Cf: Peirce’s 1870 “Logic of Relatives” • Comment 11.1
https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2014/04/29/peirces-1870-logic-of-relatives-c…
Peirce’s 1870 “Logic of Relatives” • Comment 11.1
https://oeis.org/wiki/Peirce%27s_1870_Logic_Of_Relatives_%E2%80%A2_Part_2#C…
Dear Reader,
We have reached a suitable place to pause in our reading of Peirce’s text —
actually, it’s more like a place to run as fast as we can along a parallel
track — where I can pay off a few of the expository IOUs I’ve been using
to pave the way to this point.
The more pressing debts that come to mind are concerned with the matter
of Peirce’s “number of” function that maps a term t into a number [t],
and with my justification for calling a certain style of illustration
the “hypergraph picture” of relational composition. As it happens,
there is a thematic relation between these topics, and so I can
make my way forward by addressing them together.
At this point we have two good pictures of how to compute the relational
compositions of dyadic relations, namely, the bigraph representation and
the matrix representation, each of which has its differential advantages
in different types of situations.
But we lack a comparable picture of how to compute the richer variety of
relational compositions involving triadic or higher adicity relations.
As a matter of fact, we run into a non-trivial classification problem
simply to enumerate the different types of compositions arising in
those cases.
Therefore let us inaugurate a systematic study of relational composition,
general enough to articulate the “generative potency” of Peirce’s 1870
Logic of Relatives.
Regards,
Jon