Cf: Peirce’s 1870 “Logic of Relatives” • Selection 5
https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2014/02/04/peirces-1870-logic-of-relatives-s…
Note. Please follow the link above for better formatting of Peirce's text,
as some of his typographical distinctions are lost in the transcript below.
All,
On to the next part of §3. Application of the Algebraic Signs to Logic.
Peirce’s 1870 “Logic of Relatives” • Selection 5
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https://oeis.org/wiki/Peirce%27s_1870_Logic_Of_Relatives_%E2%80%A2_Part_1#S…
<QUOTE CSP>
The Signs for Multiplication
============================
I shall adopt for the conception of multiplication the application of
a relation, in such a way that, for example, ℓw shall denote whatever is
lover of a woman. This notation is the same as that used by Mr. De Morgan,
although he appears not to have had multiplication in his mind.
s(m +, w) will, then, denote whatever is servant of anything of
the class composed of men and women taken together. So that:
s(m +, w) = sm +, sw.
(ℓ +, s)w will denote whatever is lover or servant to a woman, and:
(ℓ +, s)w = ℓw +, ℓw.
(sℓ)w will denote whatever stands to a woman in the relation of servant of a lover, and:
(sℓ)w = s(ℓw).
Thus all the absolute conditions of multiplication are satisfied.
The term “identical with ──” is a unity for this multiplication.
That is to say, if we denote “identical with ──” by 1 we have:
x1 = x
whatever relative term x may be. For what is a lover of something
identical with anything, is the same as a lover of that thing.
(Peirce, CP 3.68)
<QUOTE>
Peirce in 1870 is five years down the road from the Peirce of 1865–1866
who lectured extensively on the role of sign relations in the logic of
scientific inquiry, articulating their involvement in the three types
of inference, and inventing the concept of “information” to explain
what it is that signs convey in the process. By this time, then,
the semiotic or sign relational approach to logic is so implicit
in his way of working that he does not always take the trouble
to point out its distinctive features at each and every turn.
So let’s take a moment to draw out a few of those characters.
Sign relations, like any brand of non-trivial triadic relations,
can become overwhelming to think about once the cardinality of
the object, sign, and interpretant domains or the complexity
of the relation itself ascends beyond the simplest examples.
Furthermore, most of the strategies we would normally use to
control the complexity, like neglecting one of the domains,
in effect, projecting the triadic sign relation onto one
of its dyadic faces, or focusing on a single ordered triple
(o, s, i) at a time, can result in our receiving a distorted
impression of the sign relation’s true nature and structure.
I find it helps me to draw, or at least to imagine drawing, diagrams
of the following form, where I can keep tabs on what’s an object,
what’s a sign, and what’s an interpretant sign, for a selected set
of sign-relational triples.
Figure 1 shows how I would picture Peirce’s example of equivalent terms,
v = p, where “v” denotes the Vice-President of the United States, and “p”
denotes the President of the Senate of the United States.
Figure 1. Equivalent Terms “v” = “p”
https://inquiryintoinquiry.files.wordpress.com/2014/02/lor-1870-figure-1.jpg
Depending on whether we interpret the terms “v” and “p” as applying to
persons who hold the offices at one particular time or as applying to
all persons who have held the offices over an extended period of history,
their denotations may be either singular of plural, respectively.
Terms referring to many objects are known as having “general denotations”
or “plural referents”. They may be represented in the above style of
picture by drawing an ellipsis of three nodes like “o o o” at the
object ends of sign relational triples.
For a more complicated example, Figure 2 shows how I would picture
Peirce’s example of an equivalence between terms which comes about
by applying the distributive law for relative multiplication over
absolute summation.
Figure 2. Equivalent Terms “s(m +, w)” = “sm +, sw”
https://inquiryintoinquiry.files.wordpress.com/2014/02/lor-1870-figure-2.jpg
Resources
=========
Sign Relations
https://oeis.org/wiki/Sign_relation
Triadic Relations
https://oeis.org/wiki/Triadic_relation
Information = Comprehension × Extension
https://oeis.org/wiki/Information_%3D_Comprehension_%C3%97_Extension
Regards,
Jon