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| A number of additional definitions are relevant to sign relations whose connotative components constitute equivalence relations, if only in part. | | A number of additional definitions are relevant to sign relations whose connotative components constitute equivalence relations, if only in part. |
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− | A ''dyadic relation on a single set'' (DROSS) is a non-empty set of points plus a set of ordered pairs on these points. Until further notice, any reference to a ''dyadic relation'' is intended to be taken in this sense, in other words, as a reference to a DROSS. In a typical notation, the dyadic relation <math>\mathfrak{G} = (X, G) = (G^{(1)}, G^{(2)})</math> is specified by giving the set of points <math>X = G^{(1)}\!</math> and the set of ordered pairs <math>G = G^{(2)} \subseteq X \times X</math> that go together to define the relation. In contexts where the set of points is understood, it is customary to call the whole relation <math>\mathfrak{G}</math> by the name of the set <math>G.\!</math> | + | A ''dyadic relation on a single set'' (DROSS) is a non-empty set of points plus a set of ordered pairs on these points. Until further notice, any reference to a ''dyadic relation'' is intended to be taken in this sense, in other words, as a reference to a DROSS. In a typical notation, the dyadic relation <math>\underline{G} = (X, G) = (G^{(1)}, G^{(2)})</math> is specified by giving the set of points <math>X = G^{(1)}\!</math> and the set of ordered pairs <math>G = G^{(2)} \subseteq X \times X</math> that go together to define the relation. In contexts where the set of points is understood, it is customary to call the whole relation <math>\underline{G}</math> by the name of the set <math>G.\!</math> |
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− | A ''subrelation'' of a dyadic relation <math>\mathfrak{G} = (X, G) = (G^{(1)}, G^{(2)})</math> is a dyadic relation <math>\mathfrak{H} = (Y, H) = (H^{(1)}, H^{(2)})</math> that has all of its points and pairs in <math>\mathfrak{G}</math> more precisely, that has all of its points <math>Y \subseteq X</math> and all of its pairs <math>H \subseteq G.</math> | + | A ''subrelation'' of a dyadic relation <math>\underline{G} = (X, G) = (G^{(1)}, G^{(2)})</math> is a dyadic relation <math>\underline{H} = (Y, H) = (H^{(1)}, H^{(2)})</math> that has all of its points and pairs in <math>\underline{G}</math> more precisely, that has all of its points <math>Y \subseteq X</math> and all of its pairs <math>H \subseteq G.</math> |
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− | The ''induced subrelation on a subset'' (ISOS), taken with respect to the dyadic relation <math>G \subseteq X \times X</math> and the subset <math>Y \subseteq X,</math> is the maximal subrelation of <math>G\!</math> whose points belong to <math>Y.\!</math> In other words, it is the dyadic relation on <math>Y\!</math> whose extension contains all of the pairs of <math>Y \times Y</math> that appear in <math>G.\!</math> Since the construction of an ISOS is uniquely determined by the data of <math>G\!</math> and <math>Y,\!</math> it can be represented as a function of these arguments, as in the notation <math>\operatorname{ISOS} (G, Y),</math> which can be denoted more briefly as <math>\mathfrak{G}_Y.\!</math>. Using the symbol <math>\cap</math> to indicate the intersection of a pair of sets, the construction of <math>\mathfrak{G}_Y = \operatorname{ISOS} (G, Y)</math> can be defined as follows: | + | The ''induced subrelation on a subset'' (ISOS), taken with respect to the dyadic relation <math>G \subseteq X \times X</math> and the subset <math>Y \subseteq X,</math> is the maximal subrelation of <math>G\!</math> whose points belong to <math>Y.\!</math> In other words, it is the dyadic relation on <math>Y\!</math> whose extension contains all of the pairs of <math>Y \times Y</math> that appear in <math>G.\!</math> Since the construction of an ISOS is uniquely determined by the data of <math>G\!</math> and <math>Y,\!</math> it can be represented as a function of these arguments, as in the notation <math>\operatorname{ISOS} (G, Y),</math> which can be denoted more briefly as <math>\underline{G}_Y.\!</math>. Using the symbol <math>\bigcap</math> to indicate the intersection of a pair of sets, the construction of <math>\underline{G}_Y = \operatorname{ISOS} (G, Y)</math> can be defined as follows: |
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− | <pre> | + | {| align="center" cellpadding="8" width="90%" |
− | GY = <Y, GY> = <GY(1), GY(2)>
| + | | |
| + | <math>\begin{array}{lll} |
| + | \underline{G}_Y & = & (Y, \ G_Y) |
| + | \\ \\ |
| + | & = & (G_Y^{(1)}, \ G_Y^{(2)}) |
| + | \\ \\ |
| + | & = & (Y, \ \{ (x, y) \in Y\!\times\!Y : (x, y) \in G^{(2)} \}) |
| + | \\ \\ |
| + | & = & (Y, \ Y\!\times\!Y \, \bigcap \, G^{(2)}). |
| + | \\ |
| + | \end{array}</math> |
| + | |} |
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− | = <Y, {<x, y> C YxY : <x, y> C G(2)}>
| + | These definitions for dyadic relations can now be applied in a context where each bit of a sign relation that is being considered satisfies a special set of conditions, namely, if <math>R\!</math> is the relation bit under consideration: |
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− | = <Y, YxY n G(2)>.
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− | </pre>
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− | These definitions for dyadic relations can now be applied in a context where each bit of a sign relation that is being considered satisfies a special set of conditions, namely, if R is the bit under consideration: | |
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| # Syntactic domain X = Sign domain S = Interpretant domain I. | | # Syntactic domain X = Sign domain S = Interpretant domain I. |