Difference between revisions of "Directory:Jon Awbrey/Papers/Differential Logic : Introduction"
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:Differential Logic : Introduction}} | {{DISPLAYTITLE:Differential Logic : Introduction}} | ||
+ | <div class="nonumtoc">__TOC__</div> | ||
'''Differential logic''' is the component of logic whose object is the description of variation — for example, the aspects of change, difference, distribution, and diversity — in [[universes of discourse]] that are subject to logical description. In formal logic, differential logic treats the principles that govern the use of a ''differential logical calculus'', that is, a formal system with the expressive capacity to describe change and diversity in logical universes of discourse. | '''Differential logic''' is the component of logic whose object is the description of variation — for example, the aspects of change, difference, distribution, and diversity — in [[universes of discourse]] that are subject to logical description. In formal logic, differential logic treats the principles that govern the use of a ''differential logical calculus'', that is, a formal system with the expressive capacity to describe change and diversity in logical universes of discourse. | ||
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The differential field <math>\operatorname{D}(pq)</math> specifies the changes that need to be made from each point of <math>X\!</math> in order to feel a change in the felt value of the field <math>pq.\!</math> | The differential field <math>\operatorname{D}(pq)</math> specifies the changes that need to be made from each point of <math>X\!</math> in order to feel a change in the felt value of the field <math>pq.\!</math> | ||
− | ==Note | + | ==Note 24== |
+ | |||
+ | Now that we've introduced the field picture as an aid to thinking about propositions and their analytic series, a very pleasing way of picturing the relationships among a proposition <math>f : X \to \mathbb{B},</math> its enlargement or shift map <math>\operatorname{E}f : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B},</math> and its difference map <math>\operatorname{D}f : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B}</math> can now be drawn. | ||
+ | |||
+ | To illustrate this possibility, let's return to the differential analysis of the conjunctive proposition <math>f(p, q) = pq,\!</math> giving the development a slightly different twist at the appropriate point. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Figure 24-1 shows the proposition <math>pq\!</math> once again, which we now view as a scalar field — analogous to a ''potential hill'' in physics, but in logic tantamount to a ''potential plateau'' — where the shaded region indicates an elevation of 1 and the unshaded region indicates an elevation of 0. | ||
− | + | {| align="center" cellpadding="10" style="text-align:center" | |
+ | | [[Image:Field Picture PQ Conjunction.jpg|500px]] | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | <math>\text{Figure 24-1. Proposition}~ pq : X \to \mathbb{B}</math> | ||
+ | |} | ||
− | + | Given a proposition <math>f : X \to \mathbb{B},</math> the ''tacit extension'' of <math>f\!</math> to <math>\operatorname{E}X</math> is denoted <math>\varepsilon f : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B}</math> and defined by the equation <math>\varepsilon f = f,</math> so it's really just the same proposition residing in a bigger universe. Tacit extensions formalize the intuitive idea that a function on a particular set of variables can be extended to a function on a superset of those variables in such a way that the new function obeys the same constraints on the old variables, with a "don't care" condition on the new variables. | |
− | + | Figure 24-2 shows the tacit extension of the scalar field <math>pq : X \to \mathbb{B}</math> to the differential field <math>\varepsilon (pq) : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B}.</math> | |
− | {| align="center" cellpadding="10" style="text-align:center | + | {| align="center" cellpadding="10" style="text-align:center" |
+ | | [[Image:Field Picture PQ Tacit Extension Conjunction.jpg|500px]] | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | <math>\text{Figure 24-2. Tacit Extension}~ \varepsilon (pq) : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B}</math> | ||
+ | |- | ||
| | | | ||
− | < | + | <math>\begin{array}{rcccccc} |
− | + | \varepsilon (pq) | |
− | + | & = & | |
− | + | p & \cdot & q & \cdot & | |
− | + | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{)} | |
− | + | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)} | |
− | + | \\[4pt] | |
− | + | & + & | |
− | + | p & \cdot & q & \cdot & | |
− | + | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{)} | |
− | + | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{~} | |
− | + | \\[4pt] | |
− | + | & + & | |
− | + | p & \cdot & q & \cdot & | |
− | + | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{~} | |
− | + | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)} | |
− | + | \\[4pt] | |
− | + | & + & | |
− | + | p & \cdot & q & \cdot & | |
− | + | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{~} | |
− | + | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{~} | |
− | + | \end{array}</math> | |
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | </ | ||
|} | |} | ||
− | ==Note | + | ==Note 25== |
− | + | Continuing with the example <math>pq : X \to \mathbb{B},</math> Figure 25-1 shows the enlargement or shift map <math>\operatorname{E}(pq) : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B}</math> in the same style of differential field picture that we drew for the tacit extension <math>\varepsilon (pq) : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B}.</math> | |
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
{| align="center" cellpadding="10" style="text-align:center" | {| align="center" cellpadding="10" style="text-align:center" | ||
− | | [[Image:Field Picture PQ Conjunction.jpg|500px]] | + | | [[Image:Field Picture PQ Enlargement Conjunction.jpg|500px]] |
|- | |- | ||
− | | <math>\text{Figure | + | | <math>\text{Figure 25-1. Enlargement Map}~ \operatorname{E}(pq) : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B}</math> |
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
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|- | |- | ||
| | | | ||
<math>\begin{array}{rcccccc} | <math>\begin{array}{rcccccc} | ||
− | \ | + | \operatorname{E}(pq) |
& = & | & = & | ||
− | p & \cdot & q & \cdot & | + | p |
+ | & \cdot & | ||
+ | q | ||
+ | & \cdot & | ||
\texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{)} | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{)} | ||
\texttt{(} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)} | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)} | ||
\\[4pt] | \\[4pt] | ||
& + & | & + & | ||
− | p & \cdot & q & \cdot & | + | p |
+ | & \cdot & | ||
+ | \texttt{(} q \texttt{)} | ||
+ | & \cdot & | ||
\texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{)} | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{)} | ||
\texttt{~} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{~} | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{~} | ||
\\[4pt] | \\[4pt] | ||
& + & | & + & | ||
− | p & \cdot & q & \cdot & | + | \texttt{(} p \texttt{)} |
+ | & \cdot & | ||
+ | q | ||
+ | & \cdot & | ||
\texttt{~} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{~} | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{~} | ||
\texttt{(} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)} | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)} | ||
\\[4pt] | \\[4pt] | ||
& + & | & + & | ||
− | p & \cdot & q & \cdot & | + | \texttt{(} p \texttt{)} |
+ | & \cdot & | ||
+ | \texttt{(} q \texttt{)} | ||
+ | & \cdot & | ||
\texttt{~} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{~} | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{~} | ||
\texttt{~} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{~} | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{~} | ||
Line 3,585: | Line 3,586: | ||
|} | |} | ||
− | + | A very important conceptual transition has just occurred here, almost tacitly, as it were. Generally speaking, having a set of mathematical objects of compatible types, in this case the two differential fields <math>\varepsilon f</math> and <math>\operatorname{E}f,</math> both of the type <math>\operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B},</math> is very useful, because it allows us to consider these fields as integral mathematical objects that can be operated on and combined in the ways that we usually associate with algebras. | |
− | + | In this case one notices that the tacit extension <math>\varepsilon f</math> and the enlargement <math>\operatorname{E}f</math> are in a certain sense dual to each other. The tacit extension <math>\varepsilon f</math> indicates all the arrows out of the region where <math>f\!</math> is true and the enlargement <math>\operatorname{E}f</math> indicates all the arrows into the region where <math>f\!</math> is true. The only arc they have in common is the no-change loop <math>\texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{)(} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)}</math> at <math>pq.\!</math> If we add the two sets of arcs in mod 2 fashion then the loop of multiplicity 2 zeroes out, leaving the 6 arrows of <math>\operatorname{D}(pq) = \varepsilon(pq) + \operatorname{E}(pq)</math> that are illustrated in Figure 25-2. | |
{| align="center" cellpadding="10" style="text-align:center" | {| align="center" cellpadding="10" style="text-align:center" | ||
− | | [[Image:Field Picture PQ | + | | [[Image:Field Picture PQ Difference Conjunction.jpg|500px]] |
|- | |- | ||
− | | <math>\text{Figure 25- | + | | <math>\text{Figure 25-2. Difference Map}~ \operatorname{D}(pq) : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B}</math> |
|- | |- | ||
| | | | ||
<math>\begin{array}{rcccccc} | <math>\begin{array}{rcccccc} | ||
− | \operatorname{ | + | \operatorname{D}(pq) |
& = & | & = & | ||
p | p | ||
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q | q | ||
& \cdot & | & \cdot & | ||
+ | \texttt{(} | ||
\texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{)} | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{)} | ||
\texttt{(} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)} | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)} | ||
+ | \texttt{)} | ||
\\[4pt] | \\[4pt] | ||
& + & | & + & | ||
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\texttt{(} q \texttt{)} | \texttt{(} q \texttt{)} | ||
& \cdot & | & \cdot & | ||
+ | \texttt{~} | ||
\texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{)} | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{)} | ||
\texttt{~} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{~} | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{~} | ||
+ | \texttt{~} | ||
\\[4pt] | \\[4pt] | ||
& + & | & + & | ||
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q | q | ||
& \cdot & | & \cdot & | ||
+ | \texttt{~} | ||
\texttt{~} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{~} | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{~} | ||
\texttt{(} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)} | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)} | ||
+ | \texttt{~} | ||
\\[4pt] | \\[4pt] | ||
& + & | & + & | ||
\texttt{(} p \texttt{)} | \texttt{(} p \texttt{)} | ||
& \cdot & | & \cdot & | ||
− | \texttt{(} q \texttt{)} | + | \texttt{(}q \texttt{)} |
& \cdot & | & \cdot & | ||
+ | \texttt{~} | ||
\texttt{~} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{~} | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{~} | ||
\texttt{~} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{~} | \texttt{~} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{~} | ||
+ | \texttt{~} | ||
\end{array}</math> | \end{array}</math> | ||
|} | |} | ||
− | + | ==Tangent and Remainder Maps== | |
+ | |||
+ | If we follow the classical line that singles out linear functions as ideals of simplicity, then we may complete the analytic series of the proposition <math>f = pq : X \to \mathbb{B}</math> in the following way. | ||
− | + | Figure 26-1 shows the differential proposition <math>\operatorname{d}f = \operatorname{d}(pq) : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B}</math> that we get by extracting the cell-wise linear approximation to the difference map <math>\operatorname{D}f = \operatorname{D}(pq) : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B}.</math> This is the logical analogue of what would ordinarily be called ''the'' differential of <math>pq,\!</math> but since I've been attaching the adjective ''differential'' to just about everything in sight, the distinction tends to be lost. For the time being, I'll resort to using the alternative name ''tangent map'' for <math>\operatorname{d}f.\!</math> | |
{| align="center" cellpadding="10" style="text-align:center" | {| align="center" cellpadding="10" style="text-align:center" | ||
− | | [[Image:Field Picture PQ | + | | [[Image:Field Picture PQ Differential Conjunction.jpg|500px]] |
− | |||
− | |||
|- | |- | ||
+ | | <math>\text{Figure 26-1. Tangent Map}~ \operatorname{d}(pq) : \operatorname{E}X \to \mathbb{B}</math> | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | Just to be clear about what's being indicated here, it's a visual way of summarizing the following data:→ | ||
+ | |||
+ | {| align="center" cellpadding="10" style="text-align:center" | ||
| | | | ||
<math>\begin{array}{rcccccc} | <math>\begin{array}{rcccccc} | ||
− | \operatorname{ | + | \operatorname{d}(pq) |
& = & | & = & | ||
− | p | + | p & \cdot & q & \cdot & |
− | & \cdot & | + | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{,} \operatorname{d}q \texttt{)} |
− | q | ||
− | & \cdot & | ||
− | |||
− | \texttt{(} \operatorname{d}p \texttt{ | ||
− | |||
− | \texttt{)} | ||
\\[4pt] | \\[4pt] | ||
& + & | & + & | ||
− | p | + | p & \cdot & \texttt{(} q \texttt{)} & \cdot & |
− | & \cdot & | + | \operatorname{d}q |
− | \texttt{(} q \texttt{)} | ||
− | & \cdot & | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
\\[4pt] | \\[4pt] | ||
& + & | & + & | ||
− | \texttt{(} p \texttt{)} | + | \texttt{(} p \texttt{)} & \cdot & q & \cdot & |
− | & \cdot & | + | \operatorname{d}p |
− | q | ||
− | & \cdot & | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
\\[4pt] | \\[4pt] | ||
& + & | & + & | ||
− | + | \texttt{(} p \texttt{)} & \cdot & \texttt{(} q \texttt{)} & \cdot & 0 | |
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− | \texttt{(} p \texttt{)} & \cdot & \texttt{(} q \texttt{)} & \cdot & 0 | ||
\end{array}</math> | \end{array}</math> | ||
|} | |} | ||
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In short, <math>\operatorname{r}(pq)</math> is a constant field, having the value <math>\operatorname{d}p~\operatorname{d}q</math> at each cell. | In short, <math>\operatorname{r}(pq)</math> is a constant field, having the value <math>\operatorname{d}p~\operatorname{d}q</math> at each cell. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Applications== | ||
+ | |||
+ | I want to continue developing the basic tools of differential logic, which arose from exploring the connections between dynamics and logic, but I also wanted to give some hint of the applications that have motivated this work all along. One of these applications is to cybernetic systems, whether we see these systems as agents or cultures, individuals or species, organisms or organizations. | ||
+ | |||
+ | A cybernetic system has goals and actions for reaching them. It has a state space <math>X,\!</math> giving us all of the states that the system can be in, plus it has a goal space <math>G \subseteq X,</math> the set of states that the system "likes" to be in, in other words, the distinguished subset of possible states where the system is regarded as living, surviving, or thriving, depending on the type of goal that one has in mind for the system in question. As for actions, there is to begin with the full set <math>\mathcal{T}</math> of all possible actions, each of which is a transformation of the form <math>T : X \to X,</math> but a given cybernetic system will most likely have but a subset of these actions available to it at any given time. And even if we begin by thinking of actions in very general and very global terms, as arbitrarily complex transformations acting on the whole state space <math>X,\!</math> we quickly find a need to analyze and approximate them in terms of simple transformations acting locally. The preferred measure of "simplicity" will of course vary from one paradigm of research to another. | ||
+ | |||
+ | A generic enough picture at this stage of the game, and one that will remind us of these fundamental features of the cybernetic system even as things get far more complex, is afforded by Figure 23. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {| align="center" cellpadding="10" style="text-align:center; width:90%" | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | <pre> | ||
+ | o---------------------------------------------------------------------o | ||
+ | | | | ||
+ | | X | | ||
+ | | o-------------------o | | ||
+ | | / \ | | ||
+ | | / \ | | ||
+ | | / \ | | ||
+ | | / \ | | ||
+ | | / \ | | ||
+ | | / \ | | ||
+ | | / \ | | ||
+ | | o G o | | ||
+ | | | | | | ||
+ | | | | | | ||
+ | | | | | | ||
+ | | | o<---------T---------o | | ||
+ | | | | | | ||
+ | | | | | | ||
+ | | | | | | ||
+ | | o o | | ||
+ | | \ / | | ||
+ | | \ / | | ||
+ | | \ / | | ||
+ | | \ / | | ||
+ | | \ / | | ||
+ | | \ / | | ||
+ | | \ / | | ||
+ | | o-------------------o | | ||
+ | | | | ||
+ | | | | ||
+ | o---------------------------------------------------------------------o | ||
+ | Figure 23. Elements of a Cybernetic System | ||
+ | </pre> | ||
+ | |} | ||
==Further Reading== | ==Further Reading== |
Revision as of 12:57, 23 June 2009
Differential logic is the component of logic whose object is the description of variation — for example, the aspects of change, difference, distribution, and diversity — in universes of discourse that are subject to logical description. In formal logic, differential logic treats the principles that govern the use of a differential logical calculus, that is, a formal system with the expressive capacity to describe change and diversity in logical universes of discourse.
A simple example of a differential logical calculus is furnished by a differential propositional calculus. A differential propositional calculus is a propositional calculus extended by a set of terms for describing aspects of change and difference, for example, processes that take place in a universe of discourse or transformations that map a source universe into a target universe. This augments ordinary propositional calculus in the same way that the differential calculus of Leibniz and Newton augments the analytic geometry of Descartes.
Quick Overview
One of the first things that you can do, once you have a moderately efficient calculus for boolean functions or propositional logic, whatever you choose to call it, is to start thinking about, and even start computing, the differentials of these functions or propositions.
Let us start with a proposition of the form \(p ~\operatorname{and}~ q\) that is graphed as two labels attached to a root node:
Written as a string, this is just the concatenation \(p~q\).
The proposition \(pq\!\) may be taken as a boolean function \(f(p, q)\!\) having the abstract type \(f : \mathbb{B} \times \mathbb{B} \to \mathbb{B},\) where \(\mathbb{B} = \{ 0, 1 \}\) is read in such a way that \(0\!\) means \(\operatorname{false}\) and \(1\!\) means \(\operatorname{true}.\)
In this style of graphical representation, the value \(\operatorname{true}\) looks like a blank label and the value \(\operatorname{false}\) looks like an edge.
Back to the proposition \(pq.\!\) Imagine yourself standing in a fixed cell of the corresponding venn diagram, say, the cell where the proposition \(pq\!\) is true, as shown in the following Figure:
Now ask yourself: What is the value of the proposition \(pq\!\) at a distance of \(\operatorname{d}p\) and \(\operatorname{d}q\) from the cell \(pq\!\) where you are standing?
Don't think about it — just compute:
The cactus formula \(\texttt{(p, dp)(q, dq)}\) and its corresponding graph arise by substituting \(p + \operatorname{d}p\) for \(p\!\) and \(q + \operatorname{d}q\) for \(q\!\) in the boolean product or logical conjunction \(pq\!\) and writing the result in the two dialects of cactus syntax. This follows from the fact that the boolean sum \(p + \operatorname{d}p\) is equivalent to the logical operation of exclusive disjunction, which parses to a cactus graph of the following form:
Next question: What is the difference between the value of the proposition \(pq\!\) over there, at a distance of \(\operatorname{d}p\) and \(\operatorname{d}q,\) and the value of the proposition \(pq\!\) where you are standing, all expressed in the form of a general formula, of course? Here is the appropriate formulation:
There is one thing that I ought to mention at this point: Computed over \(\mathbb{B},\) plus and minus are identical operations. This will make the relation between the differential and the integral parts of the appropriate calculus slightly stranger than usual, but we will get into that later.
Last question, for now: What is the value of this expression from your current standpoint, that is, evaluated at the point where \(pq\!\) is true? Well, substituting \(1\!\) for \(p\!\) and \(1\!\) for \(q\!\) in the graph amounts to erasing the labels \(p\!\) and \(q\!,\) as shown here:
And this is equivalent to the following graph:
Note 2
We have just met with the fact that the differential of the and is the or of the differentials.
\(\begin{matrix} p ~\operatorname{and}~ q & \quad & \xrightarrow{\quad\operatorname{Diff}\quad} & \quad & \operatorname{d}p ~\operatorname{or}~ \operatorname{d}q \end{matrix}\) |
It will be necessary to develop a more refined analysis of that statement directly, but that is roughly the nub of it.
If the form of the above statement reminds you of De Morgan's rule, it is no accident, as differentiation and negation turn out to be closely related operations. Indeed, one can find discussions of logical difference calculus in the Boole–De Morgan correspondence and Peirce also made use of differential operators in a logical context, but the exploration of these ideas has been hampered by a number of factors, not the least of which has been the lack of a syntax that was adequate to handle the complexity of expressions that evolve.
Let us run through the initial example again, this time attempting to interpret the formulas that develop at each stage along the way.
We begin with a proposition or a boolean function \(f(p, q) = pq.\!\)
A function like this has an abstract type and a concrete type. The abstract type is what we invoke when we write things like \(f : \mathbb{B} \times \mathbb{B} \to \mathbb{B}\) or \(f : \mathbb{B}^2 \to \mathbb{B}.\) The concrete type takes into account the qualitative dimensions or the "units" of the case, which can be explained as follows.
Let \(P\!\) be the set of values \(\{ \texttt{(} p \texttt{)},~ p \} ~=~ \{ \operatorname{not}~ p,~ p \} ~\cong~ \mathbb{B}.\) |
Let \(Q\!\) be the set of values \(\{ \texttt{(} q \texttt{)},~ q \} ~=~ \{ \operatorname{not}~ q,~ q \} ~\cong~ \mathbb{B}.\) |
Then interpret the usual propositions about \(p, q\!\) as functions of the concrete type \(f : P \times Q \to \mathbb{B}.\)
We are going to consider various operators on these functions. Here, an operator \(\operatorname{F}\) is a function that takes one function \(f\!\) into another function \(\operatorname{F}f.\)
The first couple of operators that we need to consider are logical analogues of the pair that play a founding role in the classical finite difference calculus, namely:
The difference operator \(\Delta,\!\) written here as \(\operatorname{D}.\) |
The enlargement" operator \(\Epsilon,\!\) written here as \(\operatorname{E}.\) |
These days, \(\operatorname{E}\) is more often called the shift operator.
In order to describe the universe in which these operators operate, it is necessary to enlarge the original universe of discourse. Starting from the initial space \(X = P \times Q,\) its (first order) differential extension \(\operatorname{E}X\) is constructed according to the following specifications:
\(\begin{array}{rcc} \operatorname{E}X & = & X \times \operatorname{d}X \end{array}\) |
where:
\(\begin{array}{rcc} X & = & P \times Q \'"`UNIQ-MathJax1-QINU`"' Amazing! =='"`UNIQ--h-10--QINU`"'Note 11== We have been contemplating functions of the type \(f : X \to \mathbb{B}\) and studying the action of the operators \(\operatorname{E}\) and \(\operatorname{D}\) on this family. These functions, that we may identify for our present aims with propositions, inasmuch as they capture their abstract forms, are logical analogues of scalar potential fields. These are the sorts of fields that are so picturesquely presented in elementary calculus and physics textbooks by images of snow-covered hills and parties of skiers who trek down their slopes like least action heroes. The analogous scene in propositional logic presents us with forms more reminiscent of plateaunic idylls, being all plains at one of two levels, the mesas of verity and falsity, as it were, with nary a niche to inhabit between them, restricting our options for a sporting gradient of downhill dynamics to just one of two: standing still on level ground or falling off a bluff. We are still working well within the logical analogue of the classical finite difference calculus, taking in the novelties that the logical transmutation of familiar elements is able to bring to light. Soon we will take up several different notions of approximation relationships that may be seen to organize the space of propositions, and these will allow us to define several different forms of differential analysis applying to propositions. In time we will find reason to consider more general types of maps, having concrete types of the form \(X_1 \times \ldots \times X_k \to Y_1 \times \ldots \times Y_n\) and abstract types \(\mathbb{B}^k \to \mathbb{B}^n.\) We will think of these mappings as transforming universes of discourse into themselves or into others, in short, as transformations of discourse. Before we continue with this intinerary, however, I would like to highlight another sort of differential aspect that concerns the boundary operator or the marked connective that serves as one of the two basic connectives in the cactus language for ZOL. For example, consider the proposition \(f\!\) of concrete type \(f : P \times Q \times R \to \mathbb{B}\) and abstract type \(f : \mathbb{B}^3 \to \mathbb{B}\) that is written \(\texttt{(} p, q, r \texttt{)}\) in cactus syntax. Taken as an assertion in what Peirce called the existential interpretation, the proposition \(\texttt{(} p, q, r \texttt{)}\) says that just one of \(p, q, r\!\) is false. It is instructive to consider this assertion in relation to the logical conjunction \(pqr\!\) of the same propositions. A venn diagram of \(\texttt{(} p, q, r \texttt{)}\) looks like this: In relation to the center cell indicated by the conjunction \(pqr,\!\) the region indicated by \(\texttt{(} p, q, r \texttt{)}\) is comprised of the adjacent or bordering cells. Thus they are the cells that are just across the boundary of the center cell, reached as if by way of Leibniz's minimal changes from the point of origin, in this case, \(pqr.\!\) More generally speaking, in a \(k\!\)-dimensional universe of discourse that is based on the alphabet of features \(\mathcal{X} = \{ x_1, \ldots, x_k \},\) the same form of boundary relationship is manifested for any cell of origin that one chooses to indicate. One way to indicate a cell is by forming a logical conjunction of positive and negative basis features, that is, by constructing an expression of the form \(e_1 \cdot \ldots \cdot e_k,\) where \(e_j = x_j ~\text{or}~ e_j = \texttt{(} x_j \texttt{)},\) for \(j = 1 ~\text{to}~ k.\) The proposition \(\texttt{(} e_1, \ldots, e_k \texttt{)}\) indicates the disjunctive region consisting of the cells that are just next door to \(e_1 \cdot \ldots \cdot e_k.\) Note 12
One other subject that it would be opportune to mention at this point, while we have an object example of a mathematical group fresh in mind, is the relationship between the pragmatic maxim and what are commonly known in mathematics as representation principles. As it turns out, with regard to its formal characteristics, the pragmatic maxim unites the aspects of a representation principle with the attributes of what would ordinarily be known as a closure principle. We will consider the form of closure that is invoked by the pragmatic maxim on another occasion, focusing here and now on the topic of group representations. Let us return to the example of the four-group \(V_4.\!\) We encountered this group in one of its concrete representations, namely, as a transformation group that acts on a set of objects, in this case a set of sixteen functions or propositions. Forgetting about the set of objects that the group transforms among themselves, we may take the abstract view of the group's operational structure, for example, in the form of the group operation table copied here:
This table is abstractly the same as, or isomorphic to, the versions with the \(\operatorname{E}_{ij}\) operators and the \(\operatorname{T}_{ij}\) transformations that we took up earlier. That is to say, the story is the same, only the names have been changed. An abstract group can have a variety of significantly and superficially different representations. But even after we have long forgotten the details of any particular representation there is a type of concrete representations, called regular representations, that are always readily available, as they can be generated from the mere data of the abstract operation table itself. To see how a regular representation is constructed from the abstract operation table, select a group element from the top margin of the Table, and "consider its effects" on each of the group elements as they are listed along the left margin. We may record these effects as Peirce usually did, as a logical aggregate of elementary dyadic relatives, that is, as a logical disjunction or boolean sum whose terms represent the ordered pairs of \(\operatorname{input} : \operatorname{output}\) transactions that are produced by each group element in turn. This forms one of the two possible regular representations of the group, in this case the one that is called the post-regular representation or the right regular representation. It has long been conventional to organize the terms of this logical aggregate in the form of a matrix: Reading "\(+\!\)" as a logical disjunction:
And so, by expanding effects, we get:
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