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| | ==Note 14== | | ==Note 14== |
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| − | <pre>
| + | I am beginning to see how I got confused. It is common in algebra to switch around between different conventions of display, as the momentary fancy happens to strike, and I see that Peirce is no different in this sort of shiftiness than anyone else. A changeover appears to occur especially whenever he shifts from logical contexts to algebraic contexts of application. |
| − | | Consider what effects that might 'conceivably'
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| − | | have practical bearings you 'conceive' the
| |
| − | | objects of your 'conception' to have. Then,
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| − | | your 'conception' of those effects is the
| |
| − | | whole of your 'conception' of the object.
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| − | |
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| − | | Charles Sanders Peirce,
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| − | | "Maxim of Pragmaticism", CP 5.438.
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| | | | |
| − | I am beginning to see how I got confused.
| + | In the paper "On the Relative Forms of Quaternions" (CP 3.323), we observe Peirce providing the following sorts of explanation: |
| − | It is common in algebra to switch around
| |
| − | between different conventions of display,
| |
| − | as the momentary fancy happens to strike,
| |
| − | and I see that Peirce is no different in
| |
| − | this sort of shiftiness than anyone else.
| |
| − | A changeover appears to occur especially
| |
| − | whenever he shifts from logical contexts
| |
| − | to algebraic contexts of application.
| |
| − | | |
| − | In the paper "On the Relative Forms of Quaternions" (CP 3.323), | |
| − | we observe Peirce providing the following sorts of explanation: | |
| | | | |
| | + | <pre> |
| | | If X, Y, Z denote the three rectangular components of a vector, and W denote | | | If X, Y, Z denote the three rectangular components of a vector, and W denote |
| | | numerical unity (or a fourth rectangular component, involving space of four | | | numerical unity (or a fourth rectangular component, involving space of four |
| Line 3,243: |
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| | | Charles Sanders Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.323. | | | Charles Sanders Peirce, 'Collected Papers', CP 3.323. |
| | |'Johns Hopkins University Circulars', No. 13, p. 179, 1882. | | |'Johns Hopkins University Circulars', No. 13, p. 179, 1882. |
| | + | </pre> |
| | | | |
| − | This way of talking is the mark of a person who opts | + | This way of talking is the mark of a person who opts to multiply his matrices "on the rignt", as they say. Yet Peirce still continues to call the first element of the ordered pair <math>(I:J)\!</math> its "relate" while calling the second element of the pair <math>(I:J)\!</math> its "correlate". That doesn't comport very well, so far as I can tell, with his customary reading of relative terms, suited more to the multiplication of matrices "on the left". |
| − | to multiply his matrices "on the rignt", as they say. | |
| − | Yet Peirce still continues to call the first element | |
| − | of the ordered pair (I:J) its "relate" while calling | |
| − | the second element of the pair (I:J) its "correlate". | |
| − | That doesn't comport very well, so far as I can tell, | |
| − | with his customary reading of relative terms, suited | |
| − | more to the multiplication of matrices "on the left". | |
| | | | |
| − | So I still have a few wrinkles to iron out before | + | So I still have a few wrinkles to iron out before I can give this story a smooth enough consistency. |
| − | I can give this story a smooth enough consistency. | |
| − | </pre>
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| | ==Note 15== | | ==Note 15== |