Jon, List,

>From a logical point of view, when we study some relation--such as the dyadic 
>relation of A is brother of B--we are isolating the relate, the correlate, and 
>the relation between them. We understand that the things standing in the 
>position of relate and correlate will typically have many internal relations 
>among the parts that make them up. We also understand that the things in the 
>position of relate and correlate may stand in a variety of different external 
>relations to other things. But, when we analyze this particular relation of 
>being a brother, we ignore those other relations. That is, we ignore such 
>things as the fact that one might be taller than another or that one might be 
>more social than the other.

We do the same thing, I take it, when we are engaged in a phenomenological 
analysis of something that has been observed. Phenomenological analysis works 
in manner that is analogous to logical analysis. Peirce explicitly says, for 
instance, that we do not attend to the parts of the spots. The fact that, in 
reality, the two spots on the page are arranged so that one is the left to the 
other brings in another kind of relation involving an observer. In relation to 
that observer, one is to the right and one is to the left really. But Peirce 
has isolated the relation of "being on the same surface."

Let's consider a limiting kind of relation: C is similar to D. The relation of 
being on the same surface is a similarity, if I am not mistaken. Does such a 
relation of similarity involve some sort of order that holds between the relate 
and the correlate? There is a relation, but is it ordered?

--Jeff

Jeffrey Downard
Associate Professor
Department of Philosophy
Northern Arizona University
(o) 928 523-8354
________________________________________
From: Jon Alan Schmidt [[email protected]]
Sent: Saturday, November 5, 2016 5:05 PM
To: Jeffrey Brian Downard
Cc: Peirce-L
Subject: Re: [PEIRCE-L] Re: Super-Order and the Logic of Continuity (was 
Metaphysics and Nothing (was Peirce's Cosmology))

Jeff, List:

Just thinking out loud here ... Do two random spots on a page have a relation?  
If not, then this example is not pertinent; but if so, is it accurate to say 
that they have no order?  Doesn't the fact that they occur on the same piece of 
paper--like, say, chalk marks on a blackboard--entail that there is order in 
some sense?  Again, I see that they are not "ordered" in terms of having a 
hierarchy or sequence, but in fact one will be to the left of the other, one 
will be above the other, etc.  If we rotate the page 180 degrees, then these 
relations will be reversed from our point of view, but the spots will still 
exhibit the same order because of the underlying paper.  As long as they are 
potential spots, they "cannot be placed in any particularly regular way," as 
Pierce said; but once they are actual spots, they now have been placed in a 
particularly regular way, and are distinguishable only because of the order 
that is manifested in their relations.

Regards,

Jon

On Sat, Nov 5, 2016 at 6:10 PM, Jeffrey Brian Downard 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Jon, Gary R, List,

First, let me point out that my comments were meant as interpretation of how 
Peirce is coming at these questions about the character of dyadic and triadic 
relations from the side of math (including formal logic), phenomenology and 
semiotics. I am not making any metaphysical claims about what, really 
presupposes what. My aim was to hold off on those sorts of questions--at least 
for now.

In response to your claim that all dyads are, in some way or another, 
organized, I tend to disagree. Let's take one of Peirce's examples from "The 
Logic of Mathematics" as a starting point. If you put two spots on a page, they 
are not ordered. As soon as you say that one is the left of the other, or that 
one is above the other, you are comparing them with respect to some third thing.

Here is the passage:  "Two phenomena, whose parts are not attended to, cannot 
display any law, or regularity. Three dots may be placed in a straight line, 
which is a kind of regularity; or they may be placed at the vertices of an 
equilateral triangle, which is another kind of regularity. But two dots cannot 
be placed in any particularly regular way, since there is but one way in which 
they can be placed, unless they were set together, when they would cease to be 
two. It is true that on the earth two dots may be placed antipodally." (CP 
1.429)

If you take a pair of things as a collection within the mathematical system of 
set theory, the pair can be treated as an unordered set, or as an ordered set. 
The character of the set as a whole is, itself, some third thing. As such, the 
character of the set may be characterized in terms of a general rule of order 
between the members--or a set may not impose such an ordered rule on its 
members.

In the case of a dyad of identity, we have a dyad that consists of two 
instances of the same thing. Setting aside some temporal or spatial framework, 
the dyad of identity is unordered. Some mathematical collections allow multiple 
instances of the same thing (e.g., multiple instances of the number 1), but the 
postulates of most set theories do not allow multiple members that are 
identical.

There is a short discussion within the context of formal logic of unordered 
collections of two or three things CP 4.345.  He calls such relations doublets 
and triplets, whereas he calls the ordered collections dyads and triads.

I must admit that this pretty thin evidence for my claim that some dyads (or 
doublets in the context of the system of logic he is developing at 4.345) may 
not involve an ordered relation, but it is what I have to offer at this point. 
I don't see textual evidence for the claim that every sort of relation--of any 
kind--always involves some kind of order or another. Having said that, Peirce 
is typically considering limiting kinds of cases in order to clarify some 
matter that is at hand. In order to get a better understanding of different 
sorts of order, considering relations that are unordered may be helpful.

Looking ahead, preserving the conceptions of unordered relations may help us 
explain how things (e.g., some undifferentiated possibilities) which lack order 
might come to get ordered. After all, the presence of order--of any kind--is 
one of the things that needs to be explained.

Given the fact that we're now looking at RLT, I think it makes sense to hold 
off on the Minute Logic--at least for now.

--Jeff

Jeffrey Downard
Associate Professor
Department of Philosophy
Northern Arizona University
(o) 928 523-8354<tel:928%20523-8354>
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