Line 330: |
Line 330: |
| I'll meet thee on the lea rig, | | I'll meet thee on the lea rig, |
| My ain kind dearie, O! | | My ain kind dearie, O! |
− | Robert Burns, The Lea Rig, [CPW, 474] | + | Robert Burns, The Lea-Rig, [CPW, 474] |
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| An agent involved in an "effort to communicate" (ETC), no matter how various the signs and the media that make its conveyance conceivable, and no matter how articulately the character of its endeavor is styled, whether it is pointed and straightforward, or allusive and recursive, whether it is elliptic, hyperbolic, parabolic, or otherwise conically sectioned, or whether it is much less smoothly sliced into its initial approximations and final truncations, there are only so many ways that a "finitely informed creature" (FIC) can find to figure out what meaning the world has and to formulate what sense a life's work can add to it. | | An agent involved in an "effort to communicate" (ETC), no matter how various the signs and the media that make its conveyance conceivable, and no matter how articulately the character of its endeavor is styled, whether it is pointed and straightforward, or allusive and recursive, whether it is elliptic, hyperbolic, parabolic, or otherwise conically sectioned, or whether it is much less smoothly sliced into its initial approximations and final truncations, there are only so many ways that a "finitely informed creature" (FIC) can find to figure out what meaning the world has and to formulate what sense a life's work can add to it. |
Line 348: |
Line 348: |
| I'll meet thee on the lea rig, | | I'll meet thee on the lea rig, |
| My ain kind dearie, O! | | My ain kind dearie, O! |
− | Robert Burns, The Lea Rig, [CPW, 474] | + | Robert Burns, The Lea-Rig, [CPW, 474] |
| | | |
| For the sake of shortening future references to the chief object of the present inquiry and the initial sign of its potential existence, let the acronym "TIS" be equiferent to the phrase "the intended state", and let the italic tag "TIE" be equiferent to the title "The Initial Equation". Further, let the connotations be so arranged that "TIS" is semiotically equivalent to "the intended state" and "TIE" is semiotically equivalent to "The Initial Equation". It is important to note that a set of signs can be equiferent among themselves in the wholly vacuous sense that all of them have no objective reference, and, strictly speaking of what they denote, that all of them refer to nothing at all, whereas a set of signs that are equivalent in the properly semiotic sense still have each other as their connotations. | | For the sake of shortening future references to the chief object of the present inquiry and the initial sign of its potential existence, let the acronym "TIS" be equiferent to the phrase "the intended state", and let the italic tag "TIE" be equiferent to the title "The Initial Equation". Further, let the connotations be so arranged that "TIS" is semiotically equivalent to "the intended state" and "TIE" is semiotically equivalent to "The Initial Equation". It is important to note that a set of signs can be equiferent among themselves in the wholly vacuous sense that all of them have no objective reference, and, strictly speaking of what they denote, that all of them refer to nothing at all, whereas a set of signs that are equivalent in the properly semiotic sense still have each other as their connotations. |
Line 369: |
Line 369: |
| To meet thee on the lea rig, | | To meet thee on the lea rig, |
| My ain kind dearie, O! | | My ain kind dearie, O! |
− | Robert Burns, The Lea Rig, [CPW, 474] | + | Robert Burns, The Lea-Rig, [CPW, 474] |
| </pre> | | </pre> |
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