Operator Variables in Logical Graphs • 1
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https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2024/04/06/operator-variables-in-logical-gra…
All,
In lieu of a field study requirement for my bachelor's degree I spent
two years in various state and university libraries reading everything
I could find by and about Peirce, poring most memorably through reels
of microfilmed Peirce manuscripts Michigan State had at the time, all
in trying to track down some hint of a clue to a puzzling passage in
Peirce's “Simplest Mathematics”, most acutely coming to a head with
that bizarre line of type at CP 4.306, which the editors of Peirce's
“Collected Papers”, no doubt compromised by the typographer's reluctance
to cut new symbols, transmogrified into a script more cryptic than even
the manuscript's original hieroglyphic.
I found one key to the mystery in Peirce's use of “operator variables”,
which he and his students Christine Ladd–Franklin and O.H. Mitchell
explored in depth. I will shortly discuss that theme as it affects
logical graphs but it may be useful to give a shorter and sweeter
explanation of how the basic idea typically arises in common
logical practice.
Consider De Morgan's rules:
• ¬(A ∧ B) = ¬A ∨ ¬B
• ¬(A ∨ B) = ¬A ∧ ¬B
The common form exhibited by the two rules could be captured in a single
formula by taking “o₁” and “o₂” as variable names ranging over a family
of logical operators, then asking what substitutions for o₁ and o₂ would
satisfy the following equation.
• ¬(A o₁ B) = ¬A o₂ ¬B
We already know two solutions to this “operator equation”, namely,
(o₁, o₂) = (∧, ∨) and (o₁, o₂) = (∨, ∧). Wouldn't it be just
like Peirce to ask if there are others?
Having broached the subject of “logical operator variables”,
I will leave it for now in the same way Peirce himself did:
❝I shall not further enlarge upon this matter at this point,
although the conception mentioned opens a wide field; because
it cannot be set in its proper light without overstepping the
limits of dichotomic mathematics.❞ (Peirce, CP 4.306).
Further exploration of operator variables and operator invariants
treads on grounds traditionally known as second intentional logic
and “opens a wide field”, as Peirce says. For now, however, I will
tend to that corner of the field where our garden variety logical
graphs grow, observing the ways in which operative variations and
operative themes naturally develop on those grounds.
Regards,
Jon
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