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MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Thursday October 03, 2024
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Because a sign, so far as it can tell in the time it passes, addresses an unknown future interpretant, that is, an indefinite futurity of potential responses, there is always an aspect of dialogue about the sign relation, especially insofar as it is subject to extension.  This is true no matter who, whether self or other, is ostensibly addressed by the sign or text at issue, and never mind what the chances are of a literal return in the communication.  In this regard, it is recognizance enough for a sign to be issued or a text to be written in anticipation of its future result.  And though it is never certain, it is always possible that the author of a text partially anticipates the use that others make of what is signed.
 
Because a sign, so far as it can tell in the time it passes, addresses an unknown future interpretant, that is, an indefinite futurity of potential responses, there is always an aspect of dialogue about the sign relation, especially insofar as it is subject to extension.  This is true no matter who, whether self or other, is ostensibly addressed by the sign or text at issue, and never mind what the chances are of a literal return in the communication.  In this regard, it is recognizance enough for a sign to be issued or a text to be written in anticipation of its future result.  And though it is never certain, it is always possible that the author of a text partially anticipates the use that others make of what is signed.
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<p>It is one of the rules of my system of general harmony, ''that the present is big with the future'', and that he who sees all sees in that which ''is'' that which shall be.</p>
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| align="right" | G.W. Leibniz, ''Theodicy'', paragraph 360
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<pre>
 
<pre>
It is one of the rules of my system of general harmony, that the present is big with the future, and that he who sees all sees in that which is that which shall be.
  −
G.W. Leibniz, Theodicy, paragraph 360
      
When these prodigies
 
When these prodigies
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