Cf: Peirce’s 1870 “Logic of Relatives” • Comment 10.9
https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2014/04/23/peirces-1870-logic-of-relatives-c…
Peirce’s 1870 “Logic of Relatives” • Comment 10.9
https://oeis.org/wiki/Peirce%27s_1870_Logic_Of_Relatives_%E2%80%A2_Part_1#C…
<QUOTE AMSB>
Ergo in numero quo numeramus repetitio unitatum facit pluralitatem;
in rerum vero numero non facit pluralitatem unitatum repetitio,
vel si de eodem dicam “gladius unus mucro unus ensis unus”.
Therefore in the case of that number by which we number,
the repetition of ones makes a plurality;
but in the number consisting in things
the repetition of ones does not make a plurality,
as, for example, if I say of one and the same thing,
“one sword, one brand, one blade”.
Boethius (Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius, c. 480–524 A.D.),
De Trinitate (The Trinity Is One God Not Three Gods),
The Theological Tractates, H.F. Stewart, E.K. Rand, S.J. Tester (trans.),
New Edition, Loeb Classical Library, Harvard/Heinemann, 1973.
</QUOTE>
All,
The use of the concepts of identity and teridentity is not to identify
a thing-in-itself with itself, much less twice or thrice over — there
is no need and thus no utility in that. I can imagine Peirce asking,
on Kantian principles if not entirely on Kantian premisses, “Where is
the manifold to be unified?” The manifold requiring unification does
not reside in the object but in the phenomena — in the appearances
which might have been appearances of different objects but are bound
by the indicated identities to be just so many aspects, facets, parts,
roles, or signs of one and the same object.
Notice how the various identity concepts actually functioned in the
last example, where they had the opportunity to show their behavior
in something like their natural habitat.
Figure 23. Anything that is a Giver of Anything to an Owner of It
https://inquiryintoinquiry.files.wordpress.com/2022/02/lor-1870-e280a2goe28…
The use of the teridentity concept in the “giver of a horse to an owner of it”
is to say the thing appearing with respect to its quality under an absolute term,
“a horse”, the thing appearing with respect to its existence as the correlate of
a dyadic relative, “a potential possession”, and the thing appearing with respect
to its synthesis as the correlate of a triadic relative, “a gift”, are one and
the same thing.
Regards,
Jon