Comment 3
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<QUOTE>

Thus information measures the superfluous comprehension.
And, hence, whenever we make a symbol to express any thing
or any attribute we cannot make it so empty that it shall
have no superfluous comprehension.  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''.

(Peirce 1866, Lowell Lecture 7, CE 1, 467).

</QUOTE>

In a sense, logical laws bind the initial state of any medium possessed of
a capacity to bear, deliver, maintain, and nurture the meanings of signals.
In other words, when we use symbols, not mere signs, in a channel, language,
or medium constrained by logical laws, these laws do more than confine, they
also beget the generation of symbols upon symbols to fill the requisite forms,
guaranteeing there will always be ample ways to say any thing that can be said.

Regards,

Jon

--

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