MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Saturday November 09, 2024
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, 13:40, 20 December 2008
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| <p>I am going, next, to show that inference is symbolization and that the puzzle of the validity of scientific inference lies merely in this superfluous comprehension and is therefore entirely removed by a consideration of the laws of ''information''. (Peirce, CE 1, 467).</p> | | <p>I am going, next, to show that inference is symbolization and that the puzzle of the validity of scientific inference lies merely in this superfluous comprehension and is therefore entirely removed by a consideration of the laws of ''information''. (Peirce, CE 1, 467).</p> |
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| + | {| align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="90%" |
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| + | <p> The information of a term is the measure of its superfluous comprehension. That is to say that the proper office of the comprehension is to determine the extension of the term. …</p> |
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| + | <p> Every addition to the comprehension of a term, lessens its extension up to a certain point, after that further additions increase the information instead. …</p> |
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| + | <p> And therefore as every term must have information, every term has superfluous comprehension. And, hence, whenever we make a symbol to express any thing or any attribute we cannot make it so empty that it shall have no superfluous comprehension.</p> |
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| + | <p> I am going, next, to show that inference is symbolization and that the puzzle of the validity of scientific inference lies merely in this superfluous comprehension and is therefore entirely removed by a consideration of the laws of ''information''.</p> |
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| + | | align="right" | (Peirce, CE 1, 467). |
| |} | | |} |
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