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| | <div class="nonumtoc">__TOC__</div> | | <div class="nonumtoc">__TOC__</div> |
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| | + | ==Discussion== |
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| | ==Work Area== | | ==Work Area== |
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| − | ===1.3.===
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| − |
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| − | ====1.3.5. Discussion of Formalization : Specific Objects====
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| − |
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| − | <pre>
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| − | | "Knowledge" is a referring back: in its essence a regressus in infinitum.
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| − | | That which comes to a standstill (at a supposed causa prima, at something
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| − | | unconditioned, etc.) is laziness, weariness --
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| − | |
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| − | | (Nietzsche, 'The Will to Power', S 575, 309).
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| − |
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| − | With this preamble, I return to develop my own account of formalization,
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| − | with special attention to the kind of step that leads from the inchoate
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| − | chaos of casual discourse to a well-founded discussion of formal models.
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| − | A formalization step, of the incipient kind being considered here, has
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| − | the peculiar property that one can say with some definiteness where it
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| − | ends, since it leads precisely to a well-defined formal model, but not
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| − | with any definiteness where it begins. Any attempt to trace the steps
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| − | of formalization backward toward their ultimate beginnings can lead to
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| − | an interminable multiplicity of open-ended explorations. In view of
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| − | these circumstances, I will limit my attention to the frame of the
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| − | present inquiry and try to sum up what brings me to this point.
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| − |
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| − | It begins like this: I ask whether it is possible to reason about inquiry
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| − | in a way that leads to a productive end. I pose my question as an inquiry
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| − | into inquiry, and I use the formula "y_0 = y y" to express the relationship
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| − | between the present inquiry, y_0, and a generic inquiry, y. Then I propose
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| − | a couple of components of inquiry, discussion and formalization, that appear
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| − | to be worth investigating, expressing this proposal in the form "y >= {d, f}".
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| − | Applying these components to each other, as must be done in the present inquiry,
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| − | I am led to the current discussion of formalization, y_0 = y y >= f d.
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| − |
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| − | There is already much to question here. At least,
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| − | so many repetitions of the same mysterious formula
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| − | are bound to lead the reader to question its meaning.
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| − | Some of the more obvious issues that arise are these:
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| − |
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| − | The term "generic inquiry" is ambiguous. Its meaning in practice
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| − | depends on whether the description of an inquiry as being generic
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| − | is interpreted literally or merely as a figure of speech. In the
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| − | literal case, the name "y" denotes a particular inquiry, y in Y,
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| − | one that is assumed to be plenipotential or prototypical in yet
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| − | to be specified ways. In the figurative case, the name "y" is
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| − | simply a variable that ranges over a collection Y of nominally
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| − | conceivable inquiries.
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| − |
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| − | First encountered, the recipe "y_0 = y y" seems to specify that
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| − | the present inquiry is constituted by taking everything that is
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| − | denoted by the most general concept of inquiry that the present
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| − | inquirer can imagine and inquiring into it by means of the most
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| − | general capacity for inquiry that this same inquirer can muster.
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| − |
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| − | Contemplating the formula "y_0 = y y" in the context of the subordination
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| − | y >= {d, f} and the successive containments F c M c D, the y that inquires
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| − | into y is not restricted to examining y's immediate subordinates, d and f,
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| − | but it can investigate any feature of y's overall context, whether objective,
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| − | syntactic, interpretive, and whether definitive or incidental, and finally it
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| − | can question any supporting claim of the discussion. Moreover, the question y
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| − | is not limited to the particular claims that are being made here, but applies to
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| − | the abstract relations and the general concepts that are invoked in making them.
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| − | Among the many additional kinds of inquiry that suggest themselves at this point,
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| − | I see at least the following possibilities:
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| − |
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| − | 1. Inquiry into propositions about application and equality.
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| − | Just by way of a first example, one might well begin by
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| − | considering the forms of application and equality that
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| − | are invoked in the formula "y_0 = y y" itself.
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| − |
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| − | 2. Inquiry into application, for example, the way that
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| − | the term "y y" indicates the application of y to y
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| − | in the formula "y_0 = y y".
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| − |
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| − | 3. Inquiry into equality, for example,
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| − | the meaning of "=" in "y_0 = y y".
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| − |
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| − | 4. Inquiry into indices, for example,
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| − | the significance of "0" in "y_0".
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| − |
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| − | 5. Inquiry into terms, specifically, constants and variables.
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| − | What are the functions of "y" and "y_0" in this respect?
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| − |
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| − | 6. Inquiry into decomposition or subordination, for example,
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| − | as invoked by the sign ">=" in the formula "y >= {d, f}".
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| − |
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| − | 7. Inquiry into containment or inclusion. In particular, examine the
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| − | claim "F c M c D" that conditions the chances that a formalization
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| − | has an object, the degree to which a formalization can be carried
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| − | out by means of a discussion, and the extent to which an object
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| − | of formalization can be conveyed by a form of discussion.
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| − |
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| − | If inquiry begins in doubt, then inquiry into inquiry begins in
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| − | doubt about doubt. All things considered, the formula "y_0 = y y"
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| − | has to be taken as the first attempt at a description of the problem,
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| − | a hypothesis about the nature of inquiry, or an image that is tossed out
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| − | by way of getting an initial fix on the object in question. Everything in
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| − | this account so far, and everything else that I am likely to add, can only
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| − | be reckoned as hypothesis, whose accuracy, pertinence, and usefulness can
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| − | be tested, judged, and redeemed only after the fact of proposing it and
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| − | after the facts to which it refers have themselves been gathered up.
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| − |
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| − | A number of problems present themselves due to the context in which
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| − | the present inquiry is aimed to present itself. The hypothesis that
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| − | suggests itself to one person, as worth exploring at a particular time,
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| − | does not always present itself to another person as worth exploring at
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| − | the same time, or even necessarily to the same person at another time.
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| − | In a community of inquiry that extends beyond an isolated person and
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| − | in a process of inquiry that extends beyond a singular moment in time,
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| − | it is therefore necessary to consider the nature of the communication
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| − | process that the discussion of inquiry in general and the discussion of
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| − | formalization in particular need to invoke for their ultimate utility.
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| − |
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| − | Solitude and solipsism are no solution to the problems of community and
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| − | communication, since even an isolated individual, if ever there was, is,
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| − | or comes to be such a thing, has to maintain the lines of communication
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| − | that are required to integrate past, present, and prospective selves --
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| − | in other words, translating everything into present terms, the parts of
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| − | one's actually present self that involve actual experiences and present
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| − | observations, do present expectations as reflective of actual memories,
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| − | and do present intentions as reflective of actual hopes. Consequently,
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| − | the dialogue that one holds with oneself is every bit as problematic
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| − | as the dialogue that one enters with others. Others only surprise
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| − | one in other ways than one ordinarily surprises oneself.
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| − |
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| − | I recognize inquiry as beginning with a "surprising phenomenon" or
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| − | a "problematic situation", more briefly described as a "surprise"
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| − | or a "problem", respectively. These are the types of moments that
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| − | try our souls, the instances of events that instigate inquiry as
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| − | an effort to achieve their own resolution. Surprises and problems
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| − | are experienced as afflicted with an irritating uncertainty or a
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| − | compelling difficulty, one that calls for a response on the part
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| − | of the agent in question:
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| − |
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| − | 1. A "surprise" calls for an explanation to resolve the
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| − | uncertainty that is present in it. This uncertainty
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| − | is associated with a difference between observations
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| − | and expectations.
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| − |
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| − | 2. A "problem" calls for a plan of action to resolve the
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| − | difficulty that is present in it. This difficulty is
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| − | associated with a difference between observations and
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| − | intentions.
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| − |
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| − | To express this diversity in a unified formula: Both types of inquiry
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| − | begin with a "delta", a compact term that admits of expansion as a debt,
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| − | a difference, a difficulty, a discrepancy, a dispersion, a distribution,
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| − | a doubt, a duplicity, or a duty.
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| − |
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| − | Expressed another way, inquiry begins with a doubt about one's object,
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| − | whether this means what is true of a case, an object, or a world, what
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| − | to do about reaching a goal, or whether the hoped-for goal is really
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| − | good for oneself -- with all that these questions lead to in essence,
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| − | in deed, or in fact.
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| − |
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| − | Perhaps there is an inexhaustible reality that issues in these
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| − | apparent mysteries and recurrent crises, but, by the time I say
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| − | this much, I am already indulging in a finite image, a hypothesis
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| − | about what is going on. If nothing else, then, one finds again the
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| − | familiar pattern, where the formative relation between the informal
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| − | and the formal merely serves to remind one anew of the relationship
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| − | between the infinite and the finite.
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| − | </pre>
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| − |
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| − | =====1.3.5.1. The Will to Form=====
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| − |
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| − | <pre>
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| − | | The power of form, the will to give form to oneself. "Happiness"
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| − | | admitted as a goal. Much strength and energy behind the emphasis
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| − | | on forms. The delight in looking at a life that seems so easy. --
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| − | | To the French, the Greeks looked like children.
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| − | |
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| − | | (Nietzsche, 'The Will to Power', S 94, 58).
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| − |
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| − | Let me see if I can summarize as quickly as possible the problem that I see before me.
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| − | On each occasion that I try to express my experience, to lend it a form that others
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| − | can recognize, to put it in a shape that I myself can later recall, or to store it
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| − | in a state that allows me the chance of its re-experience, I generate an image of
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| − | the way things are, or at least a description of how things seem to me. I call
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| − | this process "reflection", since it fabricates an image in a medium of signs
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| − | that reflects an aspect of experience. Very often this experience is said
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| − | to be "of" -- what? -- something that exists or persists at least partly
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| − | outside the immediate experience, some action, event, or object that is
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| − | imagined to inform the present experience, or perhaps some conduct of
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| − | one's own doing that obtrudes for a moment into the world of others
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| − | and meets with a reaction there. In all of these cases, where the
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| − | experience is everted to refer to an object and thus becomes the
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| − | attribute of something with an external aspect, something that
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| − | is thus supposed to be a prior cause of the experience, the
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| − | reflection on experience doubles as a reflection on that
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| − | conduct, performance, or transaction that the experience
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| − | is an experience "of". In short, if the experience has
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| − | an eversion that makes it an experience of an object,
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| − | then its reflection is again a reflection that is
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| − | also of this object.
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| − |
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| − | Just at the point where one threatens to become lost in the morass of
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| − | words for describing experience and the nuances of their interpretation,
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| − | one can adopt a formal perspective, and realize that the relation among
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| − | objects, experiences, and reflective images is formally analogous to the
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| − | relation among objects, signs, and interpretant signs that is covered by
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| − | the pragmatic theory of signs. One still has the problem: How are the
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| − | expressions of experience everted to form the exterior faces of extended
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| − | objects and exploited to embed them in their external circumstances, and
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| − | no matter whether this object with an outer face is oneself or another?
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| − | Here, one needs to understand that expressions of experience include
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| − | the original experiences themselves, at least, to the extent that
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| − | they permit themselves to be recognized and reflected in ongoing
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| − | experience. But now, from the formal point of view, "how" means
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| − | only: To describe the formal conditions of a formal possibility.
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| − | </pre>
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| − |
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| − | =====1.3.5.2. The Forms of Reasoning=====
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| − |
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| − | <pre>
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| − | | The most valuable insights are arrived at last;
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| − | | but the most valuable insights are methods.
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| − | |
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| − | | (Nietzsche, 'The Will to Power', S 469, 261).
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| − |
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| − | A certain arbitrariness has to be faced in the terms that one uses
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| − | to talk about reasoning, to split it up into different parts and
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| − | to sort it out into different types. It is like the arbitrary
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| − | choice that one makes in assigning the midpoint of an interval
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| − | to the subintervals on its sides. In setting out the forms of
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| − | a nomenclature, in fitting the schemes of my terminology to the
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| − | territory that it disturbs in the process of mapping, I cannot
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| − | avoid making arbitrary choices, but I can aim for a strategy
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| − | that is flexible enough to recognize its own alternatives and
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| − | to accommodate the other options that lie within their scope.
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| − |
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| − | If I make the mark of deduction the fact that it reduces the
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| − | number of terms, as it moves from the grounds to the end of
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| − | an argument, then I am due to devise a name for the process
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| − | that augments the number of terms, and thus prepares the
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| − | grounds for any account of experience.
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| − |
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| − | What name hints at the many ways that signs arise in regard to things?
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| − | What name covers the manifest ways that a map takes over its territory?
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| − | What name fits this naming of names, these proceedings that inaugurate
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| − | a sign in the first place, that duly install it on the office of a term?
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| − | What name suits all these actions of addition, annexation, incursion, and
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| − | invention that instigate the initial bearing of signs on an object domain?
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| − |
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| − | In the interests of a "maximal analytic precision" (MAP), it is fitting
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| − | that I should try to sharpen this notion to the point where it applies
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| − | purely to a simple act, that of entering a new term on the lists, in
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| − | effect, of enlisting a new term to the ongoing account of experience.
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| − | Thus, let me style this process as "adduction" or "production", in
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| − | spite of the fact that the aim of precision is partially blunted
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| − | by the circumstance that these words have well-worn uses in other
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| − | contexts. In this way, I can isolate to some degree the singular
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| − | step of adding a term, leaving it to a later point to distinguish
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| − | the role that it plays in an argument.
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| − |
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| − | As it stands, the words "adduction" and "production" could apply to the
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| − | arbitrary addition of terms to a discussion, whether or not these terms
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| − | participate in valid forms of argument or contribute to their mediation.
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| − | Although there are a number of auxiliary terms, like "factorization",
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| − | "mediation", or "resolution", that can help to pin down these meanings,
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| − | it is also useful to have a word that can convey the exact sense meant.
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| − | Therefore, I coin the term "obduction" to suggest the type of reasoning
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| − | process that is opposite or converse to deduction and that introduces
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| − | a middle term "in the way" as it passes from a subject to a predicate.
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| − |
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| − | Consider the adjunction to one's vocabulary that is comprised of these three words:
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| − | "adduction", "production", "obduction". In particular, how do they appear in the
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| − | light of their mutual applications to each other and especially with respect to
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| − | their own reflexivities? Notice that the terms "adduction" and "production"
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| − | apply to the ways that all three terms enter this general discussion, but
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| − | that "obduction" applies only to their introduction only in specific
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| − | contexts of argument.
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| − |
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| − | Another dimension of variation that needs to be noted among these different types
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| − | of processes is their status with regard to determimism. Given the ordinary case
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| − | of a well-formed syllogism, deduction is a fully deterministic process, since the
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| − | middle term to be eliminated is clearly marked by its appearance in a couple of
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| − | premisses. But if one is given nothing but the fact that forms this conclusion,
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| − | or starts with a fact that is barely suspected to be the conclusion of a possible
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| − | deduction, then there are many other middle terms and many other premisses that
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| − | might be construed to result in this fact. Therefore, adduction and production,
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| − | for all of their uncontrolled generality, but even obduction, in spite of its
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| − | specificity, cannot be treated as deterministic processes. Only in degenerate
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| − | cases, where the number of terms in a discussion is extremely limited, or where
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| − | the availability of middle terms is otherwise restricted, can it happen that
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| − | these processes become deterministic.
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| − | </pre>
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