Information = Comprehension × Extension • Comment 3
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https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2024/10/13/information-comprehension-x-exten…
All,
Peirce identifies inference with a process he describes
as “symbolization”. Let us consider what that might imply.
❝I am going, next, to show that inference is symbolization
and that the puzzle of the validity of scientific inference
lies merely in this superfluous comprehension and is therefore
entirely removed by a consideration of the laws of “information”.❞
(467)
Even if it were only a rough analogy between inference and symbolization,
a principle of logical continuity, what is known in physics as a “correspondence
principle”, would suggest parallels between steps of reasoning in the neighborhood
of exact inferences and signs in the vicinity of genuine symbols. This would lead us
to expect a correspondence between degrees of inference and degrees of symbolization
extending from exact to approximate (“non‑demonstrative”) inferences and from genuine
to approximate (“degenerate”) symbols.
❝For this purpose, I must call your attention to the differences there are
in the manner in which different representations stand for their objects.
❝In the first place there are likenesses or copies — such as “statues”, “pictures”,
“emblems”, “hieroglyphics”, and the like. Such representations stand for their
objects only so far as they have an actual resemblance to them — that is agree
with them in some characters. The peculiarity of such representations is that
they do not determine their objects — they stand for anything more or less; for
they stand for whatever they resemble and they resemble everything more or less.
❝The second kind of representations are such as are set up by a convention of men
or a decree of God. Such are “tallies”, “proper names”, &c. The peculiarity of
these “conventional signs” is that they represent no character of their objects.
❝Likenesses denote nothing in particular; “conventional signs” connote nothing
in particular.
❝The third and last kind of representations are “symbols” or general representations.
They connote attributes and so connote them as to determine what they denote. To this
class belong all “words” and all “conceptions”. Most combinations of words are also
symbols. A proposition, an argument, even a whole book may be, and should be, a single
symbol.❞ (467–468)
In addition to Aristotle, the influence of Kant on Peirce is very strongly marked in
these earliest expositions. The invocations of “conceptions of the understanding”,
the “use of concepts” and thus of symbols in reducing the manifold of extension,
and the not so subtle hint of the synthetic à priori in Peirce's discussion, not
only of natural kinds but also of the kinds of signs leading up to genuine symbols,
can all be recognized as pervasive Kantian themes.
In order to draw out these themes and see how Peirce was led to develop their
leading ideas, let us bring together our previous Figures, abstracting from
their concrete details, and see if we can figure out what is going on.
Figure 3 shows an abductive step of inquiry, as taken on the cue of an iconic sign.
Figure 3. Conjunctive Predicate z, Abduction of Case x ⇒ y
https://inquiryintoinquiry.files.wordpress.com/2016/10/ice-figure-3.jpg
Figure 4 shows an inductive step of inquiry, as taken on the cue of an indicial sign.
Figure 4. Disjunctive Subject u, Induction of Rule v ⇒ w
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https://inquiryintoinquiry.files.wordpress.com/2016/10/ice-figure-4.jpg
Reference —
Peirce, C.S. (1866), “The Logic of Science, or, Induction and Hypothesis”,
Lowell Lectures of 1866, pp. 357–504 in Writings of Charles S. Peirce :
A Chronological Edition, Volume 1, 1857–1866, Peirce Edition Project,
Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1982.
Regards,
Jon
cc:
https://www.academia.edu/community/VowNMX