Cf: Peirce’s 1870 “Logic of Relatives” • Selection 4
https://inquiryintoinquiry.com/2014/01/31/peirces-1870-logic-of-relatives-s…
All,
Here is the next part of §3. Application of the Algebraic Signs to Logic.
Peirce’s 1870 “Logic of Relatives” • Selection 4
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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 Addition
======================
The sign of addition is taken by Boole so that
x + y
denotes everything denoted by x, and, besides, everything denoted by y.
Thus
m + w
denotes all men, and, besides, all women.
This signification for this sign is needed for connecting the notation of
logic with that of the theory of probabilities. But if there is anything
which is denoted by both terms of the sum, the latter no longer stands for
any logical term on account of its implying that the objects denoted by one
term are to be taken besides the objects denoted by the other.
For example,
f + u
means all Frenchmen besides all violinists, and, therefore, considered as
a logical term, implies that all French violinists are besides themselves.
For this reason alone, in a paper which is published in the Proceedings of
the Academy for March 17, 1867, I preferred to take as the regular addition
of logic a non-invertible process, such that
m +, b
stands for all men and black things, without any implication that the
black things are to be taken besides the men; and the study of the
logic of relatives has supplied me with other weighty reasons for
the same determination.
Since the publication of that paper, I have found that Mr. W. Stanley Jevons, in
a tract called “Pure Logic, or the Logic of Quality” [1864], had anticipated me in
substituting the same operation for Boole’s addition, although he rejects Boole’s
operation entirely and writes the new one with a “+” sign while withholding from it
the name of addition.
It is plain that both the regular non-invertible addition and the
invertible addition satisfy the absolute conditions. But the notation
has other recommendations. The conception of taking together involved
in these processes is strongly analogous to that of summation, the sum
of 2 and 5, for example, being the number of a collection which consists
of a collection of two and a collection of five. Any logical equation or
inequality in which no operation but addition is involved may be converted
into a numerical equation or inequality by substituting the numbers of the
several terms for the terms themselves — provided all the terms summed are
mutually exclusive.
Addition being taken in this sense, nothing is to be denoted by zero,
for then
x +, 0 = x
whatever is denoted by x; and this is the definition of zero. This
interpretation is given by Boole, and is very neat, on account of the
resemblance between the ordinary conception of zero and that of nothing,
and because we shall thus have
[0] = 0.
(Peirce, CP 3.67)
</QUOTE>
A wealth of issues arises here that I hope to take up in depth
at a later point, but for the moment I shall be able to mention
only the barest sample of them in passing.
The two papers precedinge this one in CP 3 are Peirce’s papers of March and
September 1867 in the Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,
titled “On an Improvement in Boole’s Calculus of Logic” and “Upon the Logic of
Mathematics”, respectively. Among other things, these two papers provide us
with further clues about the motivating considerations that brought Peirce to
introduce the “number of a term” function, signified here by square brackets.
In setting up a correspondence between “letters” and “numbers”,
Peirce constructs a structure-preserving map from a logical domain
to a numerical domain. That he does this deliberately is evidenced
by the care that he takes with the conditions under which the chosen
aspects of structure are preserved, along with his recognition of the
critical fact that zeroes are preserved by the mapping.
Incidentally, Peirce appears to have an inkling of the problems
that would later be caused by using the plus sign for inclusive
disjunction, but his advice was overridden by the dialects of
applied logic that developed in various communities, retarding
the exchange of information among engineering, mathematical, and
philosophical specialties all throughout the subsequent century.
Regards,
Jon