Thanks Nick,

I need to affirm and thank Glen for the other post, which does indeed attach to 
just what I was requesting.  But I won’t be able to get to that today.

I wanted to reply to this one yesterday, and will hope the idea hasn’t faded 
enough to miss what seemed to me an interesting direction your response below 
can go.

A denial of status for “the underlying” seems, to me, to be the evil cult that 
Neo-PoMo is selling.  Back to that in a second, but as that thought comes up, I 
recall Glen’s arguments over the hears that post-modernism wasn’t born evil; 
its later generations of carriers turned it into that.

But from this thread, I have a new articulation of what the non-evil early 
post-modernism might have been, or might have become.  One might say that, had 
post-modernism gone in its best direction, it would have been the project of 
showing how difficult and subtle a true pragmatism is, when one realizes that 
everything is “up for grabs”, to settle into a shorthand I used in the first 
post for the various unpackings I wrote later to mean the same thing.

It would absolutely not have been a denial of any status for “the underlying”, 
bur rather a call to understand what is the nature of the status of “the 
underlying” in relation to our activity, which can include both “within our 
activity” and “as context for our activity”.  

I don’t think one escapes it, and I think your statement below affirms how much 
you haven’t let it go, because you can’t.

You say “statistics is all we got”.  If you think “you[‘ve] got” statistics, 
then you have just committed to "a belief” (not a great word, but let me not 
digress to look for a better one) in an underlying that, in fact, you don’t 
have, or so I claim.  The categories, the activities of observing and 
casting-in-language that attach quantities to them, a language and logic of 
quantities, bring into existence quantity-concepts, accepted tracks of argument 
to manipulate them.  Without all that machinery, you don’t “have” any 
“statistics” to “do”.  In thinking “you[‘ve] got” it, you have just made the 
essential commitment to “an underlying” that creates a starting point from 
which the rest of your thought and discourse can even emanate.  To understand 
how and why you have done that, and probably why you have had to do that, is 
the exercise of figuring out what the status of “the underlying” is.  I think 
the correct point of view is that all that framework “statistics” that you act 
toward _as if_ “you[‘ve] got”, is structurally just another fluctuating 
pattern, analogous in its status to the sample-estimator values assigned to 
particular quantities that get used when you apply statistical conventions to 
some particular collection of experiences. 

Remember that I wrote, originally and then again in the second post, that the 
language of “sample estimators in relation to the underlying” was meant as an 
analogy — within a frame taken as the context to express it — for the much more 
interesting problem of arriving at faithful renderings.  _Within_ the 
illustration used to express the analogy, “the underlying” certainly exists, in 
the sense that it has as well-defined roles in the structure of the process as 
the states of knowledge which are values for the sample estimators.  I did 
_not_ say, and precisely did not _mean_ that the concreteness that “the 
underlying” has in the illustration of doing a statistical inference problem — 
more precisely, the peer status of the underlying and the sample-estimator 
values, which are precisely _as concrete_ as each other, however concrete that 
is, within that frame — then transports through to a comparably concrete 
“underlying” in pragmatism in the sense of truth-notions.  The intended service 
of the analogy is that it allows us to see both sample estimators and their 
“underlying” concretely, and thereby to recognize the differentness of their 
places in our own thought organization and use.  It is that thought 
organization and use that (as I am proposing it) maps through the analogy from 
the illustrative cartoon of a statistical inference application, to the general 
case of “coming to terms” with “the world".  But precisely because the frame 
that makes “the underlying” given, in the illustrating cartoon, does _not_ map 
through the analogy, we have a new project of understanding the nature of “the 
underlying” in the truth-notion problem.  

In my little self-invented world of uninformed story-telling, where that was 
what could be seen in early post-modernism, one can see how through whatever 
combination of error or malevolence, later generations (the Neo-PoMoists) would 
have heard (probably, by disposition, _chosen_ to hear) the original postmodern 
call to figure out the nature of the status of the underlying as a denial that 
there is any such status, reducing all of life to brute competitions for power, 
to which they then dedicated themselves, because that’s the kind of people they 
are.  But that life is same-old same-old.  For postmodernism to have become the 
next stage in a serious project of pragmatism would, to me, have been very 
interesting.

Many thanks, 

Eric


> On Jan 18, 2023, at 5:41 AM, Nicholas Thompson <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> I am finding what Mail.google 
> <https://linkprotect.cudasvc.com/url?a=https%3a%2f%2fMail.google&c=E,1,oTroWtMEEiR-NXSvzbvTXwTxraw30bZ5Vqe84jNaHS8eF5vahfunyIUjdzzI5_lCc4LtthbLJffakVXWMRmc3tC6LE7d3ypXuyZH1u5TSA1KiQ,,&typo=1&ancr_add=1>
>  does to messages so confusing that I am gong to try to simplify here. 
> 
> EricS writes
> 
> 
> My liking of the analogy of sample estimators and underlying  values 
> Ii.e.values on which the estimations converge--NST] is that, if one felt that 
> were a valid analogy to a specific aspects of Peirce’s 
> truth-relative-to-states-of-knowledge concept, it would completely clear the 
> fog of philosophical profundity from Peirce, and say that this idea, for a 
> modern quantitative reader, is an everyday commonplace, and one that we can 
> easily examine at all levels from our habits to our formalism, and study the 
> structure of in cognition.
> 
> To which I can only respond:
> 
> Y E S !!!!
> I did feel obligated to reframe the word "underlying" because it adds back a 
> bit of the mystery that I am so glad to see expunged.  Another way for 
> thinking about Peirce is to say that  cognition is a statistical project and 
> statistics is all we got.  Peirce is trying as hard as possible NOT to be 
> profound. 
> Nick
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