MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Monday October 27, 2025
Jump to navigationJump to search
597 bytes added
, 21:38, 1 May 2012
| Line 1,609: |
Line 1,609: |
| | The designations ''higher order'' and ''lower order'' are attributed to signs in a casual, local, and transitory way. At this point they signify nothing beyond the occurrence in a sign relation of a pair of triples having the form shown in Table 38. | | The designations ''higher order'' and ''lower order'' are attributed to signs in a casual, local, and transitory way. At this point they signify nothing beyond the occurrence in a sign relation of a pair of triples having the form shown in Table 38. |
| | | | |
| − | <pre> | + | <br> |
| − | Table 38. Sign Relation Containing a Higher Order Sign
| |
| − | Object Sign Interpretant
| |
| − | ... s ...
| |
| − | ... ... ...
| |
| − | s t ...
| |
| − | </pre>
| |
| | | | |
| − | This is all it takes to make <math>s\!</math> a lower order sign and <math>t\!</math> a higher order sign in relation to each other at the moments in question. Whether a global ordering of a more generally justifiable sort can be constructed from an arbitrary series of such purely local impressions is another matter altogether. | + | {| align="center" border="1" cellpadding="8" cellspacing="0" style="text-align:center; width:80%" |
| | + | |+ style="height:30px" | <math>\text{Table 38.} ~~ \text{Sign Relation Containing a Higher Order Sign}\!</math> |
| | + | |- style="height:40px; background:#f0f0ff" |
| | + | | <math>\text{Object}\!</math> |
| | + | | <math>\text{Sign}\!</math> |
| | + | | <math>\text{Interpretant}\!</math> |
| | + | |- |
| | + | | width="33%" | |
| | + | <math>\begin{matrix} |
| | + | \ldots |
| | + | \\ |
| | + | \ldots |
| | + | \\ |
| | + | \underline{\underline{s}} |
| | + | \end{matrix}</math> |
| | + | | width="33%" | |
| | + | <math>\begin{matrix} |
| | + | \underline{\underline{s}} |
| | + | \\ |
| | + | \ldots |
| | + | \\ |
| | + | \underline{\underline{t}} |
| | + | \end{matrix}</math> |
| | + | | width="33%" | |
| | + | <math>\begin{matrix} |
| | + | \ldots |
| | + | \\ |
| | + | \ldots |
| | + | \\ |
| | + | \ldots |
| | + | \end{matrix}</math> |
| | + | |} |
| | + | |
| | + | <br> |
| | + | |
| | + | This is all it takes to make <math>\underline{\underline{s}}\!</math> a lower order sign and <math>\underline{\underline{t}}\!</math> a higher order sign in relation to each other at the moments in question. Whether a global ordering of a more generally justifiable sort can be constructed from an arbitrary series of such purely local impressions is another matter altogether. |
| | | | |
| | <pre> | | <pre> |