitive
| notation.  These rules of translation are the so-called
| 'definitions' which appear in formalized systems.  They
| are best viewed not as adjuncts to one language but as
| correlations between two languages, the one a part of
| the other.
|
| But these correlations are not arbitrary.  They are supposed
| to show how the primitive notations can accomplish all purposes,
| save brevity and convenience, of the redundant language.  Hence
| the definiendum and its definiens may be expected, in each case,
| to be related in one or another of the three ways lately noted.
| The definiens may be a faithful paraphrase of the definiendum
| into the narrower notation, preseving a direct synonymy* as
| of antecedent usage;  or the definiens may, in the spirit
| of explication, improve upon the antecedent usage of the
| definiendum;  or finally, the definiendum may be a newly
| created notation, newly endowed with meaning here and now.
|
| In formal and informal work alike, thus, we find
| that definition -- except in the extreme case of the
| explicitly conventional introduction of new notations --
| hinges on prior relations of synonymy.  Recognizing then
| that the notion of definition does not hold the key to
| synonymy and analyticity, let us look further into
| synonymy and say no more of definition.
|
|*According to an important variant sense of "definition", the relation
| preserved may be the weaker relation of mere agreement in reference;
| see below, p. 132.  But definition in this sense is better ignored in
| the present connection, being irrelevant to the question of synonymy.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 26-27.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 11


| 3.  Interchangeability
|
| A natural suggestion, deserving close examination, is that the synonymy
| of two linguistic forms consists simply in their interchangeability in
| all contexts without change of truth value -- interchangeability, in
| Leibniz's phrase 'salva veritate'.  Note that synonyms so conceived
| need not even be free from vagueness, as long as the vaguenesses
| match.
|
| But it is not quite true that the synonyms "bachelor" and "unmarried man"
| are everywhere interchangeable 'salva veritate'.  Truths which become false
| under substitution of "unmarried man" for "bachelor" are easily constructed
| with the help of "bachelor of arts" or "bachelor's buttons";  also with the
| help of quotation, thus:
|
|    "Bachelor" has less than ten letters.
|
| Such counterinstances can, however, be set aside by treating
| the phrases "bachelor of arts" and "bachelor's buttons" and the
| quotation '"bachelor"' each as a single indivisible word and then
| stipulating that the interchangeability 'salva veritate' which
| is to be the touchstone of synonymy is not supposed to apply
| to fragmentary occurrences inside of a word.  This account of
| synonymy, supposing it acceptable on other counts, has indeed
| the drawback of appealing to a prior conception of "word" which
| can be counted on to present difficulties of formulation in its
| turn.  Nevertheless some progress might be claimed in having
| reduced the problem of synonymy to a problem of wordhood.
| Let us pursue this line a bit, taking "word" for granted.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 27-28.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 12


| 3.  Interchangeability (cont.)
|
| The question remains whether interchangeability
| 'salva veritate' (apart from occurrences within words)
| is a strong enough condition for synonymy, or whether,
| on the contrary, some heteronymous expressions might be thus
| interchangeable.  Now let us be clear that we are not concerned
| here with synonymy in the sense of complete identity in psychological
| associations or poetic quality;  indeed no two expressions are synonymous
| in such a sense.  We are concerned only with what may be called 'cognitive'
| synonymy.  Just what this is cannot be said without successfully finishing the
| present study;  but we know something about it from the need which arose for
| it in connection with analyticity in Section 1.  The sort of synonymy needed
| there was merely such that any analytic statement could be turned into a
| logical truth by putting synonyms for synonyms.  Turning the tables and
| assuming analyticity, indeed, we could explain cognitive synonymy of
| terms as follows (keeping to the familiar example):  to say that
| "bachelor" and "unmarried man" are cognitively synonymous is
| to say no more or less than that the statement:
|
| (3)  All and only bachelors are unmarried men
|
| is analytic.*
|
|*This is cognitive synonymy in a primary, broad sense.  Carnap ([3],
| pp. 56ff) and Lewis ([2], pp. 83ff) have suggested how, once this
| notion is at hand, a narrower sense of cognitive synonymy which
| is preferable for some purposes can in turn be derived.  But
| this special ramification of concept-building lies aside
| from the present purposes and must not be confused with
| the broad sort of cognitive synonymy here concerned.
| 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 28-29.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 13


| 3.  Interchangeability (cont.)
|
| What we need is an account of cognitive synonymy
| not presupposing analyticity -- if we are to explain
| analyticity conversely with help of cognitive synonymy
| as undertaken in Section 1.  And indeed such an independent
| account of cognitive synonymy is at present up for consideration,
| namely, interchangeability 'salva veritate' everywhere except within
| words.  The question before us, to resume the thread at last, is whether
| such interchangeability is a sufficient condition for cognitive synonymy.
| We can quickly assure ourselves that it is, by examples of the following
| sort.  The statement:
|
| (4)  Necessarily all and only bachelors are bachelors
|
| is evidently true, even supposing "necessarily" so narrowly construed as
| to be truly applicable only to analytic statements.  Then, if "bachelor"
| and "unmarried man" are interchangeable 'salva veritate', the result:
|
| (5)  Necessarily all and only bachelors are unmarried men
|
| of putting "unmarried man" for an occurrence of "bachelor" in (4) must,
| like (4), be true.  But to say that (5) is true is to say that (3) is
| analytic, and hence that "bachelor" and "unmarried man" are cognitively
| synonymous.
|
| Let us see what there is about the above argument that gives it its air
| of hocus-pocus.  The condition of interchangeability 'salva veritate'
| varies in its force with variations in the richness of the language
| at hand.  The above argument supposes we are working with a language
| rich enough to contain the adverb "necessarily", this adverb being so
| construed as to yield truth when and only when applied to an analytic
| statement.  But can we condone a language which contains such an adverb?
| Does the adverb really make sense?  To suppose that it does is to suppose
| that we have already made satisfactory sense of "analytic".  Then what are
| we so hard at work on right now?
|
| Our argument is not flatly circular, but something like it.
| It has the form, figuratively speaking, of a closed curve
| in space.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 29-30.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 14


| 3.  Interchangeability (cont.)
|
| Interchangeability 'salva veritate' is meaningless until relativized to
| a language whose extent is specified in relevant respects.  Suppose now
| we consider a language containing just the following materials.  There
| is an indefinitely large stock of one-place predicates, (for example,
| "F" where "Fx" means that x is a man) and many-place predicates (for
| example, "G" where "Gxy" means that x loves y), mostly having to
| do with extralogical subject matter.  The rest of the language
| is logical.  The atomic sentences consist each of a predicate
| followed by one or more variables "x", "y", etc.;  and the
| complex sentences are built up of the atomic ones by truth
| functions ("not", "and", "or", etc.) and quantification.
| In effect such a language enjoys the benefits also of
| descriptions and indeed singular terms generally,
| these being contextually definable in known ways.
| Even abstract singular terms naming classes,
| classes of classes, etc., are contextually
| definable in case the assumed stock of
| predicates includes the two-place
| predicate of class membership.
| Such a language can be adequate
| to classical mathematics and
| indeed to scientific discourse
| generally, except in so far as
| the latter involves debatable
| devices such as contrary-to-fact
| conditionals or modal adverbs like
| "necessarily".  Now a language of this
| type is extensional, in this sense:  any
| two predicates which agree extensionally
| (that is, are true of the same objects)
| are interchangeable 'salva veritate'.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 30.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 15


| 3.  Interchangeability (cont.)
|
| In an extensional language, therefore, interchangeability
| 'salva veritate' is no assurance of cognitive synonymy of
| the desired type.  That "bachelor" and "unmarried man" are
| interchangeable 'salva veritate' in an extensional language
| assures us of no more than that (3) is true.  There is no
| assurance here that the extensional agreement of "bachelor"
| and "unmarried man" rests on meaning rather than merely on
| accidental matters of fact, as does the extensional agreement
| of "creature with a heart" and "creature with kidneys".
|
| For most purposes extensional agreement is the nearest approximation
| to synonymy we need care about.  But the fact remains that extensional
| agreement falls far short of cognitive synonymy of the type required for
| explaining analyticity in the manner of Section 1.  The type of cognitive
| synonymy required there is such as to equate the synonymy of "bachelor"
| and "unmarried man" with the analyticity of (3), not merely with the
| truth of (3).
|
| So we must recognize that interchangeability 'salva veritate',
| if construed in relation to an extensional language, is not
| a sufficient condition of cognitive synonymy in the sense
| needed for deriving analyticity in the manner of Section 1.
| If a language contains an intensional adverb "necessarily" in
| the sense lately noted, or other particles to the same effect,
| then interchangeability 'salva veritate' in such a language
| does afford a sufficient condition of cognitive synonymy;
| but such a language is intelligible only in so far as the
| notion of analyticity is already understood in advance.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 31.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 16


| 3.  Interchangeability (concl.)
|
| The effort to explain cognitive synonymy first, for the sake
| of deriving analyticity from it afterward as in Section 1, is
| perhaps the wrong approach.  Instead we might try explaining
| analyticity somehow without appeal to cognitive synonymy.
| Afterward we could doubtless derive cognitive synonymy from
| analyticity satisfactorily enough if desired.  We have seen
| that cognitive synonymy of "bachelor" and "unmarried man" can
| be explained as analyticity of (3).  The same explanation works
| for any pair of one-place predicates, of course, and it can
| be extended in obvious fashion to many-place predicates.
| Other syntactical categories can also be accommodated in
| fairly parallel fashion.  Singular terms may be said to be
| cognitively synonymous when the statement of identity formed
| by putting "=" between them is analytic.  Statements may be said
| simply to be cognitively synonymous when their biconditional (the
| result of joining them by "if and only if") is analytic.  If we
| care to lump all categories into a single formulation, at the
| expense of assuming again the notion of "word" which was
| appealed to early in this section, we can describe any two
| linguistic forms as cognitively synonymous when the two forms
| are interchangeable (apart from occurrences within "words")
| 'salva' (no longer 'veritate' but) 'analyticitate'.  Certain
| technical questions arise, indeed, over cases of ambiguity
| or homonymy;  let us not pause for them, however, for we
| are already digressing.  Let us rather turn our backs
| on the problem of synonymy and address ourselves
| anew to that of analyticity.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 31-32.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 17


| 4.  Semantical Rules
|
| Analyticity at first seemed most naturally definable by appeal
| to a realm of meanings.  On refinement, the appeal to meanings
| gave way to an appeal to synonymy or definition.  But definition
| turned out to be a will-o'-the-wisp, and synonymy turned out to be
| best understood only by dint of a prior appeal to analyticity itself.
| So we are back at the problem of analyticity.
|
| I do not know whether the statement "Everything green is extended"
| is analytic.  Now does my indecision over this example really betray
| an incomplete understanding, an incomplete grasp of the "meanings",
| of "green" and "extended"?  I think not.  The trouble is not with
| "green" or "extended", but with "analytic".
|
| It is often hinted that the difficulty in separating analytic
| statements from synthetic ones in ordinary language is due to
| the vagueness of ordinary language and that the distinction is
| clear when we have a precise artificial language with explicit
| "semantical rules".  This, however, as I shall now attempt to
| show, is a confusion.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 32.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 18


| 4.  Semantical Rules (cont.)
|
| The notion of analyticity about which we are worrying is a purported
| relation between statements and languages:  a statement S is said to
| be 'analytic for' a language L, and the problem is to make sense of
| this relation generally, that is, for variable "S" and "L".  The
| gravity of this problem is not perceptibly less for artificial
| languages than for natural ones.  The problem of making sense
| of the idiom "S is analytic for L", with variable "S" and "L",
| retains its stubbornness even if we limit the range of the
| variable "L" to artificial languages.  Let me now try to
| make this point evident.
|
| For artificial languages and semantical rules we look naturally
| to the writings of Carnap.  His semantical rules take various forms,
| and to make my point I shall have to distinguish certain of the forms.
| Let us suppose, to begin with, an artificial language L_0 whose semantical
| rules have the form explicitly of a specification, by recursion or otherwise,
| of all the analytic statements of L_0.  The rules tell us that such and such
| statements, and only those, are the analytic statements of L_0.  Now here
| the difficulty is simply that the rules contain the word "analytic",
| which we do not understand!  We understand what expressions the
| rules attribute analyticity to, but we do not understand what
| the rules attribute to those expressions.  In short, before
| we can understand a rule which begins "A statement S is
| analytic for language L_0 if and only if ...", we must
| understand the general relative term "analytic for";
| we must understand "S is analytic for L" where "S"
| and "L" are variables.
|
| Alternatively we may, indeed, view the so-called rule as a conventional
| definition of a new simple symbol "analytic-for-L_0", which might better
| be written untendentiously as "K" so as not to seem to throw light on the
| interesting word "analytic".  Obviously any number of classes K, M, N, etc.
| of statements of L_0 can be specified for various purposes or for no purpose;
| what does it mean to say that K, as against M, N, etc., is the class of the
| "analytic" statements of L_0?
|
| By saying what statements are analytic for L_0 we explain
| "analytic-for-L_0" but not "analytic", not "analytic for".
| We do not begin to explain the idiom "S is analytic for L"
| with variable "S" and "L", even if we are content to limit
| the range of "L" to the realm of artificial languages.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 33-34.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 19


| 4.  Semantical Rules (cont.)
|
| Actually we do know enough about the intended significance of
| "analytic" to know that analytic statements are supposed to
| be true.  Let us then turn to a second form of semantical
| rule, which says not that such and such statements are
| analytic but simply that such and such statements are
| included among the truths.  Such a rule is not subject
| to the criticism of containing the un-understood word
| "analytic";  and we may grant for the sake of argument
| that there is no difficulty over the broader term "true".
| A semantical rule of this second type, a rule of truth,
| is not supposed to specify all the truths of the language;
| it merely stipulates, recursively or otherwise, a certain
| multitude of statements which, along with others unspecified,
| are to count as true.  Such a rule may be conceded to be quite
| clear.  Derivatively, afterward, analyticity can be demarcated
| thus:  a statement is analytic if it is (not merely true but)
| true according to the semantical rule.
|
| Still there is really no progress.  Instead of appealing to an unexplained
| word "analytic", we are now appealing to an unexplained phrase "semantical
| rule".  Not every true statement which says that the statements of some
| class are true can count as a semantical rule -- otherwise 'all' truths
| would be "analytic" in the sense of being true according to semantical
| rules.  Semantical rules are distinguishable, apparently, only by the
| fact of appearing on a page under the heading "Semantical Rules";
| and this heading is itself then meaningless.
|
| We can say indeed that a statement is 'analytic-for-L_0' if and
| only if it is true according to such and such specifically appended
| "semantical rules", but then we find ourselves back at essentially the
| same case which was originally discussed:  "S is analytic-for-L_0" if and
| only if ...".  Once we seek to explain "S is analytic for L" generally for
| variable "L" (even allowing limitation of "L" to artificial languages),
| the explanation "true according to the semantical rules of L" is
| unavailing;  for the relative term "semantical rule of" is as
| much in need of clarification, at least, as "analytic for".
| 
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 34.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 20


| 4.  Semantical Rules (cont.)
|
| It may be instructive to compare the notion of semantical rule with that
| of postulate.  Relative to a given set of postulates, it is easy to say
| what a postulate is:  it is a member of the set.  Relative to a given
| set of semantical rules, it is equally easy to say what a semantical
| rule is.  But given simply a notation, mathematical or otherwise,
| and indeed as thoroughly understood a notation as you please in
| point of the translations or truth conditions of its statements,
| who can say which of its true statements rank as postulates?
| Obviously the question is meaningless -- as meaningless as
| asking which points in Ohio are starting points.  Any finite
| (or effectively specifiable infinite) selection of statements
| (preferably true ones, perhaps) is as much 'a' set of postulates
| as any other.  The word "postulate" is significant only relative
| to an act of inquiry;  we apply the word to a set of statements just
| in so far as we happen, for the year or the moment, to be thinking of
| those statements in relation to the statements which can be reached from
| them by some set of transformations to which we have seen fit to direct our
| attention.  Now the notion of semantical rule is as sensible and meaningful as
| that of postulate, if conceived in a similarly relative spirit -- relative, this
| time, to one or another particular enterprise of schooling unconversant persons
| in sufficient conditions for truth of statements of some natural or artificial
| language L.  But from this point of view no one signalization of a subclass
| of the truths of L is intrinsically more a semantical rule than another;
| and, if "analytic" means "true by semantical rules", no one truth of L
| is analytic to the exclusion of another.*
|
|*The foregoing paragraph was not part of the present essay as
| originally published.  It was prompted by Martin [R.M. Martin,
| "On 'Analytic'", 'Philosophical Studies', vol. 3 (1952), 42-47],
| as was the end of Essay 7.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 35.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 21


| 4.  Semantical Rules (concl.)
|
| It might conceivably be protested that an artificial language L
| (unlike a natural one) is a language in the ordinary sense 'plus'
| a set of explicit semantical rules -- the whole constituting, let
| us say, an ordered pair;  and that the semantical rules of L then
| are specifiable simply as the second component of the pair L.  But,
| by the same token and more simply, we might construe an artificial
| language L outright as an ordered pair whose second component is the
| class of its analytic statements;  and then the analytic statements of L
| become specifiable simply as the statements in the second component of L.
| Or better still, we might just stop tugging at our bootstraps altogether.
|
| Not all the explanations of analyticity known to Carnap
| and his readers have been covered explicitly in the above
| considerations, but the extension to other forms is not hard
| to see.  Just one additional factor should be mentioned which
| sometimes enters:  sometimes the semantical rules are in effect
| rules of translation into ordinary language, in which case the
| analytic statements of the artificial language are in effect
| recognized as such from the analyticity of their specified
| translations in ordinary language.  Here certainly there
| can be no thought of an illumination of the problem of
| analyticity from the side of the artificial language.
|
| From the point of view of the problem of analyticity the notion of an
| artificial language with semantical rules is a 'feu follet par excellence'.
| Semantical rules determining the analytic statements of an artificial language
| are of interest only in so far as we already understand the notion of analyticity;
| they are of no help in gaining this understanding.
|
| Appeal to hypothetical languages of an artificially simple
| kind could conceivably be useful in clarifying analyticity,
| if the mental or behavioral or cultural factors relevant to
| analyticity -- whatever they may be -- were somehow sketched
| into the simplified model.  But a model which takes analyticity
| merely as an irreducible character is unlikely to throw light on
| the problem of explicating analyticity.
|
| It is obvious that truth in general depends on both language and extralinguistic
| fact.  The statement "Brutus killed Caesar" would be false if the world had
| been different in certain ways, but it would also be false if the word
| "killed" happened rather to have the sense of "begat".  Thus one is
| tempted to suppose in general that the truth of a statement is
| somehow analyzable into a linguistic component and a factual
| component.  Given this supposition, it next seems reasonable
| that in some statements the factual component should be null;
| and these are the analytic statements.  But, for all its
| a priori reasonableness, a boundary between analytic
| and synthetic statements simply has not been drawn.
| That there is such a distinction to be drawn at
| all is an unempirical dogma of empiricists,
| a metaphysical article of faith.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 35-37.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 22


| 5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism
|
| In the course of these somber reflections we have taken a dim view first
| of the notion of meaning, then of the notion of cognitive synonymy, and
| finally of the notion of analyticity.  But what, it may be asked, of
| the verification theory of meaning?  This phrase has established
| itself so firmly as a catchword of empiricism that we should be
| very unscientific indeed not to look beneath it for a possible
| key to the problem of meaning and the associated problems.
|
| The verification theory of meaning, which has been conspicuous in the
| literature from Peirce onward, is that the meaning of a statement is
| the method of empirically confirming or infirming it.  An analytic
| statement is that limiting case which is confirmed no matter what.
|
| As urged in Section 1, we can as well pass over the question of
| meanings as entities and move straight to sameness of meaning,
| or synonymy.  Then what the verification theory says is that
| statements are synonymous if and only if they are alike in
| point of method of empirical confirmation or infirmation.
|
| This is an account of cognitive synonymy not of linguistic forms generally,
| but of statements.*  However, from the concept of synonymy of statements
| we could derive the concept of synonymy for other linguistic forms, by
| considerations somewhat similar to those at the end of Section 3.
| Assuming the notion of "word", indeed, we could explain any
| two forms as synonymous when the putting of one form for
| an occurrence of the other in any statement (apart from
| occurrences within "words") yields a synonymous statement.
| Finally, given the concept of synonymy thus for linguistic
| forms generally, we could define analyticity in terms of
| synonymy and logical truth as in Section 1.  For that
| matter, we could define analyticity more simply in
| terms of just synonymy of statements together with
| logical truth;  it is not necessary to appeal to
| synonymy of linguistic forms other than statements.
| For a statement may be described as analytic simply
| when it is synonymous with a logically true statement.
|
|*The doctrine can indeed be formulated with terms rather than statements as the
| units.  Thus Lewis describes the meaning of a term as "'a criterion in mind',
| by reference to which one is able to apply or refuse to apply the expression
| in question in the case of presented, or imagined, things or situations"
| [C.I. Lewis, 'An Analysis of Knowledge and Valuation', Open Court, LaSalle,
| IL, 1946, p. 133]. -- For an instructive account of the vicissitudes of
| the verification theory of meaning, centered however on the question
| of meaning'fulness' rather than synonymy and analyticity, see Hempel.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 37-38.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 23


| 5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
|
| So, if the verification theory can be accepted as an adequate account
| of statement synonymy, the notion of analyticity is saved after all.
| However, let us reflect.  Statement synonymy is said to be likeness
| of method of empirical confirmation or infirmation.  Just what are
| these methods which are to be compared for likeness?  What, in
| other words, is the nature of the relation between a statement
| and the experiences which contribute to or detract from its
| confirmation?
|
| The most naive view of the relation is that it is one of direct report.
| This is 'radical reductionism'.  Every meaningful statement is held to be
| translatable into a statement (true or false) about immediate experience.
| Radical reductionism, in one form or another, well antedates the verification
| theory of meaning explicitly so called.  Thus Locke and Hume held that every
| idea must either originate directly in sense experience or else be compounded
| of ideas thus originating;  and taking a hint from Tooke we might rephrase
| this doctrine in semantical jargon by saying that a term, to be significant
| at all, must be either a name of a sense datum or a compound of such names or
| an abbreviation of such a compound.  So stated, the doctrine remains ambiguous
| as between sense data as sensory events and sense data as sensory qualities;
| and it remains vague as to the admissible ways of compounding.  Moreover, the
| doctrine is unnecessarily and intolerably restrictive in the term-by-term
| critique which it imposes.  More reasonably, and without yet exceeding
| the limits of what I have called radical reductionism, we may take full
| statements as our significant units -- thus demanding that our statements
| as wholes be translatable into sense-datum language, but not that they be
| translatable term by term.
|
| This emendation would unquestionably have been welcome to Locke and Hume
| and Tooke, but historically it had to await an important reorientation in
| semantics -- the reorientation whereby the primary vehicle of meaning came
| to be seen no longer in the term but in the statement.  This reorientation,
| seen in Bentham and Frege, underlies Russell's concept of incomplete symbols
| defined in use;  also it is implicit in the verification theory of meaning,
| since the objects of verification are statements.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 38-39.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 24


| 5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
|
| Radical reductionism, conceived now with statements as units,
| set itself the task of specifying a sense-datum language and
| showing how to translate the rest of significant discourse,
| statement by statement, into it.  Carnap embarked on this
| project in the 'Aufbau'.
|
| The language which Carnap adopted as his starting point was not
| a sense-datum language in the narrowest conceivable sense, for
| it included also the notations of logic, up through higher set
| theory.  In effect it included the whole language of pure
| mathematics.  The ontology implicit in it (that is, the
| range of values of its variables) embraced not only
| sensory events but classes, classes of classes, and
| so on.  Empiricists there are who would boggle at
| such prodigality.  Carnap's starting point is
| very parsimonious, however, in its extralogical
| or sensory part.  In a series of constructions in
| which he exploits the resources of modern logic with
| much ingenuity, Carnap succeeds in defining a wide array
| of important additional sensory concepts which, but for his
| constructions, one would not have dreamed were definable on
| so slender a basis.  He was the first empiricist who, not
| content with asserting the reducibility of science to
| terms of immediate experience, took serious steps
| toward carrying out the reduction.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", p. 39.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 25


| 5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
|
| If Carnap's starting point is satisfactory,
| still his constructions were, as he himself
| stressed, only a fragment of the full program.
| The construction of even the simplest statements
| about the physical world was left in a sketchy state.
| Carnap's suggestions on this subject were, despite their
| sketchiness, very suggestive.  He explained spatio-temporal
| point-instants as quadruples of real numbers and envisaged
| assignment of sense qualities to point-instants according
| to certain canons.  Roughly summarized, the plan was that
| qualities should be assigned to point-instants in such a
| way as to achieve the laziest world compatible with our
| experience.  The principle of least action was to be
| our guide in constructing a world from experience.
|
| Carnap did not seem to recognize, however, that his treatment
| of physical objects fell short of reduction not merely through
| sketchiness, but in principle.  Statements of the form "Quality
| q is at point-instant x;y;z;t" were, according to his canons,
| to be apportioned truth vakues in such a way as to maximize
| and minimize certain over-all features, and with growth of
| experience the truth values were to be progressively revised
| in the same spirit.  I think that this is a good schematization
| (deliberately oversimplified, to be sure) of what science really
| does;  but it provides no indication, not even the sketchiest, of
| how a statement of the form "Quality q is at x;y;z;t" could ever
| be translated into Carnap's initial language of sense data and
| logic.  The connective "is at" remains an added undefined
| connective;  the canons counsel us in its use but not
| in its elimination.
|
| Carnap seems to have appreciated this point afterward;
| for in his later writings he abandoned all notion of
| the translatability of statements about the physical
| world into statements about immediate experience.
| Reductionism in its radical form has long since
| ceased to figure in Carnap's philosophy.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 39-40.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 26


| 5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism (cont.)
|
| But the dogma of reductionism has, in a subtler and more tenuous form,
| continued to influence the thought of empiricists.  The notion lingers
| that to each statement, or each synthetic statement, there is associated
| a unique range of possible sensory events such that the occurrence of any
| of them would add to the likelihood of truth of the statement, and that
| there is associated also another unique range of possible sensory events
| whose occurrence would detract from that likelihood.  This notion is of
| course implicit in the verification theory of meaning.
|
| The dogma of reductionism survives in the supposition that each statement,
| taken in isolation from its fellows, can admit of confirmation or infirmation
| at all.  My countersuggestion, issuing essentially from Carnap's doctrine of
| the physical world in the 'Aufbau', is that our statements about the external
| world face the tribunal of sense experience not individually but only as a
| corporate body.*
|
|*This doctrine was well argued by Duhem [Pierre Duhem, 'La Theorie Physique:
| Son Object et Sa Structure', Paris, 1906, pp. 303-328].  Or see Lowinger
| Armand Lowinger, 'The Methodology of Pierre Duhem', Columbia University
| Press, New York, NY, 1941, pp. 132-140].
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 40-41.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 27


| 5.  The Verification Theory and Reductionism (concl.)
|
| The dogma of reductionism, even in its attenuated form, is intimately
| connected with the other dogma -- that there is a cleavage between
| the analytic and the synthetic.  We have found ourselves led,
| indeed, from the latter problem to the former through the
| verification theory of meaning.  More directly, the one
| dogma clearly supports the other in this way:  as long
| as it is taken to be significant in general to speak
| of the confirmation and infirmation of a statement,
| it seems significant to speak also of a limiting
| kind of statement which is vacuously confirmed,
| 'ipso facto', come what may;  and such
| a statement is analytic.
|
| The two dogmas are, indeed, at root identical.  We lately reflected
| that in general the truth of statements does obviously depend both
| upon language and upon extralinguistic fact;  and we noted that
| this obvious circumstance carries in its train, not logically
| but all too naturally, a feeling that the truth of a statement
| is somehow analyzable into a linguistic component and a factual
| component.  The factual component must, if we are empiricists,
| boil down to a range of confirmatory experiences.  In the
| extreme case where the linguistic component is all that
| matters, a true statement is analytic.  But I hope we are
| now impressed with how stubbornly the distinction between
| analytic and synthetic has resisted any straightforward
| drawing.  I am impressed also, apart from prefabricated
| examples of black and white balls in an urn, with how
| baffling the problem has always been of arriving at
| any explicit theory of the empirical confirmation of
| a synthetic statement.  My present suggestion is that
| it is nonsense, and the root of much nonsense, to speak
| of a linguistic component and a factual component in the
| truth of any individual statement.  Taken collectively,
| science has its double dependence upon language and
| experience;  but this duality is not significantly
| traceable into the statements of science taken
| one by one.
|
| The idea of defining a symbol in use was, as remarked, an advance
| over the impossible term-by-term empiricism of Locke and Hume.
| The statement, rather than the term, came with Bentham to be
| recognized as the unit accountable to an empiricist critique.
| But what I am now urging is that even in taking the statement
| as unit we have drawn our grid too finely.  The unit of empirical
| significance is the whole of science.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 41-42.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 28


| 6.  Empiricism without the Dogmas
|
| The totality of our so-called knowledge or beliefs, from the most
| casual matters of geography and history to the profoundest laws of
| atomic physics or even of pure mathematics and logic, is a man-made
| fabric which impinges on experience only along the edges.  Or, to
| change the figure, total science is like a field of force whose
| boundary conditions are experience.  A conflict with experience at
| the periphery occasions readjustments in the interior of the field.
| Truth values have to be redistributed over some of our statements.
| Re-evaluation of some statements entails re-evaluation of others,
| because of their logical interconnections -- the logical laws
| being in turn simply certain further statements of the system,
| certain further elements of the field.  Having re-evaluated one
| statement we must re-evaluate some others, which may be statements
| logically connected with the first or may be the statements of logical
| connections themselves.  But the total field is so underdetermined by
| its boundary conditions, experience, that there is much latitude of
| choice as to what statements to re-evaluate in the light of any
| single contrary experience.  No particular experiences are
| linked with any particular statements in the interior of
| the field, except indirectly through considerations
| of equilibrium affecting the field as a whole.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 42-43.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 29


| 6.  Empiricism without the Dogmas (cont.)
|
| If this view is right, it is misleading to speak of the empirical content of
| an individual statement -- especially if it is a statement at all remote from
| the experiential periphery of the field.  Furthermore it becomes folly to seek
| a boundary between synthetic statements, which hold contingently on experience,
| and analytic statements, which hold come what may.  Any statement can be held
| true come what may, if we make drastic enough adjustments elsewhere in the
| system.  Even a statement very close to the periphery can be held true in
| the face of recalcitrant experience by pleading hallucination or by amending
| certain statements of the kind called logical laws.  Conversely, by the same
| token, no statement is immune to revision.  Revision even of the logical law
| of the excluded middle has been proposed as a means of simplifying quantum
| mechanics;  and what difference is there in principle between such a shift
| and the shift whereby Kepler superseded Ptolemy, or Einstein Newton, or
| Darwin Aristotle?
|
| For vividness I have been speaking in terms of varying distances
| from a sensory periphery.  Let me try now to clarify this notion
| without metaphor.  Certain statements, though 'about' physical
| objects and not sense experience, seem peculiarly germane to
| sense experience -- and in a selective way:  some statements to
| some experiences, others to others.  Such statements, especially
| germane to particular experiences, I picture as near the periphery.
| But in this relation of "germaneness" I envisage nothing more than a
| loose association reflecting the relative likelihood, in practice, of
| our choosing one statement rather than another for revision in the event
| of recalcitrant experience.  For example, we can imagine recalcitrant
| experiences to which we would surely be inclined to accommodate our
| system by re-evaluating just the statement that there are brick
| houses on Elm Street, together with related statements on the
| same topic.  We can imagine other recalcitrant experiences
| to which we would be inclined to accommodate our system by
| re-evaluating just the statement that there are no centaurs,
| along with kindred statemnts.  A recalcitrant experience can,
| I have urged, be accommodated by any of various alternative
| re-evaluations in various alternative quarters of the total
| system;  but, in the cases which we are now imagining, our
| natural tendency to disturb the total system as little as
| possible would lead us to focus our revisions upon these
| specific statements concerning brick houses or centaurs.
| These statements are felt, therefore, to have a sharper
| empirical reference than highly theoretical statements
| of physics or logic or ontology.  The latter statements
| may be thought of as relatively centrally located within
| the total network, meaning merely that little preferential
| connection with any particular sense data obtrudes itself.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 43-44.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 30


| 6.  Empiricism without the Dogmas (cont.)
|
| As an empiricist I continue to think of the conceptual scheme of science as
| a tool, ultimately, for predicting future experience in the light of past
| experience.  Physical objects are conceptually imported into the situation
| as convenient intermediaries -- not by definition in terms of experience,
| but simply as irreducible posits comparable, epistemologically, to the
| gods of Homer.  For my part I do, qua lay physicist, believe in physical
| objects and not in Homer's gods;  and I consider it a scientific error
| to believe otherwise.  But in point of epistemological footing the
| physical objects and the gods differ only in degree and not in kind.
| Both sorts of entities enter our conception only as cultural posits.
| The myth of physical objects is epistemologically superior to most
| in that it has proved more efficacious than other myths as a device
| for working a manageable structure into the flux of experience.
|
| Positing does not stop with macroscopic physical objects.
| Objects at the atomic level are posited to make the laws of
| macroscopic objects, and ultimately the laws of experience,
| simpler and more manageable;  and we need not expect or demand
| full definition of atomic and subatomic entities in terms of
| macroscopic ones, any more than definition of macroscopic things
| in terms of sense data.  Science is a continuation of common sense,
| and it continues the common-sense expedient of swelling ontology to
| simplify theory.
|
| Physical objects, small and large, are not the only posits.
| Forces are another example;  and indeed we are told nowadays that
| the boundary between energy and matter is obsolete.  Moreover, the
| abstract entities which are the substance of mathematics -- ultimately
| classes and classes of classes and so on up -- are another posit in the
| same spirit.  Epistemologically these are myths on the same footing with
| physical objects and gods, neither better nor worse except for differences
| in the degree to which they expedite our dealings with sense experiences.
|
| The over-all algebra of rational and irrational numbers is
| underdetermined by the algebra of rational numbers, but is
| smoother and more convenient;  and it includes the algebra
| of rational numbers as a jagged or gerrymandered part.
| Total science, mathematical and natural and human,
| is similarly but more extremely underdetermined
| by experience.  The edge of the system must be
| kept squared with experience;  the rest, with
| all its elaborate myths or fictions, has as
| its objective the simplicty of laws.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 44-45.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

TDOE. Note 31


| 6.  Empiricism without the Dogmas (concl.)
|
| Ontological questions, under this view, are on a par with questions
| of natural science.  Consider the question whether to countenance
| classes as entities.  This, as I have argued elsewhere, is the
| question whether to quantify with respect to variables which
| take classes as values.  Now Carnap [*] has maintained that
| this is a question not of matters of fact but of choosing
| a convenient language form, a convenient conceptual scheme
| or framework for science.  With this I agree, but only on the
| proviso that the same be conceded regarding scientific hypotheses
| generally.  Carnap ([*], p. 32n) has recognized that he is able to
| preserve a double standard for ontological questions and scientific
| hypotheses only by assuming an absolute distinction between the
| analytic and the synthetic;  and I need not say again that
| this is a distinction which I reject.
|
| The issue over there being classes seems more a question of convenient
| conceptual scheme;  the issue over there being centaurs, or brick houses
| on Elm street, seems more a question of fact.  But I have been urging that
| this difference is only one of degree, and that it turns upon our vaguely
| pragmatic inclination to adjust one strand of the fabric of science rather
| than another in accommodating some particular recalcitrant experience.
| Conservatism figures in such choices, and so does the quest for
| simplicity.
|
| Carnap, Lewis, and others take a pragmatic stand on the question of choosing
| between language forms, scientific frameworks;  but their pragmatism leaves
| off at the imagined boundary between the analytic and the synthetic.  In
| repudiating such a boundary I espouse a more thorough pragmatism.  Each
| man is given a scientific heritage plus a continuing barrage of sensory
| stimulation;  and the considerations which guide him in warping his
| scientific heritage to fit his continuing sensory promptings are,
| where rational, pragmatic.
|
|*Rudolf Carnap, "Empiricism, Semantics, and Ontology",
|'Revue Internationale de Philosphie', vol. 4 (1950), pp. 20-40.
| Reprinted in Leonard Linsky (ed.), 'Semantics and the Philosophy
| of Language', University of Illinois Press, Urbana, IL, 1952.
|
| Quine, "Two Dogmas", pp. 45-46.
|
| W.V. Quine,
|"Two Dogmas of Empiricism", 'Philosophical Review', January 1951.
| Reprinted as pages 20-46 in 'From a Logical Point of View',
| 2nd edition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

VOLS. Verities Of Likely Stories

VOLS. Note 1


| These are the forms of time,
| which imitates eternity and
| revolves according to a law
| of number.
|
| Plato, "Timaeus", 38 A,
| Benjamin Jowett (trans.)

VOLS. Note 2


| Now first of all we must, in my judgement, make the following distinction.
| What is that which is Existent always and has no Becoming?  And what is
| that which is Becoming always and never is Existent?  Now the one of
| these is apprehensible by thought with the aid of reasoning, since
| it is ever uniformly existent;  whereas the other is an object of
| opinion with the aid of unreasoning sensation, since it becomes and
| perishes and is never really existent.  Again, everything which becomes
| must of necessity become owing to some Cause;  for without a cause it is
| impossible for anything to attain becoming.  But when the artificer of any
| object, in forming its shape and quality, keeps his gaze fixed on that which
| is uniform, using a model of this kind, that object, executed in this way,
| must of necessity be beautiful;  but whenever he gazes at that which
| has come into existence and uses a created model, the object thus
| executed is not beautiful.  Now the whole Heaven, or Cosmos, or
| if there is any other name which it specially prefers, by that
| let us call it -- so, be its name what it may, we must first
| investigate concerning it that primary question which has to be
| investigated at the outset in every case -- namely, whether it has
| existed always, having no beginning of generation, or whether it has
| come into existence, having begun from some beginning.  It has come into
| existence;  for it is visible and tangible and possessed of a body;  and all
| such things are sensible, and things sensible, being apprehensible by opinion
| with the aid of sensation, come into existence, as we saw, and are generated.
| And that which has come into existence must necessarily, as we say, have
| come into existence by reason of some Cause.  Now to discover the
| Maker and Father of this Universe were a task indeed;  and
| having discovered Him, to declare Him unto all men were
| a thing impossible.  However, let us return and inquire
| further concerning the Cosmos -- after which of the Models
| ['paradeigmaton'] did its Architect construct it?  Was it after
| that which is self-identical and uniform, or after that which has
| come into existence?  Now if so be that this Cosmos is beautiful and
| its Constructor good, it is plain that he fixed his gaze on the Eternal;
| but if otherwise (which is an impious supposition), his gaze was on that
| which has come into existence.  But it is clear to everyone that his gaze
| was on the Eternal;  for the Cosmos is the fairest of all that has come
| into existence, and He is the best of all the Causes.  So having
| in this wise come into existence, it has been constructed
| after the pattern of that which is apprehensible by
| reason and thought and is self-identical.
|
| Plato, "Timaeus", 27D-29A.
|
| Plato, "Timaeus", R.G. Bury (trans.),
|'Plato, Volume 9',  G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1929.

VOLS. Note 3


| Again, if these premisses be granted, it is wholly necessary that this Cosmos
| should be a Copy ['eikona'] of something.  Now in regard to every matter it is
| most important to begin at the natural beginning.  Accordingly, in dealing with
| a copy and its model, we must affirm that the accounts given will themselves be
| akin to the diverse objects which they serve to explain;  those which deal with
| what is abiding and firm and discernible by the aid of thought will be abiding
| and unshakable;  and in so far as it is possible and fitting for statements to
| be irrefutable and invincible, they must in no wise fall short thereof;  whereas
| the accounts of that which is copied after the likeness of that Model, and is
| itself a likeness, will be analogous thereto and possess likelihood;  for as
| Being is to Becoming, so is Truth to Belief.  Wherefore, Socrates, if in our
| treatment of a great host of matters regarding the Gods and the generation of
| the Universe we prove unable to give accounts that are always in all respects
| self-consistent and perfectly exact, be not thou surprised;  rather we should
| be content if we can furnish accounts that are inferior to none in likelihood,
| remembering that both I who speak and you who judge are but human creatures,
| so that it becomes us to accept the likely account of these matters and
| forbear to search beyond it.
|
| Plato, "Timaeus", 29B-29D.
|
| Plato, "Timaeus", R.G. Bury (trans.),
|'Plato, Volume 9',  G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1929.

VOLS. Note 4


| Many likelihoods informed me of this before,
| which hung so tott'ring in the balance that
| I could neither believe nor misdoubt.
|
| 'All's Well That Ends Well', 1.3.119-121

VOLS. Note 5


| We have Reduction [abduction, Greek 'apagoge'] (1) when it is obvious
| that the first term applies to the middle, but that the middle applies
| to the last term is not obvious, yet nevertheless is more probable or
| not less probable than the conclusion;  or (2) if there are not many
| intermediate terms between the last and the middle;  for in all such
| cases the effect is to bring us nearer to knowledge.
|
| (1) E.g., let A stand for "that which can be taught", B for "knowledge",
|     and C for "morality".  Then that knowledge can be taught is evident;
|     but whether virtue is knowledge is not clear.  Then if BC is not less
|     probable or is more probable than AC, we have reduction;  for we are
|     nearer to knowledge for having introduced an additional term, whereas
|     before we had no knowledge that AC is true.
|
| (2) Or again we have reduction if there are not many intermediate terms
|     between B and C;  for in this case too we are brought nearer to knowledge.
|     E.g., suppose that D is "to square", E "rectilinear figure" and F "circle".
|     Assuming that between E and F there is only one intermediate term -- that the
|     circle becomes equal to a rectilinear figure by means of lunules -- we should
|     approximate to knowledge.  When, however, BC is not more probable than AC, or
|     there are several intermediate terms, I do not use the expression "reduction";
|     nor when the proposition BC is immediate;  for such a statement implies knowledge.
|
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics", 2.25.
|
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics",
| Hugh Tredennick (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 1', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1938, 1983.

VOLS. Note 6


| A probability [Greek 'eikos'] is not the same as a sign ['semeion'].
| The former is a generally accepted premiss;  for that which people
| know to happen or not to happen, or to be or not to be, usually
| in a particular way, is a probability:  e.g., that the envious
| are malevolent or that those who are loved are affectionate.
| A sign, however, means a demonstrative premiss which
| is necessary or generally accepted.  That which
| coexists with something else, or before or
| after whose happening something else has
| happened, is a sign of that something's
| having happened or being.
|
| An enthymeme is a syllogism from probabilities or signs;
| and a sign can be taken in three ways -- in just as many ways
| as there are of taking the middle term in the several figures ...
|
| We must either classify signs in this way, and regard their middle term as
| an index ['tekmerion'] (for the name "index" is given to that which causes
| us to know, and the middle term is especially of this nature), or describe
| the arguments drawn from the extremes as "signs", and that which is drawn
| from the middle as an "index".  For the conclusion which is reached through
| the first figure is most generally accepted and most true.
|
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics", 2.27.
|
| Aristotle, "Prior Analytics",
| Hugh Tredennick (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 1', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1938, 1983.

VOLS. Note 7


| Rhetoric is a counterpart [Greek 'antistrophos'] of Dialectic;
| for both have to do with matters that are in a manner within the
| cognizance of all men and not confined to any special science.
| Hence all men in a manner have a share of both;  for all, up to
| a certain point, endeavour to criticize or uphold an argument,
| to defend themselves or to accuse.  Now, the majority of people
| do this either at random or with a familiarity arising from habit.
| But since both these ways are possible, it is clear that matters
| can be reduced to a system, for it is possible to examine the
| reason why some attain their end by familiarity and others by
| chance;  and such an examination all would at once admit to be
| the function of an art ['techne'].  (1-2)
|
| Now, previous compilers of "Arts" of Rhetoric have provided us with
| only a small portion of this art, for proofs are the only things in
| it that come within the province of art;  everything else is merely
| an accessory.  And yet they say nothing about enthymemes which are
| the body of proof, but chiefly devote their attention to matters
| outside the subject;  for the arousing of prejudice, compassion,
| anger, and similar emotions has no connexion with the matter in
| hand, but is directed only to the dicast.  (3-4)
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.1.1-4.
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.

VOLS. Note 8


| It is obvious, therefore, that a system arranged according to the rules of art
| is only concerned with proofs;  that proof ['pistis'] is a sort of demonstration
| ['apodeixis'], since we are most strongly convinced when we suppose anything to
| have been demonstrated;  that rhetorical demonstration is an enthymeme, which,
| generally speaking, is the strongest of rhetorical proofs;  and lastly, that
| the enthymeme is a kind of syllogism.  Now, as it is the function of Dialectic
| as a whole, or one of its parts, to consider every kind of syllogism in a similar
| manner, it is clear that he who is most capable of examining the matter and forms
| of a syllogism will be in the highest degree a master of rhetorical argument, if
| to this he adds a knowledge of the subjects with which enthymemes deal and the
| differences between them and logical syllogisms.  For, in fact, the true and that
| which resembles it come under the purview of the same faculty, and at the same time
| men have a sufficient natural capacity for the truth and indeed in most cases attain
| to it;  wherefore one who divines well ['stochastikos echein'] in regard to the truth
| will also be able to divine well in regard to probabilities ['endoxa'].
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.1.11.
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.

VOLS. Note 9


| It is thus evident that Rhetoric does not deal with any one definite class
| of subjects, but, like Dialectic, [is of general application -- Trans.];
| also, that it is useful;  and further, that its function is not so much
| to persuade, as to find out in each case the existing means of persuasion.
| The same holds good in respect to all the other arts.  For instance, it
| is not the function of medicine to restore a patient to health, but only
| to promote this end as far as possible;  for even those whose recovery is
| impossible may be properly treated.  It is further evident that it belongs
| to Rhetoric to discover the real and apparent means of persuasion, just
| as it belongs to Dialectic to discover the real and apparent syllogism.
| For what makes the sophist is not the faculty but the moral purpose.
| But there is a difference:  in Rhetoric, one who acts in accordance with
| sound argument, and one who acts in accordance with moral purpose, are
| both called rhetoricians;  but in Dialectic it is the moral purpose that
| makes the sophist, the dialectician being one whose arguments rest, not
| on moral purpose but on the faculty.
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.1.14.
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.

VOLS. Note 10


| Rhetoric then may be defined as the faculty of discovering the possible means
| of persuasion in reference to any subject whatever.  This is the function of
| no other of the arts, each of which is able to instruct and persuade in its
| own special subject;  thus, medicine deals with health and sickness, geometry
| with the properties of magnitudes, arithmetic with number, and similarly with
| all the other arts and sciences.  But Rhetoric, so to say, appears to be able
| to discover the means of persuasion in reference to any given subject.  That is
| why we say that as an art its rules are not applied to any particular definite
| class of things.
|
| As for proofs, some are inartificial, others artificial.  By the former
| I understand all those which have not been furnished by ourselves but were
| already in existence, such as witnesses, tortures, contracts, and the like;
| by the latter, all that can be constructed by system and by our own efforts.
| Thus we have only to make use of the former, whereas we must invent the latter.
|
| Now the proofs furnished by the speech are of three kinds.
| The first depends upon the moral character of the speaker,
| the second upon putting the hearer into a certain frame
| of mind, the third upon the speech itself, in so far as
| it proves or seems to prove.
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.1-3.
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.

VOLS. Note 11


| But for purposes of demonstration, real or apparent, just as Dialectic possesses
| two modes of argument, induction and the syllogism, real or apparent, the same is
| the case in Rhetoric;  for the example is induction, and the enthymeme a syllogism,
| and the apparent enthymeme an apparent syllogism.  Accordingly I call an enthymeme
| a rhetorical syllogism, and an example rhetorical induction.  Now all orators produce
| belief by employing as proofs either examples or enthymemes and nothing else;  so that
| if, generally speaking, it is necessary to prove any fact whatever either by syllogism
| or by induction -- and that this is so is clear from the 'Analytics' -- each of the
| two former must be identical with each of the two latter.  The difference between
| example and enthymeme is evident from the 'Topics', where, in discussing syllogism
| and induction, it has previously been said that the proof from a number of particular
| cases that such is the rule, is called in Dialectic induction, in Rhetoric example;
| but when, certain things being posited, something different results by reason of
| them, alongside of them, from their being true, either universally or in most
| cases, such a conclusion in Dialectic is called a syllogism, in Rhetoric an
| enthymeme.
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.8-9.
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.

VOLS. Note 12


| The function ['ergon'] of Rhetoric, then, is to deal with things about
| which we deliberate, but for which we have no systematic rules;  and in
| the presence of such hearers as are unable to take a general view of many
| stages, or to follow a lengthy chain of argument.  But we only deliberate
| about things which seem to admit of issuing in two ways;  as for those things
| which cannot in the past, present, or future be otherwise, no one deliberates
| about them, if he supposes that they are such;  for nothing would be gained
| by it.  Now, it is possible to draw conclusions and inferences partly from
| what has been previously demonstrated syllogistically, partly from what
| has not, which however needs demonstration, because it is not probable.
| The first of these methods is necessarily difficult to follow owing to
| its length, for the judge is supposed to be a simple person;  the second
| will obtain little credence, because it does not depend upon what is either
| admitted of probable.  The necessary result then is that the enthymeme and
| the example are concerned with things which may, generally speaking, be other
| than they are, the example being a kind of induction and the enthymeme a kind
| of syllogism, and deduced from few premisses, often from fewer than the regular
| syllogism;  for if any one of these is well known, there is no need to mention it,
| for the hearer can add it himself.  For instance, to prove that Dorieus was the
| victor in a contest at which the prize was a crown, it is enough to say that
| he won a victory at the Olympic games;  there is no need to add that the
| prize at the Olympic games is a crown, for everybody knows it.
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.12-13.
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.

VOLS. Note 13


| But since few of the propositions of the rhetorical syllogism
| are necessary ['anagkaion'], for most of the things which we
| judge and examine can be other than they are, human actions,
| which are the subject of our deliberation and examination,
| being all of such a character and, generally speaking, none of
| them necessary;  since, further, facts which only generally happen
| or are merely possible can only be demonstrated by other facts of
| the same kind, and necessary facts by necessary propositions (and
| that this is so is clear from the 'Analytics'), it is evident that
| the materials from which enthymemes are derived will be sometimes
| necessary, but for the most part only generally true;  and these
| materials being probabilities and signs, it follows that these
| two elements must correspond to these two kinds of propositions,
| each to each.  For that which is probable is that which generally
| happens, not however unreservedly, as some define it, but that
| which is concerned with things that may be other than they are,
| being so related to that in regard to which it is probable as
| the universal to the particular.  As to signs, some are related
| as the particular to the universal, others as the universal to
| the particular.  Necessary signs are called 'tekmeria';  those
| which are not necessary have no distinguishing name.  I call
| those necessary signs from which a logical syllogism can be
| constructed, wherefore such a sign is called 'tekmerion';
| for when people think that their arguments are irrefutable,
| they think that they are bringing forward a 'tekmerion',
| something as it were proved and concluded;  for in
| the old language 'tekmar' and 'peras' have the
| same meaning (limit, conclusion).
| 
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.14-17.
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.

VOLS. Note 14


| Among signs, some are related as the particular to the universal;
| for instance, if one were to say that all wise men are just, because
| Socrates was both wise and just.  Now this is a sign, but even though
| the particular statement is true, it can be refuted, because it cannot
| be reduced to syllogistic form.  But if one were to say that it is a sign
| that a man is ill, because he has a fever, or that a woman has had a child
| because she has milk, this is a necessary sign.  This alone among signs is
| a 'tekmerion';  for only in this case, if the fact is true, is the argument
| irrefutable.  Other signs are related as the universal to the particular,
| for instance, if one were to say that it is a sign that this man has a fever,
| because he breathes hard;  but even if the fact be true, this argument also
| can be refuted, for it is possible for a man to breathe hard without having
| a fever.  We have now explained the meaning of probable, sign, and necessary
| sign, and the difference between them;  in the 'Analytics' we have defined
| them more clearly and stated why some of them can be converted into logical
| syllogisms, while others cannot.
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.18
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.

VOLS. Note 15


| We have now stated the materials of proofs which are thought to be demonstrative.
| But a very great difference between enthymemes has escaped the notice of nearly
| every one, although it also exists in the dialectical method of syllogisms.
| For some of them belong to Rhetoric, some syllogisms only to Dialectic,
| and others to other arts and faculties, some already existing and
| others not yet established.  Hence its is that this escapes
| the notice of the speakers, and the more they specialize
| in a subject, the more they transgress the limits of
| Rhetoric and Dialectic.  But this will be clearer
| if stated at greater length.
|
| I mean by dialectical and rhetorical syllogisms those which are concerned with what
| we call "topics", which may be applied alike to Law, Physics, Politics, and many
| other sciences that differ in kind, such as the topic of the more or less, which
| will furnish syllogisms and enthymemes equally well for Law, Physics, or any
| other science whatever, although these subjects differ in kind.  Specific
| topics on the other hand are derived from propositions which are peculiar
| to each species or genus of things;  there are, for example, propositions
| about Physics which can furnish neither enthymemes nor syllogisms about
| Ethics, and there are propositions concerned with Ethics which will be
| useless for furnishing conclusions about Physics;  and the same holds
| good in all cases.  The first kind of topics will not make a man
| practically wise about any particular class of things, because
| they do not deal with any particular subject matter;  but as
| to the specific topics, the happier a man is in his choice
| of propositions, the more he will unconsciously produce
| a science quite different from Dialectic and Rhetoric.
| For if once he hits upon first principles, it will
| no longer be Dialectic or Rhetoric, but that
| science whose principles he has arrived at.
| Most enthymemes are constructed from
| these special topics, which are
| called particular and special,
| fewer from those that are
| common or universal.
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.20-22
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.

VOLS. Note 16


| We have said that example ['paradeigma', analogy] is a kind of induction and with
| what kind of material it deals by way of induction.  It is neither the relation
| of part to whole, nor of whole to part, nor of one whole to another whole, but
| of part to part, of like to like, when both come under the same genus, but one
| of them is better known than the other.  For example, to prove that Dionysius
| is aiming at a tyranny, because he asks for a bodyguard, one might say that
| Pisistratus before him and Theagenes of Megara did the same, and when they
| obtained what they asked for made themselves tyrants.  All the other
| tyrants known may serve as an example of Dionysius, whose reason,
| however, for asking for a bodyguard we do not yet know.  All these
| examples are contained under the same universal proposition, that
| one who is aiming at a tyranny asks for a bodyguard.
|
| Aristotle, "Art of Rhetoric", 1.2.19
|
| Aristotle, "The 'Art' of Rhetoric",
| John Henry Freese (trans.), in:
|'Aristotle, Volume 22', G.P. Goold (ed.),
| William Heinemann, London, UK, 1926, 1982.

VOLS. Note 17


The Likely Story:
Its likely Moral.

Those of you who stayed with the tour have been strolling with me
through the Socratic and the Peripatetic wings of a gallery devoted
to the Classical background of Peirce's theory of signs and inquiry,
and the exhibits that I have collected there have been gathering dust
in that Museum of Incidental Musements for a score of Summers or more.
If I were to state the theme of the show it'd come out a bit like this:

| There is a continuity between approximate (likely, probable)
| and apodeictic (demonstrative, exact) patterns of reasoning,
| with the latter being the limiting ideal of the former type.

Having spent the lion's share of my waking and my dreaming life
trying to put things together that others are busy taking apart,
I found that it often helps to return to the sources of streams,
where opposing banks of perspectives are a bit less riven apart.

For example, modus tollens is a pattern of inference
in deductive reasoning that takes the following form:

 A => B
  ~B
--------
  ~A

Probably the most common pattern of inference
in empirical reasoning takes a form like this:

H_0 = the null hypothesis.  Typically, H_0 says
that a couple of factors X and Y are independent,
in effect, that they have no lawlike relationship.

D_0 = the null distribution of outcomes.
In part, D_0 says that particular types
of possible outcomes have probabilities
of happening that are very near to zero.

Let us assume that D_0 => G_0, with G_0
being the proposition that an event E_0
has a close to zero chance of happening.

We are given the theoretical propositions:
(1) H_0 => D_0 and (2) D_0 => G_0, and so
we may assume that (3) H_0 => G_0.

Let's say that we do the relevant experiment,
and, lo and behold, we observe the event E_0,
that is supposed to be unlikely if H_0 holds.
Now it's not a logical contradiction, but we
take E_0 as evidence against G_0 anyway, and
by modus tollens as evidence contrary to H_0.

We may view this typical pattern of "significance testing"
as a statistical generalization of the modus tollens rule.

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

VOLS.  Note 17 -- Dup or Correction?

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

The Likely Story:
Its likely Moral.

Those of you who stayed with the tour have been strolling with me
through the Socratic and the Peripatetic wings of a gallery devoted
to the Classical background of Peirce's theory of signs and inquiry,
and the exhibits that I have collected there have been gathering dust
in that Museum of Incidental Musements for a score of Summers or more.
If I were to state the theme of the show it'd come out a bit like this:

| There is a continuity between approximate (likely, probable)
| and apodeictic (demonstrative, exact) patterns of reasoning,
| with the latter being the limiting ideal of the former type.

Having spent the lion's share of my waking and my dreaming life
trying to put things together that others are busy taking apart,
I found that it often helps to return to the sources of streams,
where opposing banks of perspectives are a bit less riven apart.

For example, modus tollens is a pattern of inference
in deductive reasoning that takes the following form:

 A => B
  ~B
--------
  ~A

Probably the most common pattern of inference
in empirical reasoning takes a form like this:

H_0 = the null hypothesis.  Typically, H_0 says
that a couple of factors X and Y are independent,
in effect, that they have no lawlike relationship.

D_0 = the null distribution of outcomes.
In part, D_0 says that particular types
of possible outcomes have probabilities
of happening that are very near to zero.

Let us assume that D_0 => G_0, with G_0
being the proposition that an event E_0
has a close to zero chance of happening.

We are given the theoretical propositions:
(1) H_0 => D_0 and (2) D_0 => G_0, and so
we may assume that (3) H_0 => G_0.

Let's say that we do the relevant experiment,
and, lo and behold, we observe the event E_0,
that is supposed to be unlikely if H_0 holds.
Now it's not a logical contradiction, but we
take E_0 as evidence against G_0 anyway, and
by modus tollens as evidence contrary to H_0.

We may view this typical pattern of "significance testing"
as a statistical generalization of the modus tollens rule.

VOLS. Note 18


| The dull green time-stained panes
| of the windows look upon each other
| with the cowardly glances of cheats.
|
| Maxim Gorky, 'Creatures That Once Were Men'

Peirce is a reflective practitioner of pragmatic thinking,
which is to say that he puts the interpreter back into the
scene of observation, from whence he has, from time to time,
been elevated beyond implication, or exiled beyond redemption.

VOLS. Verities Of Likely Stories • Discussion

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

Seth,

> P1.  "we think each one of our beliefs to be true,
>       and, indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375).
>
> And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua fallibilist,
> which you regard as being paradoxical in import.  S1 is your restatement of P1,
> and S2 is what you believe to be the fallibilist view.
>
> S1.  (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).

This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.

A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,

If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.

And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.

This is aside from the fact that Peirce's semantics
for "Q believes P" is not what you assume for it,
nor is his usage of quantifiers what you assume.

The first time I heard this one, it was posed as being about
"referential opacity" or "non-substitutability of identicals"
in intentional contexts, which is a typical symptom of using
2-adic relations where 3-adic relations are called for, and
even Russell and Quine briefly consider this, though both
of them shy away on the usual out-Occaming Occam grounds.

If you were going to take a lesson from Quine,
I think you might well begin with his holism,
and quit parapharsing texts out of context.

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

JA = Jon Awbrey
SS = Seth Sharpless

SS: Well at last you address the issue directly, saying what
    Peter Skagestad already said, to which I have previously
    given my response for what it was worth.

SS: As for your comment,

    | If you were going to take a lesson from Quine,
    | I think you might well begin with his holism,
    | and quit parapharsing texts out of context,

SS: the context of the P1 quote in the 1877 paper on "Fixation of Belief" is very familiar
    to most contributors to this list, my S1 paraphrase was explicit and could be (and was)
    judged for its fidelity to the original, and I have scrupulously given sources for other
    passages to which I have referred, quoting the less familiar passages verbatim.

SS: Yes, holism, theories of belief revision, theories of the structure of propositions
    and the logic of relations, intensional and situational logic, Gricean conversational
    maxims, theories of inquiry and the history of science, these and much else could be
    brought to bear on this little problem, which is one of the things that make it
    interesting.

SS: I have taken note of your admonitions on how I ought to behave.
    May I suggest that a little collegiality on your part would
    not be out of place.

Seth,

I will try to tell you where I am really coming from,
in this and all of the other matters of interest to
this Forum, as it appears that my epigraphic use of
quotations from Russell, Dewey, and Julius Caesar
may have confused you about the name of the camp
from which I presently look out.

I studied analytic, existential, oriental, phenomenological,
and pragmatic philosophy, among several others, pretty much
in parallel, for many years as an undergraduate (1967-1976) --
yes, that long, for it was an "interesting time", after all --
then I pursued graduate studies in mathematics, then later
psychology, in the meantime working mostly as a consulting
statistician and computer jockey for a mix of academic and
professional school research units.

The more experience that I gained in applying formal sciences --
mathematical, computational, statistical, and logical methods --
to the problems that I continued to see coming up in research,
the more that my philosophical reflections on my work led me
choose among those that "worked" and those that did not.

I can do no better than to report my observations from this experience.
The mix of ideas that I learned from analytic philosophy just never
quite addresses the realities of phenomena and practices that are
involved in real-live inquiry, while the body of ideas contained
in the work of Peirce and Dewey, and sometimes James and Mead,
continues to be a source of genuine insight into the actual
problems of succeeding at science.

From this perspective, the important thing is whether a philosophical outlook
address the experiential phenomena that are present in the field, and whether
it gives us some insight into why the methods that work there manage to do so,
for the sake of improving how they manage to do so in the future.

An approximate formulation that addresses the realities of phenomena,
practices, and problems in inquiry is vastly preferable to an exact
formulation of some other subject, that has no relation to the job.

I directly addressed the material issues that raised from the very first.
That is, after all, a rather old joke.  But you have simply ignored all
of the alternate directions that I indicated, all of them arising from
the substance and the intent of Peirce's work.

The little puzzle that you have been worrying us over is typical of
the sort of abject silliness that so-called analytic philosophy has
wasted the last hundred years of intellectual history with, and I,
for one, believe that it is time to move on.

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

Seth,

> P1.  "we think each one of our beliefs to be true,
>       and, indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375).
>
> And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua fallibilist,
> which you regard as being paradoxical in import.  S1 is your restatement of P1,
> and S2 is what you believe to be the fallibilist view.
>
> S1.  (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).

JA: This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
    probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.

JA: A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,

JA: If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.

JA: And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.

JA: This is aside from the fact that Peirce's semantics
    for "Q believes P" is not what you assume for it,
    nor is his usage of quantifiers what you assume.

JA: The first time I heard this one, it was posed as being about
    "referential opacity" or "non-substitutability of identicals"
    in intentional contexts, which is a typical symptom of using
    2-adic relations where 3-adic relations are called for, and
    even Russell and Quine briefly consider this, though both
    of them shy away on the usual out-Occaming Occam grounds.

JA: If you were going to take a lesson from Quine,
    I think you might well begin with his holism,
    and quit parapharsing texts out of context.

What Peirce says here is simply the common sense truism
that what a person believes is what that person believes
to be true, and therefore the appendix "to be true" is
veriformly redundant.  This has no special bearing on
fallibility except that when a person changes a belief
then that person ipso facto changes a belief as to what
is true.

When one changes a belief
from something of the form A
to something of the form ~A,
then 1 of 3 things can occur:

1.  A is true, in which case one is now wrong to believe ~A.
2.  A is not true, in which case one was wrong to believe A.
3.  The distinction between A and ~A is ill-formed, in which
    case one was wrong in believing that it was well-formed.

In either case, one has has actualized one's fallibility.

As I explained in my first remarks on this issue, the proper context for understanding
Peirce's statements about belief -- for anyone who really wishes to do that -- since
belief is a state that he calls the end of inquiry, is Peirce's theory of inquiry,
which process he analyzes in terms of the three principal types of inference that
he recognizes, placing that study within the study of logic, which he treats
as more or less equivalent to semiotics, or the theory of sign relations.
Since Peirce holds that all of our thoughts and beliefs and so on are
signs, and since sign relations are 3-adic relations, the ultimate
context for understanding what Peirce says about belief and error
and so on -- for anyone who really wishes to do that -- is the
context of 3-adic sign relations and the semiotic processes
that take place in these frames.  Quine's holism, as best
I can remember from my studies of 30 years ago, says that
we cannot translate single statements, but only whole
theories, and I find that an admirable sentiment,
independently of how consistent Quine may have
been in his application of it.  Your attempt
at a paraphrase, which I can only suspect
began with the punchline and tried to
attach Peirce as the fall guy, fails
already on syntactic grounds, since
it does not preserve even the form
of what Peirce said, and although
you provide no explicit semantics
for the concept of belief you are
attempting to attach to Peirce's
statement, whereas Peirce's gave
us many further statements of
what he meant, fails on the
minimal semantic grounds
that no false statement
can be the paraphrase
of a true sentence.

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

JA = Jon Awbrey
JR = Joe Ransdell
SS = Seth Sharpless

SS: I shall try to address your objection to my argument with the kind
    of civility that I wish you could show for me.  You were apparently
    not satisfied with my reply to Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox when
    they made the same objection you are now making, so I will try to
    make my argument clearer.

I only have a moment, and so I will save this note for a more careful review later.
I can see that you are in earnest, but my general impression is that you are moving
at a high rate of speed down a no outlet alley, and perhaps a bit too focussed on the
syntactic peculiarities of one particular fragment, when Peirce himself has provided us
with ample paraphrases and amplifications of his intended sense on this very same point.

I wish I could convince you that the quantifiers and their interlacings
are irrelevant to the actual sense of what Peirce is saying here, as he
is merely observing a pragmatic equivalence between two situations that
may be expressed in relational predicates of yet to be determined arity.
Failing that, we will have to examine what Peirce in 1877 might have
meant by what you are assuming is the implicit quantifier signalled
by "each".  This is an issue that I have studied long and hard, but
have avoided raising it so far, mostly out of a prospective despair
at my present capacity to render it clear.  Maybe it is time.
But really, it is not necesssary to get what Peirce is
saying here, which is a fairly simple, common sense
point, idiomatically expressed, and, most likely,
irreducibly so.  It would be a far better thing
we do if we adopt the hermeneutic principle of
looking for the author's own paraphrases and
approximations, even if not exact from
a purely syntactic point of view.

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

SS, quoting JA, citing JR, paraphrasing SS, interpreting CSP:

    | And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua
    | fallibilist, which you regard as being paradoxical in import.
    |
    | P1. "we think each one of our beliefs to be true, and,
    |      indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375)
    |
    | S1 is your restatement of P1 ...
    |
    | S1. (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).

SS, quoting JA:

    | This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
    | probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.
    |
    | A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,
    |
    | If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.
    |
    | And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.

SS: No, Jon, you have not got it quite right.  S1 was not my restatement of P1;
    I gave S1 as a paraphrase of what a believer must believe, given that P1 is true.
    That is not quite the same (though in later passages, I did sometimes carelessly
    refer to S1 as a "paraphrase of P1").

SS: In response to the objection of Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox,
    which is the same as that which you are now making, I conceded that:

SS: (1) (For every x)I believe(I believe x -> x is true)

SS: is not the same as:

SS: (2) I believe(For every x)(I believe x-> x is true).

SS: But on the assumption that the believer is intelligent,
    and that he sees the conditional in (1) as a necessary
    ("tautologous") truth, he should be able to make an
    inference like the following:

SS: "Any arbitrarily chosen belief of mine must be believed by me to be true"

SS: Therefore,

SS: "All my beliefs are believed by me to be true"

SS: which is a valid universal generalization of the same kind as:

SS: Any arbitrarily chosen natural number must be a product of primes;
    therefore, all natural numbers are products of primes.

SS: Any arbitrarily chosen cat must be a mammal;
    therefore, all cats are mammals.

SS: It is true that this is an inference that calls for some logical skill on the part of
    the believer, so that someone could believe P1 without believing S1, but we are talking
    about Peirce, and whether HIS belief in fallibilism is consistent with HIS belief in P1.
    I think there can be no doubt about his belief in P1.  As to what it is exactly that he
    believes, when he believes in fallibilism, that is a more difficult question.  I am now
    having doubts that "Some of my beliefs are false," or

SS: (S2) (For some x)(I believe x & x is not true)

SS: fairly expresses Peirce's Fallibilism. I discussed that possibility in my
    summary letter, under the heading "First Solution."  More needs to be said
    about it, but I'll keep it for another communication, possibly in response
    to Joseph's forthcoming letter.

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

JA = Jon Awbrey
JR = Joe Ransdell
SS = Seth Sharpless

SS: I shall try to address your objection to my argument with the kind
    of civility that I wish you could show for me.  You were apparently
    not satisfied with my reply to Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox when
    they made the same objection you are now making, so I will try to
    make my argument clearer.

I would try to address the issue of civility,
but my defense would have to take the form,
"But Ma, he hit me first!", and I long ago
learned the recursive futility of setting
foot on such a path.

JA: I only have a moment, and so I will save this note for
    a more careful review later.  I can see that you are in
    earnest, but my general impression is that you are moving
    at a high rate of speed down a no outlet alley, and perhaps
    a bit too focussed on the syntactic peculiarities of one
    particular fragment, when Peirce himself has provided
    us with ample paraphrases and amplifications of his
    intended sense on this very same point.

I have already mentioned another locus where Peirce adverts to this issue,
but this time with all of the requisite qualifiers and all of the nuanced
indicators of relative significance intact, and that is in this passage:

| Two things here are all-important to assure oneself of
| and to remember.  The first is that a person is not
| absolutely an individual.  His thoughts are what
| he is "saying to himself", that is, is saying
| to that other self that is just coming into
| life in the flow of time.  When one reasons,
| it is that critical self that one is trying
| to persuade;  and all thought whatsoever is a
| sign, and is mostly of the nature of language.
| The second thing to remember is that the man's
| circle of society (however widely or narrowly
| this phrase may be understood), is a sort of
| loosely compacted person, in some respects of
| higher rank than the person of an individual
| organism.  It is these two things alone that
| render it possible for you -- but only in
| the abstract, and in a Pickwickian sense --
| to distinguish between absolute truth
| and what you do not doubt.
|
| CSP, CP 5.421.
|
| Charles Sanders Peirce, "What Pragmatism Is",
|'The Monist', Volume 15, 1905, pages 161-181,
| Also in the 'Collected Papers', CP 5.411-437.

If we wanted a bone to pick,
this one promises more beef.

Another approach that might be more productive,
if no less controversial, would be through the
examination of the distinction between what we
frequently call "belief" and "knowledge", and
why the distinction collapses or degenerates
for the fictively isolated individual agent.

JA, amending JA:

I wish I could convince you that the quantifiers and their interlacings
are irrelevant to the actual sense of what Peirce is saying here, as he
is merely observing a pragmatic equivalence between two situations that
may be expressed in relational predicates of yet to be determined arity.
Failing that, we will have to examine what Peirce in 1877 might have
meant by what you are assuming is the implicit quantifier signalled
by "each".  This is an issue that I have studied long and hard, but
have avoided raising so far, mostly out of a prospective despair
at my present capacity to render it clear.  Maybe it is time.
But really, it is not necesssary to do this just in order to
get what Peirce is saying here, which is a fairly simple,
common sense point, idiomatically expressed, and, most
likely, irreducibly so.  It would be a far better
thing we do if we adopt the hermeneutic principle
of looking for the author's own paraphrases and
approximations, even if not exactly identical
from a purely syntactic point of view.

A minimal caution about this point would require us to recognize
two distinct dimensions of variation in the usage of quantifiers:

1.  The difference in usage between Peirce 1877 and the
    post-Fregean scene of our contemporary discussions.

2.  The difference in usage between most mathematicians, then and now,
    and people who identify themselves as "logicists" or "linguists".

We probably cannot help ourselves from translating Peirce 1877
into our own frame of reference, but we should be aware of the
potential for distortion that arises from the anachronisms and
the dialectic disluxations that will as a consequence result.

SS, quoting JA, citing JR, paraphrasing SS, interpreting CSP:

    | And here are the pair of sentences which you impute to Peirce qua
    | fallibilist, which you regard as being paradoxical in import.
    |
    | P1. "we think each one of our beliefs to be true, and,
    |      indeed, it is mere tautology to say so" (CP 5.375)
    |
    | S1 is your restatement of P1 ...
    |
    | S1. (For every x)(I believe x -> x is true).

SS, quoting JA:

    | This has been said before, by Peter Skagestad and
    | probably others, but S1 is not a paraphrase of P1.
    |
    | A better try would be, for all propositions P and persons Q,
    |
    | If P is a belief of Q, then Q thinks that P is true.
    |
    | And that is a tautology, in the sense of repeating oneself.

SS: No, Jon, you have not got it quite right.  S1 was not my restatement of P1;
    I gave S1 as a paraphrase of what a believer must believe, given that P1 is true.
    That is not quite the same (though in later passages, I did sometimes carelessly
    refer to S1 as a "paraphrase of P1").

I have no probleme with the idea that interpretation is inescapably abductive:

http://www.chss.montclair.edu/inquiry/fall95/awbrey.html

The question is whether the interpretant preserves a semblance of the meaning.

SS: In response to the objection of Peter Skagestad and Mark Silcox,
    which is the same as that which you are now making, I conceded that:

SS: (1) (For every x)I believe(I believe x -> x is true)

Peirce did not say this.

SS: is not the same as:

SS: (2) I believe(For every x)(I believe x-> x is true).

Peirce did not say this.

SS: But on the assumption that the believer is intelligent,
    and that he sees the conditional in (1) as a necessary
    ("tautologous") truth, he should be able to make an
    inference like the following:

The conditional in (1) is not necessary.
I don't know anybody who would say this.

SS: "Any arbitrarily chosen belief of mine must be believed by me to be true"

This is a non-sequitur.  Oh wait.

Any arbitrarily chosen belief of mine must be believed-by-me-to-be-true.

Okay.  But that's what he said in the first place.
And this statement does not confict with believing
that some belief of mine may turn-out-to-be-false.

A statement can be believed-by-me-to-be-true and turn-out-to-be-false.

Peirce's statement again:

| But we think each one of our beliefs to be true,
| and, indeed, it is mere tautology to say so.
|
| CSP, 'Collected Papers', CP 5.375

This has the form of:

| But we can cover any distance we can run at a pace faster than a walk.

Straightened out a bit:

| Any distance we can run is a distance we can cover faster than a walk.

The tautology is one that occurs at the level of the two predicates:
"runnable" and "coverable at a pace faster than a walk".  It would
be better to avoid worrying about the quantifiers in this reading.

SS: Therefore,

SS: "All my beliefs are believed by me to be true"

SS: which is a valid universal generalization of the same kind as:

SS: Any arbitrarily chosen natural number must be a product of primes;
    therefore, all natural numbers are products of primes.

SS: Any arbitrarily chosen cat must be a mammal;
    therefore, all cats are mammals.

SS: It is true that this is an inference that calls for some logical skill on the
    part of the believer, so that someone could believe P1 without believing S1,
    but we are talking about Peirce, and whether HIS belief in fallibilism is
    consistent with HIS belief in P1.  I think there can be no doubt about
    his belief in P1.  As to what it is exactly that he believes, when he
    believes in fallibilism, that is a more difficult question.  I am now
    having doubts that "Some of my beliefs are false," or

SS: (S2) (For some x)(I believe x & x is not true)

SS: fairly expresses Peirce's Fallibilism.  I discussed that possibility in my
    summary letter, under the heading "First Solution".  More needs to be said
    about it, but I'll keep it for another communication, possibly in response
    to Joseph's forthcoming letter.

I believe that the generic problem here is a "poverty of syntax".
Syntax, expecially isolated syntax fragments of natural language
idioms, may constrain but it cannot utterly determine the models.
You have to gather independent evidence as to what the intended
models may be.  In Peirce's case, his use of the word "belief",
as in "state of belief" as in "The irritation of doubt causes a
struggle to attain a state of belief", simply points to a whole
different order of models (universes + predicates) than the ones
that you are presently taking for granted as the only possible
models, most likely importing them from the discussions with
which you have become familiar on the contemporary scene.
One of the most significant aspects of Peirce's whole
approach is that he is talking about a process, one
in which signs, in particular, beliefs and concepts,
can enter and exit the pool of accepted, acted on,
adopted, trusted, utilized resources.  Your use
of quantifiers is assuming a static situation,
as if the population of beliefs were fixed,
no pun, for once, intended.  This is why
you appear to be repeating Parmenidean
paradoxes in the mental realm, as if
to show that changing one's mind is
impossible.  It is not necessary
to invent modal or tensed logic
to deal with this, as change
can be modeled in the ways
that mathematics has been
doing it for a long time.

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

Note 13

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

I believe that one should always steer into a skid, but I doubt it.
That expresses the swerve of my learned dispositions, in cars with
rear-wheel drives on icy roads, and its corrective waylaying by my
first trip in a rental car, with front-wheel drive, on an icy road,
about as well as any collection of mere linguistic mechanisms will.
The circumstunts that mere words will not convey what I learned by
way of this adventition and all of my other near-death experiences
in this life is merely the insufficiency of words and their author.

Phenomena come first, theories come later,
on the evolutionary scale of time, anyway.
The circumstance that theories are always
falling short of phenomena in some degree,
does not stay the phenomenon in its orbit.

Animate creatures capable of inquiry, people like us, acted on dispositions
that we call "belief" and experienced experiences that we call "doubt" long
before they had the concepts, much less the words, "belief" and "doubt", or
universal quantifiers "all" and "each", with or without existential import,
with or without hypostatic general import, with or without game-theoretic
import, with or without predesignated domains of quantification, with or
without you name what comes next.  Concepts, mental symbols to pragmatic
thinkers, are instrumental goods that we import through the customs of
biology and culture.  They come and go.  I love the game of etymology
and enjoy an apt bit of ordinary language analysis as much as anyone
has a right to, but the theory that you can wring all your theories
of phenomena, no matter how complex, out of commonsense word usage
is a notion whose time has come and gone.  It just ain't science.

| Belief and doubt may be conceived to be distinguished only in degree.
|
| CSP, CE 3, pages 21.
|
| C.S. Peirce, MS 182, 1872, "Chapter 1 (Enlarged Abstract)", pages 20-21 in:
|'Writings of Charles S. Peirce:  A Chronological Edition, Volume 3, 1872-1878',
| Peirce Edition Project, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1986.

o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o

VOOP. Varieties Of Ontology Project


Problem Statement.

A.  What are the different types of ontology projects
    that are covered by our current scope and purpose?

B.  What are the criteria that are appropriate
    to each of the different ontology projects?

Given, then, that different types of ontology projects
will have different criteria for the acceptability and
the adequacy of proposals at each stage of development,
let us see if we can formulate the respective criteria
for a number of ontology projects that fall within the
charge, scope and purpose of a standard upper ontology.

A variety of ontology projects come to mind.
I will give them these working designations:

1.  ROSO

    What are the minimal criteria of acceptability of
    a "research oriented scientific ontology" (ROSO)?

2.  ULTO

    What are the minimal criteria of acceptability for
    an "upper level technical ontology" (ULTO)?

3.  URFO

    What are the minimal criteria of acceptability for
    an "un-reflective folk ontology" (URFO)?

We've all concurred, or at least relented, that there's
room enough under the Standard Umbrella Ontology for the
type of "un-reflective folk ontology" (URFO) that concerns
itself mostly with "shoes, ships, sealing wax", and so on,
but the question remains, on less rainy days, whether the
principles and the parameters that suit the garden variety
URFO are adaptable to the rigors of the ROSO and the ULTO.

After we have settled on the minimal criteria of acceptability,
we might then venture into establishing the ideal criteria of
adequacy for the respective types of ontologies.

Defining, or at least characterizing these types
of ontology projects would of course be a major
part of the task of developing the respective
criteria for acceptability and adequacy.

Notes from previous exchanges:

JA = Jon Awbrey
JH = Jay Halcomb
PG = Pierre Grenon

PG: Never the less, it seems to me that this group would be
    better off if proposed material was judged on criteria
    similar to those by which the final product shall be
    evaluated, rather than dependent upon pleasant
    email exchanges.

JH: I agree with this view, which was the essential point
    of my last e-mail -- getting more specific about such
    criteria for working documents.

JA: Many people, present writer included, have observed that the criteria
    appropriate to different kinds of ontology applications and projects,
    all of them nonetheless falling under the rather large tent of our
    scope and purpose document, may be radically different.

JA: In particular, I have pointed to the differences in working methodology
    and goals of research oriented ontologies and, for the lack of a better
    name, so-called commonsense ontologies.

JH: Precisely so.  I think that we've many of us said these similar
    things at one time or another, and we always return to them when
    a proposal is made (recall the discussion about the CycL language
    when that proposal was made).  That is why I think that developing
    clearer acceptance criteria, upfront, for specifying these various
    targets is important, when it comes to working documents for the
    group.  Specifically, developing  specification criteria for
    terminologies, languages, and logic(s).  I would  hope the
    IFF folks should have some specific thoughts about this.

JA: Until a better term comes along, I'm using the word "project"
    somewhat in the way that people speak of cultural projects or
    existential projects -- broad, compelling, if slightly vague
    intimations of something that needs to be done.

JA: Here is a narrative about one sort of ontology project,
    the aims, criteria, and working assumptions of which
    I am acquainted with, and feel like I understand:

JA: I once got sold on the project of building software bridges between
    qualitative and quantitative research.  For example, in many areas
    of clinical practice, medical anthropology, and public health one
    has "practitioner-scientist models" where people accumulate lots
    of free-floating informal hunches and qualitative impressions in
    their on-the-job settings, that they then need to follow up with
    hard data gathering, quantitatively measurable constructs, and
    the usual battery of statistical methods.  A lot of practical
    savvy never gets widely distributed, and a lot of benighted
    mythology never gets tested, all for the lack of good ways
    to refine this "personal knowledge" into scientific truth.

JA: It still seems to me that properly designed lexical and logical resources
    ought to provide us with some of the plancks we need to build this bridge.

JA: At first strike, it sounds like this ought to involve an integration of
    research oriented and common sense ontologies.  But there has seemed to
    arise one insurmountable obstacle after another in trying to do this.

JA: Just by way of focusing on a concrete illustration, take the word "event".
    Formalizing the concept of "event" for a research oriented ontology does
    not require any discusssion on our part.  Those discussions were carried
    out somewhere between the days of powdered-wig-wearing-high-rollers and
    the days of manurial comparisons.  To get the standard axioms, one goes
    to a standard reference book and copies them into one's knowledge base:

    | PAS.  Probability And Statistics -- Ontology List
    |
    | 01.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04885.html
    | 02.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04886.html
    | 03.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04887.html
    | 04.  http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04888.html
    |
    | et sic deinceps ...

JA: The only question is whether one's favorite ontology prover is up to
    the snuff of proving whatever theorems need to be proved thereon.

JA: There can be no compromise with these criteria.
    The research market simply will not bear it.
    So if there is to be an integration with
    nontechnical language and methodology,
    it must be an augmentation of these
    basics and not their overwriting.

JA: I have gotten used to the idea that there is another sort of ontology project,
    but since I do not get the cogency of it, it seems like its definition and its
    criteria of validity would have to come from the critical self-examination of
    those whose project it is.  All I know at present is that the obvious course
    that I suggested above for formalizing the concept "event" is probably the
    course of last resort from the standpoint of this alternative project.

JA: That is what I mean by radical differences in working criteria for acceptance.

JA: Similar disjunctions of approach and acceptability could be observed
    for several other dimensions of diversity among ontological projects,
    for example, the "already been chewed" vs. the "knowledge soup" brands,
    that is, those who expect full-fledged axiom systems from the outset
    vs. those who would gel their knowledge chunks out of a semiotic sol.

VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience

VORE. Note 1

| Once upon a time and a very good time it was there was
| a moocow coming down along the road and this moocow that
| was down along the road met a nicens little boy named
| baby tuckoo ....
|
| His father told him that story:  his father looked at him
| through a glass:  he had a hairy face.
|
| He was baby tuckoo.  The moocow came down the road where
| Betty Byrne lived:  she sold lemon platt.
|
|    O, the wild rose blossoms
|    On the little green place.
|
| He sang that song.  That was his song.
|
|    O, the green wothe botheth.
|
| Joyce, 'Portrait', p. 1.
|
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.

VORE. Note 2

| It was the hour for sums.  Father Arnall wrote a hard sum on the
| board and then said:
|
| -- Now then, who will win?  Go ahead, York!  Go ahead, Lancaster!
|
| Stephen tried his best but the sum was too hard and he felt confused.
| The little silk badge with the white rose on it that was pinned on the
| breast of his jacket began to flutter.  He was no good at sums but he
| tried his best so that York might not lose.  Father Arnall's face looked
| very black but he was not in a wax:  he was laughing.  Then Jack Lawton
| cracked his fingers and Father Arnall looked at his copybook and said:
|
| -- Right.  Bravo Lancaster!  The red rose wins.  Come on now, York!
| Forge ahead!
|
| Jack Lawton looked over from his side.  The little silk badge with
| the red rose on it looked very rich because he had a blue sailor top
| on.  Stephen felt his own face red too, thinking of all the bets about
| who would get first place in Elements, Jack Lawton or he.  Some weeks
| Jack Lawton got the card for first and some weeks he got the card for
| first.  His white silk badge fluttered and fluttered as he worked at
| the next sum and heard Father Arnall's voice.  Then all his eagerness
| passed away and he felt his face quite cool.  He thought his face must
| be white because it felt so cool.  He could not get out the answer for
| the sum but it did not matter.  White roses and red roses:  those were
| beautiful colours to think of.  And the cards for first place and third
| place were beautiful colours too:  pink and cream and lavender.  Lavender
| and cream and pink roses were beautiful to think of.  Perhaps a wild rose
| might be like those colours and he remembered the song about the wild rose
| blossoms on the little green place.  But you could not have a green rose.
| But perhaps somewhere in the world you could.
|
| Joyce, 'Portrait', pp. 6-7.
|
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.

VORE. Note 3

| The equation on the page of his scribbler began to spread out a widening tail,
| eyed and starred like a peacock's;  and, when the eyes and stars of its indices
| had been eliminated, began slowly to fold itself together again.  The indices
| appearing and disappearing were eyes opening and closing;  the eyes opening
| and closing were stars being born and being quenched.  The vast cycle
| of starry life bore his weary mind outward to its verge and inward
| to its centre, a distant music accompanying him outward and inward.
| What music?  The music came nearer and he recalled the words, the
| words of Shelley's fragment upon the moon wandering companionless,
| pale for weariness.  The stars began to crumble and a cloud of
| fine star-dust fell through space.
|
| The dull light fell more faintly upon the page whereon another equation
| began to unfold itself slowly and to spread abroad its widening tail.
| It was his own soul going forth to experience, unfolding itself
| sin by sin, spreading abroad the balefire of its burning stars
| and folding back upon itself, fading slowly, quenching its
| own lights and fires.  They were quenched:  and the
| cold darkness filled chaos.
|
| Joyce, 'Portrait', p. 97.
|
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.

VORE. Note 4

| The formula which he wrote obediently on the sheet of paper, the coiling and
| uncoiling calculations of the professor, the spectrelike symbols of force and
| velocity fascinated and jaded Stephen's mind.  He had heard some say that the
| old professor was an atheist freemason.  Oh, the grey dull day!  It seemed a
| limbo of painless patient consciousness through which souls of mathematicians
| might wander, projecting long slender fabrics from plane to plane of ever rarer
| and paler twilight, radiating swift eddies to the last verges of a universe ever
| vaster, farther and more impalpable.
|
| -- So we must distinguish between elliptical and ellipsoidal.
| Perhaps some of you gentlemen may be familiar with the works
| of Mr W.S. Gilbert.  In one of his songs he speaks of the
| billiard sharp who is condemned to play:
|
|    On a cloth untrue
|    With a twisted cue
|    And elliptical billiard balls.
|
| -- He means a ball having the form of the ellipsoid
| of the principal axes of which I spoke a moment ago. --
|
| Joyce, 'Portrait', pp. 185-186.
|
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.

VORE. Note 5

| I was, at that time, in Germany, whither the wars,
| which have not yet finished there, had called me,
| and as I was returning from the coronation of the
| Emperor to join the army, the onset of winter held
| me up in quarters in which, finding no company to
| distract me, and having, fortunately, no cares or
| passions to disturb me, I spent the whole day shut
| up in a room heated by an enclosed stove, where I
| had complete leisure to meditate on my own thoughts.
|
| Descartes, DOM, p. 35.
|
| Rene Descartes, "Discourse on the Method
| of Properly Conducting One's Reason and
| of Seeking the Truth in the Sciences",
| pp. 25-91 in 'Discourse on Method and
| the Meditations', translated with an
| introduction by F.E. Sutcliffe,
| Penguin, London, UK, 1968.

VORE. Note 6

| A very young child may always be observed to watch its own
| body with great attention.  There is every reason why this
| should be so, for from the child's point of view this body
| is the most important thing in the universe.  Only what it
| touches has any actual and present feeling;  only what it
| faces has any actual color;  only what is on its tongue
| has any actual taste.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.229.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.

VORE. Note 7

| No one questions that, when a sound is heard by a child, he thinks,
| not of himself as hearing, but of the bell or other object as sounding.
| How when he wills to move a table?  Does he then think of himself as
| desiring, or only of the table as fit to be moved?  That he has the
| latter thought, is beyond question;  that he has the former, must,
| until the existence of an intuitive self-consciousness is proved,
| remain an arbitrary and baseless supposition.  There is no good
| reason for thinking that he is less ignorant of his own peculiar
| condition than the angry adult who denies that he is in a passion.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.230.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.

VORE. Note 8

| The child, however, must soon discover by observation
| that things which are thus fit to be changed are apt
| actually to undergo this change, after a contact with
| that peculiarly important body called Willy or Johnny.
| This consideration makes this body still more important
| and central, since it establishes a connection between
| the fitness of a thing to be changed and a tendency in
| this body to touch it before it is changed.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.231.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.

VORE. Note 9

| The child learns to understand the language;  that is to say, a connection
| between certain sounds and certain facts becomes established in his mind.
| He has previously noticed the connection between these sounds and the
| motions of the lips of bodies somewhat similar to the central one,
| and has tried the experiment of putting his hand on those lips
| and has found the sound in that case to be smothered.  He thus
| connects that language with bodies somewhat similar to the
| central one.  By efforts, so unenergetic that they should
| be called rather instinctive, perhaps, than tentative, he
| learns to produce those sounds.  So he begins to converse.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.232.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.

VORE. Note 10

| It must be about this time that he begins to find that what
| these people about him say is the very best evidence of fact.
| So much so, that testimony is even a stronger mark of fact than
| 'the facts themselves', or rather than what must now be thought
| of as the 'appearances' themselves.  (I may remark, by the way,
| that this remains so through life;  testimony will convince a
| man that he himself is mad.)
|
| A child hears it said that the stove is hot.  But it is not, he says;
| and, indeed, that central body is not touching it, and only what that
| touches is hot or cold.  But he touches it, and finds the testimony
| confirmed in a striking way.  Thus, he becomes aware of ignorance,
| and it is necessary to suppose a 'self' in which this ignorance can
| inhere.  So testimony gives the first dawning of self-consciousness.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.233.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.

VORE. Note 11

| But, further, although usually appearances are either
| only confirmed or merely supplemented by testimony, yet
| there is a certain remarkable class of appearances which
| are continually contradicted by testimony.  These are those
| predicates which 'we' know to be emotional, but which 'he'
| distinguishes by their connection with the movements of that
| central person, himself (that the table wants moving, etc.)
| These judgments are generally denied by others.  Moreover, he
| has reason to think that others, also, have such judgments which
| are quite denied by all the rest.  Thus, he adds to the conception
| of appearance as the actualization of fact, the conception of it as
| something 'private' and valid only for one body.  In short, 'error'
| appears, and it can be explained only by supposing a 'self' which
| is fallible.
|
| Ignorance and error are all that
| distinguish our private selves
| from the absolute 'ego' of
| pure apperception.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.234-235.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.

VORE. Note 12

| Now, the theory which, for the sake of perspicuity, has thus
| been stated in a specific form, may be summed up as follows:
|
| At the age at which we know children to be self-conscious, we know that
| they have been made aware of ignorance and error;  and we know them to
| possess at that age powers of understanding sufficient to enable them
| to infer from ignorance and error their own existence.
|
| Thus we find that known faculties, acting under conditions known
| to exist, would rise to self-consciousness.  The only essential
| defect in this account of the matter is, that while we know that
| children exercise 'as much' understanding as is here supposed,
| we do not know that they exercise it in precisely this way.
| Still the supposition that they do so is infinitely more
| supported by facts, than the supposition of a wholly
| peculiar faculty of the mind.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.236.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.

VORE. Note 13

| The only argument worth noticing
| for the existence of an intuitive
| self-consciousness is this:
|
| We are more certain of our own existence than of any other fact;
| a premiss cannot determine a conclusion to be more certain than
| it is itself;  hence, our own existence cannot have been inferred
| from any other fact.
|
| The first premiss must be admitted, but the second premiss is founded
| on an exploded theory of logic.  A conclusion cannot be more certain
| than that some one of the facts which support it is true, but it may
| easily be more certain than any one of those facts.
|
| Let us suppose, for example, that a dozen witnesses testify to an occurrence.
| Then my belief in that occurrence rests on the belief that each of those men
| is generally to be believed upon oath.  Yet the fact testified to is made
| more certain than that any one of those men is generally to be believed.
|
| In the same way, to the developed mind of man, his own existence is supported
| by 'every other fact', and is, therefore, incomparably more certain than any
| one of these facts.  But it cannot be said to be more certain than that there
| is another fact, since there is no doubt perceptible in either case.
|
| It is to be concluded, then, that there is no necessity of supposing an intuitive
| self-consciousness, since self-consciousness may easily be the result of inference.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions", CP 5.237.
|
| C.S. Peirce, "Questions Concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man",
| paragraphs CP 5.213-263 in 'Collected Papers', Harvard University Press,
| Cambridge, MA, 1960.  First published, 'Journal of Speculative Philosophy',
| vol. 2, pp. 103-114, 1868.

VORE. Note 14

| His soul had arisen from the grave of boyhood, spurning her graveclothes.
| Yes! Yes! Yes!  He would create proudly out of the freedom and power of
| his soul, as the great artificer whose name he bore, a living thing,
| new and soaring and beautiful, impalpable, imperishable.
|
| Joyce, 'Portrait', pp. 163-164.
|
| James Joyce, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man',
| Bantam, New York, NY, 1992.  Originally published 1916.

VORE. Note 15

| On another occasion I heard one of the grown-ups saying to
| another "When is that young Lyon coming?"  I pricked up my
| ears and said "Is there a lion coming?"  "Yes," they said,
| "he's coming on Sunday.  He'll be quite tame and you shall
| see him in the drawing-room."  I counted the days till Sunday
| and the hours through Sunday morning.  At last I was told the
| young lion was in the drawing-room and I could come and see him.
| I came.  And he was an ordinary young man named Lyon.  I was
| utterly overwhelmed by the disenchantment and still remember
| with anguish the depths of my despair.
|
| Russell, 'Autobiography', p. 18.
|
| Bertrand Russell, 'Autobiography', with an introduction by
| Michael Foot, Routledge, London, UK, 1998.  First published
| in 3 volumes by George Allen & Unwin, 1967-1969.

VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience • Application

VORE. Application Note 1

Most of the year I spend my time wondering when logicians will begin
to take the phenomena and the problems of Truth In Science seriously --
but for a brief time in summer my fancy turns to wondering when they
will get around to taking Truth In Literature seriously.  Now, there
is a market for this -- I especially remember an editorial or letter
in the 'Chronicle of Higher Education' a few years back, the gist of
which was a literature teacher's half plaintive half wistful wishing
for software that would help researchers and students with the truly
insightful analysis of literary texts, tools that would be sensitive
to something more than simple-minded syntactic similarities and help
us to deal with the full complexity of meanings that folks pack into
narratives, novels, poems, and other expressions of human experience.

To sharpen the point a bit, we might well ask ourselves:

Just how far do the customary categories of first order
logic take us in approaching this realm of applications?

For instance, take the term "Stephen Dedulus", in any of its variant spellings,
as it is used by James Joyce in his various works.  Just for starters, is this
term a constant or a variable?  Is this term individual or general?  Are these
even the primary questions to ask about such a term, or do we perhaps miss the
whole point of the text -- not that I would try to be more holistic than Quine --
in approaching it from this direction?

VORE. Application Note 2

Sometimes a typo is just a typo -- among the variant spellings
of "Stephen Dedalus" that James Joyce actually uses, I mostly
had in mind "Stephen Daedelus" and "Stephanos Dedalos", but
not what I spelled out before, which was my own mistyping.

Consider the following bits of "metadata":

1.  In her introduction to the Signet edition of Joyce's 'Dubliners',
    Edna O'Brien tells us this:

    | He chose a pseudonym, that of his future fictional character,
    | Stephen Daedelus, because he was ashamed of writing, as he said,
    | for the "Pigs Paper".

2.  The blurb on the back of my Bantam paperback copy of 'Portrait'
    tells me this:

    | James Joyce's highly autobiographical novel was first published
    | in the United States in 1916 to immediate acclaim.  Ezra Pound
    | accurately predicted that Joyce's book would "remain a permanent
    | part of English literature", while H.G. Wells dubbed it "by far
    | the most important living and convincing picture that exists of
    | an Irish Catholic upbringing".  A remarkably rich study of a
    | developing mind, 'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man'
    | made an indelible mark on literature and confirmed Joyce's
    | reputation as one of the world's great and lasting writers.

What do I mean by taking the phenomena and the problems of Truth In Literature
seriously?  Perhaps I can explain some of what it means to me in the following
way.  From the beginning of my reading experience, I am sure at least from the
days of 'See Spot Run' and 'Funny Funny Puff', it has been a standard exercise
to read a text and then to give some report of its meaning.  I couldn't put my
finger on when exactly the transition occurred, but I know that it soon became
insufficient to comment on nothing more than literal aspects of the stories in
question.  I'm sure that all my readers have had a similar upbringing.  So you
know the brands of evasions up with which none of your teachers would have put.

In contrast with that, one of the favorite patterns of reasoning among
certain schools of logic in the last century, along with many of their
AI disciples, has gone a bit like this:

 Method X is adequate to all important problems.
 Problem Y is resistant to solution by Method X.
---------------------------------------------------
 Therefore, Problem Y is not an important problem.

Perhaps it is just envy that I could not have gone to such a school,
but I find myself constitutionally incapable of taking these orders
of answers seriously.

VORE. Application Note 3

Many currents have brought us to the current juncture.
I will not endeavor to untangle their viscosities and
vortices, but lean to respond as responsibly as I can
to the full complex of their flows or their frictions.

If we dare, in our ship of logic, to coast past the siren shores
of literature without more than the ordinary quota of wax in our
ears, then let us lash ourselves to the mast with this guideline:

Logic should not make us stupid.

VORE. Application Note 4

What I really want to understand is the What, the How, and the Why of stories,
what stories are, their "quiddity", how stories work and why people tell them.

If I understood the Why then I might have a clue to the what -- that would be
a functional explanation, in the way that the word "function" used to be used
in anthropology and sociology, that is, before the "(neo-)functionalist turn"
turned its sense around into the opposite of what it used to mean -- but that,
as they say, is another story.  If I understood the How, then maybe it would
tell me something about the what and the why of the story -- in the way that
Aristotle told us that studying the action can reveal to us the character
and the motivation.  A very pragmant suggestion, that.

This study began, ostensibly enough, as what seemed like a theme out of Quine's
"Two Dogmas of Empiricism, but perusers of Peirce will already have experienced
their all too private recognition that "recalcitrant experience" is just another
name for the "brute reaction" with which the world greets our daydreams of theory,
and that he characterized far less picaresquely under the category of "Secondness".

In order to understand Quine's story it becomes necessary to examine
not only the sources that he rightly acknowledged but the springs of
his action that he failed to acknowledge or misrepresented, plus the
the backcloth of ideas that he protagonized about or reacted against.

Some data on several of these scores can be had by looking at Russell's work,
and I have in mind tracing the trajectory of a particular development there,
the plot of which I am charting out on the Ontology List, in progress here:

POLA.  Philosophy Of Logical Atomism -- Ontology List 01-19

Other information on this score must come from a study of Peirce's work.
Personally, I always find that it helps to return to the source, in two
senses, at least, the precursory authors and their earliest expressions.

Two investigations along these lines have been initiated here:

JITL.  Just In Time Logic -- Ontology List 01-04

VOLS.  Verities Of Likely Stories -- Ontology List 01-03

The "Just In Time Logic" thread, to express it in contemporary terms --
that's one way to make it sound smarter, I guess -- will contemplate
Peirce's early ideas about the "temporal dynamics of belief revision",
taking a view of the inquiry process as the time-evolution of thought.

The "Verities Of Likely Stories" theme will return to the sources of our
contemporary ideas about analogies, homologies, icons, metaphors, models,
morphisms, ..., to mention just a few kin of a Proteus-resembling family.

This is not the bottom line,
but it will have to suffice
for a middling one, since I
and you and we and ontology
are as always in medias res.

Document Histories

CROM. Critical Reflection On Method • Document History

Inquiry List (Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20140627181001/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000905.html

Ontology List (Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070218070420/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05124.html

SUO List (Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070313224500/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11279.html

CROM. Critical Reflection On Method • Discussion History

Inquiry List (Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010117/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000904.html

Ontology List (Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20060918001845/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05123.html

SUO List (Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070316000416/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11278.html

DIEP. De In Esse Predication • Document History

Inquiry List (Sep 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001359/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000780.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001009/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000781.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000944/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000782.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001114/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000783.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000941/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000784.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001104/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000785.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001241/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000787.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000909/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000788.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000902/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000789.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001131/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000792.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001200/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000793.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001215/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000794.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001218/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000795.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001332/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000800.html
  15. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001154/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000801.html
  16. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001226/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000802.html
  17. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001402/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000804.html
  18. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001001/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000805.html
  19. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001347/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000834.html

Ontology List (Sep 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070313230956/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05026.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070316003847/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05027.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070317131614/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05028.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070320020154/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05029.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070323144756/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05030.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20070328013010/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05031.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20050826220928/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05033.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20070316003856/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05034.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231006/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05035.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231017/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05038.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231027/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05039.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231037/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05040.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231048/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05041.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231058/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05048.html
  15. http://web.archive.org/web/20070310113354/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05049.html
  16. http://web.archive.org/web/20070313231108/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05050.html
  17. http://web.archive.org/web/20070310113519/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05052.html
  18. http://web.archive.org/web/20070222033549/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05053.html
  19. http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035929/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05082.html

DIEP. De In Esse Predication • Discussion History

Inquiry List (Sep 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001032/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000786.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001019/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000790.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000906/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000796.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001045/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000797.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000930/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000799.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001253/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000803.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001212/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000806.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000859/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000798.html

Ontology List (Sep 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070317221422/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05032.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070316003906/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05036.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20121010204912/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05043.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070222033717/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05045.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070222033504/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05047.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20070222033848/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05051.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20070219072137/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05054.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20070222033828/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05046.html

HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction • Document History 1

Inquiry List (Sep–Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001256/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000841.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001328/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000842.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000958/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000843.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001026/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000851.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001036/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000858.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000913/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000859.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001029/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000863.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001138/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000866.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010325/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000899.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010230/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000902.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010349/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000903.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010042/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000906.html

Ontology List (Sep–Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070214054035/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05089.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070216005823/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05090.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070214054045/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05091.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070216005832/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05093.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070218070102/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05100.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20050523211120/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05101.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041512/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05105.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20070216102336/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05108.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20070216102358/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05118.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041305/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05121.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20060912171726/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05122.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041325/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05125.html

SUO List (Sep–Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035737/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10964.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075158/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10965.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075208/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10966.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075228/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10991.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075239/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11022.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075248/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11025.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075258/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11028.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075309/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11079.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041235/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11239.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035816/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11271.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20070222005616/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11277.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075432/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11290.html

HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction • Discussion History 1

Inquiry List (Sep–Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001237/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000844.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010057/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000891.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010111/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000892.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010204/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000893.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010247/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000894.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010258/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000895.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010308/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000896.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010054/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000897.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010342/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000898.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010141/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000900.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014010339/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-October/000901.html

Ontology List (Sep–Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070214054025/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05092.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070214053809/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05110.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070211023423/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05111.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070214053920/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05112.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070219040057/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05113.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20060720162947/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05114.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20060720163027/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05115.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20060720163042/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05116.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041225/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05117.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20070216102345/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05119.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20070218041014/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05120.html

SUO List (Sep–Oct 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075218/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10967.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075320/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11227.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075331/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11228.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075342/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11229.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070222144959/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11231.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20060721222834/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11232.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075351/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11234.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075401/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11236.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075411/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11237.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035806/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11240.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305075421/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg11267.html

HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction • Document History 2

Ontology List (Sep–Oct 2003)

  1. Continuous Predicate
  2. Dormitive Virtue
  3. Dulcitive Virtue
  4. Math Abstraction
  5. Reading Runes
  6. Hypostatization
  7. Abstract Objects
  8. Subjectal Abstraction
  9. Definition of Predicate
  10. Second Intentions
  11. Logical Reflexion
  12. Epea Apteroenta

SUO List (Sep–Oct 2003)

  1. Continuous Predicate
  2. Dormitive Virtue
  3. Dulcitive Virtue
  4. Math Abstraction
  5. Reading Runes
  6. Hypostatization
  7. Abstract Objects
  8. Subjectal Abstraction
  9. Definition of Predicate
  10. Second Intentions
  11. Logical Reflexion
  12. Epea Apteroenta

HAPA. Hypostatic And Prescisive Abstraction • Discussion History 2

Ontology List (Sep–Oct 2003)

  1. Metaphormazes
  2. Deciduation Problems
  3. Thematic Recapitulation
  4. Field Key, Kitchen Recipe
  5. Indirect Self Reference
  6. Genealogy & Paraphrasis
  7. Intention & Reflection
  8. Rhematic Saturation
  9. Relational Turn
  10. Tabula Erasa
  11. Directions

SUO List (Sep–Oct 2003) • (1)(2)

  1. Metaphormazes
  2. Deciduation Problems
  3. Thematic Recapitulation
  4. Field Key, Kitchen Recipe
  5. Indirect Self Reference
  6. Genealogy & Paraphrasis
  7. Intention & Reflection
  8. Rhematic Saturation
  9. Relational Turn
  10. Tabula Erasa
  11. Directions

JITL. Just In Time Logic • Document History

Inquiry List (Aug 2003 – Apr 2005)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084824/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000712.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084832/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000714.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084845/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000717.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084852/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000719.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084904/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000722.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084816/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000723.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084908/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000724.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084912/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000725.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084916/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000726.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084921/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000727.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084925/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000728.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084929/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000729.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084933/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000730.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051247/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000731.html
  15. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051252/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000732.html
  16. http://web.archive.org/web/20121113152840/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-April/002542.html
  17. http://web.archive.org/web/20081120222140/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-April/002543.html
  18. http://web.archive.org/web/20121113152903/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-April/002544.html

Ontology List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20140405161017/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04961.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306133915/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04962.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20140405160005/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04965.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134016/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04967.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134046/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04970.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134056/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04971.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134107/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04972.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134117/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04973.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134128/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04974.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134138/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04975.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134155/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04976.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134206/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04977.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134220/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04978.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134231/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04979.html
  15. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134241/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04980.html

NEKS. New Elements • Kaina Stoicheia • Document History

Inquiry List (Sep–Dec 2005)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20140927031226/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003063.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20140927032400/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003065.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20150221163001/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003075.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20150221163001/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003090.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20140927152409/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003183.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20140930151632/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003186.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20140927031019/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003187.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152056/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003189.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20140927145521/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003190.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20140927152552/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003207.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152201/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003208.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152230/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003222.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152251/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003253.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152400/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003261.html
  15. http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152424/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003264.html
  16. http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152454/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003265.html
  17. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233820/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003274.html
  18. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233713/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003277.html
  19. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233746/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003278.html
  20. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233637/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003279.html
  21. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234032/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003283.html
  22. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234059/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003359.html
  23. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234103/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003360.html

NEKS. New Elements • Kaina Stoicheia • Commentary History

Inquiry List (Sep 2005 – Feb 2006)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20140927032227/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003066.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20140927032200/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-September/003067.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20150224132513/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003070.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20140930212839/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003071.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20120204201416/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003073.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20120206122908/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003074.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20120204201721/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003087.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20150224132436/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003091.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20150224132419/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-October/003117.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152611/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003263.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20140930152637/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-November/003269.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233936/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003276.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232908/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2006-February/003366.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232911/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2006-February/003367.html

NEKS. New Elements • Kaina Stoicheia • Discussion History

Inquiry List (Dec 2005)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234010/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003272.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234040/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003282.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233753/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003296.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234050/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003297.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233848/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003298.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233659/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003299.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233721/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003300.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234152/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003301.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233802/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003302.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013234055/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003303.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233903/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2005-December/003304.html

OLOD. Quine On The Limits Of Decision • Document History

Inquiry List (Sep 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001340/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000791.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014000951/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000853.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061014001355/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-September/000854.html

Ontology List (Sep 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304201252/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/thrd9.html#05037
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035906/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05037.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070219035951/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05095.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070219040008/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05096.html

POLA. Philosophy Of Logical Atomism • Document History

Inquiry List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182153/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000674.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182157/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000675.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182137/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000679.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182233/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000685.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182238/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000686.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182245/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000688.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182249/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000689.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182253/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000690.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203820/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000691.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203828/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000693.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203833/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000694.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203836/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000695.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203844/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000697.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203848/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000698.html
  15. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203852/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000699.html
  16. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203856/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000700.html
  17. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203900/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000701.html
  18. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203928/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000709.html
  19. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203932/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000710.html
  20. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051339/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000745.html
  21. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051343/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000746.html
  22. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051347/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000747.html
  23. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051351/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000748.html
  24. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051355/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000749.html
  25. http://web.archive.org/web/20051215123628/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000750.html
  26. http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141737/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000751.html
  27. http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141709/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000752.html
  28. http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141717/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000756.html
  29. http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141837/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000757.html

Ontology List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20080502102247/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04939.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20080502073506/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04940.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20080621104338/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04944.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115257/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04945.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115309/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04946.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115323/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04947.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115333/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04948.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115343/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04949.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115353/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04950.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115404/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04951.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115413/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04952.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003408/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04953.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20080409021341/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04954.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20080622160902/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04955.html
  15. http://web.archive.org/web/20080409021347/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04956.html
  16. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003451/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04957.html
  17. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003503/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04958.html
  18. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003513/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04959.html
  19. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003523/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04960.html
  20. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003535/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04995.html
  21. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003545/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04996.html
  22. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003557/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04997.html
  23. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003605/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04998.html
  24. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003616/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04999.html
  25. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003626/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05000.html
  26. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003636/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05001.html
  27. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003700/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05002.html
  28. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003710/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05006.html
  29. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305003719/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05007.html

POLA. Philosophy Of Logical Atomism • Discussion History

Ontology List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20080621104325/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04941.html

RTOK. Russell's Theory Of Knowledge • Document History

Inquiry List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141725/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000758.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141628/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000759.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141729/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000760.html

Ontology List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306151622/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05008.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070324073231/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05009.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070324073241/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05010.html

RTOP. Russell's Treatise On Propositions • Document History

Inquiry List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141603/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000761.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20040906141807/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000762.html

Ontology List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070328165409/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05011.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070316003836/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05012.html

SABI. Synthetic/Analytic ≟ Boundary/Interior • Document History

Inquiry List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20040907185623/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000773.html

Ontology List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20050824071512/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg05024.html

SYNF. Syntactic Fallacy • Document History

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070302141236/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10471.html

TDOE. Two Dogmas Of Empiricism • Document History

Inquiry List (Jul 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233112/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000631.html
  • Background for Analyticity
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233132/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000638.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233212/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000639.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233048/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000640.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233020/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000641.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232930/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000642.html
  • Definition
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232959/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000643.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233215/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000644.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233054/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000645.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232914/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000646.html
  • Interchangeability
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232955/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000647.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233149/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000648.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233139/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000649.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233115/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000650.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233119/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000651.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233219/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000652.html
  • Semantical Rules
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233129/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000653.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232943/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000654.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233201/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000655.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232947/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000656.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233013/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000657.html
  • The Verification Theory and Reductionism
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233009/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000658.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232933/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000659.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233005/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000660.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233233/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000661.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233034/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000662.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233122/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000663.html
  • Empiricism without the Dogmas
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013232923/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000664.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233146/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000665.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233136/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000666.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013233104/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-July/000667.html

The above material is excerpted from:

  • W.V. Quine, “Two Dogmas of Empiricism”, Philosophical Review, January 1951.
    Reprinted, W.V. Quine, From a Logical Point of View, 2nd edition, pp. 20–46,
    Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

Ontology List (Jul 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20080411140946/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04902.html
  • Background for Analyticity
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210042/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04909.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210052/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04910.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210102/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04911.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210112/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04912.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210122/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04913.html
  • Definition
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210132/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04914.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210143/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04915.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210153/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04916.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210203/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04917.html
  • Interchangeability
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210214/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04918.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210223/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04919.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210234/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04920.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304181104/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04921.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210244/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04922.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210310/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04923.html
  • Semantical Rules
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210321/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04924.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210332/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04925.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210350/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04926.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210401/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04927.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210411/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04928.html
  • The Verification Theory and Reductionism
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210423/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04929.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210431/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04930.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070305022135/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04931.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210441/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04932.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070304210451/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04933.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20080419061751/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04934.html
  • Empiricism without the Dogmas
  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20080411152023/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04935.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20080411152028/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04936.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20080411152033/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04937.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20080622160852/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04938.html

The above material is excerpted from:

  • W.V. Quine, “Two Dogmas of Empiricism”, Philosophical Review, January 1951.
    Reprinted, W.V. Quine, From a Logical Point of View, 2nd edition, pp. 20–46,
    Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1980.

VOLS. Verities Of Likely Stories • Document History

Inquiry List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084828/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000713.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084836/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000715.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084849/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000718.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084900/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000721.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051255/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000733.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051259/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000734.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051303/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000735.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051307/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000736.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051311/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000737.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051315/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000738.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051243/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000739.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051319/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000740.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051323/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000741.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051327/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000742.html
  15. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051331/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000743.html
  16. http://web.archive.org/web/20050331051335/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000744.html

Ontology List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20140405161010/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04963.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306133936/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04964.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134007/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04966.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134036/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04969.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306132756/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04981.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134251/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04982.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134301/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04983.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134313/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04984.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134343/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04986.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134353/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04987.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134406/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04989.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134422/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04990.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134433/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04991.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134443/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04992.html
  15. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306134454/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04993.html
  16. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306115437/http://suo.ieee.org/ontology/msg04994.html

VOOP. Varieties Of Ontology Project • Document History

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070302142211/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10759.html

VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience • Document History

Inquiry List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20050324203753/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000668.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20050324203757/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000669.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182141/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000671.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182145/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000672.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182205/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000677.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182209/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000678.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182213/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000680.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182217/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000681.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182221/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000682.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182229/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000683.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182225/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000684.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182241/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000687.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203824/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000692.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203841/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000696.html
  15. http://web.archive.org/web/20050326203924/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000708.html

SUO List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306110551/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10497.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070310134749/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10498.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070310135842/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10501.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070310135852/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10503.html
  5. http://web.archive.org/web/20070309010913/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10513.html
  6. http://web.archive.org/web/20070309010923/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10515.html
  7. http://web.archive.org/web/20070310135943/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10520.html
  8. http://web.archive.org/web/20070310113310/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10521.html
  9. http://web.archive.org/web/20070310113529/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10522.html
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20070309010933/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10524.html
  11. http://web.archive.org/web/20070309010944/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10526.html
  12. http://web.archive.org/web/20070309010953/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10533.html
  13. http://web.archive.org/web/20070310140027/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10539.html
  14. http://web.archive.org/web/20070309011003/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10540.html
  15. http://web.archive.org/web/20070309011016/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10545.html

VORE. Varieties Of Recalcitrant Experience • Application History

Inquiry List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20050324203802/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000670.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182149/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000673.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20050325182201/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000676.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20050330084856/http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/2003-August/000720.html

SUO List (Aug 2003)

  1. http://web.archive.org/web/20070310134759/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10499.html
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20070313223944/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10504.html
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070310135902/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10512.html
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070306164806/http://suo.ieee.org/email/msg10556.html