Continuing from Lowell Lecture 2.17,

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ell-lecture-ii/display/13629

This concludes Lowell Lecture 2.

 

 

By a ligature is meant a line of identity together with all other lines of
identity that have points in common with it. For example 



means any man loves himself. It has four lines of identity, one attached to
the monad spot "is a man," two attached to the dyad spot loves and one
joining the triple point to the inner cut. But all those make a single
"ligature." Now the reformed rule of iteration and deiteration is, that any
partial graph, detached or attached, may be iterated within the same or
additional cuts provided every line or hook of the iterated graph be
attached in the new replica to identically the same ligatures as in the
primitive replica; and if a partial graph be already so iterated it can be
deiterated by the erasure of one of the replicas which must be within every
cut that the replica left standing is within. For example, suppose we have
these premisses: 



We can iterate the two outside lines of identity within the outer cut, thus:




Within one enclosure we can join the two lines on each side, thus: 



We can now deiterate "mother of", thus: 



We can now erase the two cuts which have nothing between them but lines of
identity, thus: 



We can now erase "mother of," thus 



I now proceed to the new fourth rule. It runs as follows: 

The innermost effective ligature between two spots lies within every cut
that encloses both those spots. 

In order to illustrate the meaning of this I take these [five] graphs: 



The first three of these mean, respectively, "Nobody loves anybody whom he
does not respect," "Somebody loves nobody whom he does not respect,"
"Somebody is loved by nobody who does not respect him." Those three
propositions cannot be expressed, with the same degree of analysis, without
the ligature the innermost of which is within the cut that encloses both
spots. But the fourth, which means "There is somebody whom somebody does not
love unless he respects him" will not have its meaning changed by breaking
both ligatures, as in the fifth graph, so as to make it read "Either there
is somebody who non-loves somebody or else somebody respects somebody" or
"If everybody loves everybody somebody respects somebody.["] The juncture
protruding through two cuts could be cut without altering the meaning: 



By putting two cuts round the "loves" and retracting the junctures through
two cuts we get the equivalent graph 



The third chapter of the exposition of existential graphs is by far the most
important and interesting of the three. The whole gist of mathematical
reasoning depends upon it. I shall have to remit it to another [lecture.] 

 

 <http://gnusystems.ca/Lowells.htm> http://gnusystems.ca/Lowells.htm }{
Peirce's Lowell Lectures of 1903

https://fromthepage.com/jeffdown1/c-s-peirce-manuscripts/ms-455-456-1903-low
ell-lecture-ii

 

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