Sorry for the delay, Karl. Here it is. ---Pedro ----- Mensaje original ----- De: Karl Javorszky <karl.javors...@gmail.com> Fecha: Martes, 18 de Diciembre de 2012, 3:55 pm Asunto: spam filter A: "Pedro C. Marijuan" <pcmarijuan.i...@aragon.es>
> Hi Pedro, > > happy Xmas and New Year! > > The spam filter has rejected Step Six. Maybe you could ask it to > publish it? > > Best: > Karl > ----------------------------- > Step Six of Learn to > Count in Twelve Easy StepsWhat happened > previously: Step 1.:We have introduced > additional describing aspects of the logical sentence a+b=c. Next to a,b,c, we > also make use of u=b-a, k=b-2a, t=2b-3a, q=a-2b, s=17-(a+b|c), w=2a-3b.Step > 2.:We have introduced the > collection of additions we shall use. We have generated the aspects > {a,b,c,k,u,t,q,s,w} of the 136 smallest pairs of a,b.> Step 3.:We have shown > that a sort > on the data set – with any of the aspects as first, a different aspect as the > second sorting argument – assigns a place to an addition; different sorts may > assign different places.Step 4.:Ordering the data set on > all pairs of aspects brings forth 72 variants of realisations of the order > principle based on {<|=|>}. Some of the sorting orders are identical, > some contradictory. The contradictions are visible on > {place|amount|frequency|order}. The task is to consolidate the > contradictions.Step 5.:Those sorting orders which > to each addition assign identical sequential numbers build a common “clan” > together. In the version of the Table presented here, 20 clans are visible. > Members of a clan can differ on their number of teeth; the place of an element > within a tie is not quite indeterminable but is rather dependent of how finely > has the preceding sorting order had sorted previously.Step > 6.:Reordering:After having eliminated the > easy cases, where no reordering is needed, we now confront the mechanics of > transforming the sequence alphabeta into the sequence gammadelta. (V[alfabeta, > gammadelta]=.f.) This procedure is called “reordering” and as its effect, an > element j that previously had the sequential place p1 has now the > sequential place p2. (p1 {=|#} p2)Of specific interest is the > case, wherein during a reorder, several elements have to move together in the > course of a reordering. This is the main concept of the Twelve > Steps.Explaining the main > concept: The central concept can be > pointed out exactly, by deictic methods. Before doing so, let us try to > explicate the idea in colloquial speech. One knows from everyday life that a > change of places may be an intricate business, as oftentimes someone has to > vacate first the place in which a different person will come to sit, while the > person expelled has to ask a 3rd one to liberate his place in turn, > etc. This can get quite complicated, but normally people don’t talk much about > it, as it normally has a solution that is evident to all. Rubik’s cube shows > a specific instance of the > central concept at work. (Please see 6.graph.Rubik). The concept presented > here > is similar to that made visible in the cube, but for the following points: > there, 6 planes are given and 24 elements move while 6 are fixed; the task is > deducting from the known results of the planes the collection and the sequence > of the repetitive procedures (“operations”) that will result in the goal being > achieved. Here, we have 136 elements, none of them fixed and the number of > planes can be a subject of a spirited debate. The task here is to deduct the > appearance of the planes after having gone thru all repetitive procedures > (“operations”). In the case of the cube, the pleasure of having solved the > puzzle encounters one as soon as one understands the procedures of which the > resulting planes are an implication; here, success comes from having > understood > the planes that result from the applications of the procedures.In logistics > one > would speak of “merchandise in transit”, where one will use effective and > expected matches between material and spatial references.Names for the main > concept:Wittgenstein calls the idea > discussed here a Sachverhalt (pls see around 2.01 in > http://people.umass.edu/phil335-klement-2/tlp/tlp.html#bodytext). > It appears ok to interpret, that the Sachverhalt is that “amount j is on > place p”, while the Zusammenhang is that “j moves together within > {j,j’,j’’,...etc} during a reorder from alphabeta into gammadelta”. Heraclit has predicted the > dynamic interdependence among realisations of the order without giving a > specific name to it. He points out the “upward-downward path” > (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heraclitus#Panta_rhei.2C_.22everything_flows.22). Here, we may make use of > the ideas – and the names – of the connotations of a convoy, chain, string or > rhythm for the Zusammenhang and step or tact for the Sachverhalt.Data:The > deictic definition is > done by presenting a fragment of Table T (please see 6.num). Each line in > Table > T is one step in the process of reordering. We publish – next to the > permutation of the first-level arguments that were used at the creation of the > Table – order alphabeta (the “previous” order), order gammadelta (the “new” > order), arguments (a,b), the sequential number for the Zusammenhang i, > the step number j within string No. i [tact j in rhythm i], > and sequential place previous (“from”) and sequential place new > (“to”).Statistics:There is a quite wide range > of properties for the chains. Interactive Figure 6.graph.1 shows the > properties > of convoys within a reorder, to discuss, how many strings are necessary for a > reorder and how the number of tacts of the rhythms are distributed;6.graph.2 > shows in the form > of a circle, which places are connected into a chain during a reorder;One may > select and deselect > specific chains to see the additions that are connected by a Zusammenhang in > the form of points in the plane built by the axes x: alphabeta, y: gammadelta > (6.graph.3); We keep track of the > “carry” in the form of “carry_a” and “carry_b” (not shown here). The carry is > the sum of the argument over all j in chain i.In the next Step (to appear > 8th of January, 2013) we shall propose a type of chains to be used > as standard units; in Steps 8 and 9 we build spaces with rectangular axes by > using properties of the standard chains.Please allow me to wish you > a nice Midwinter Break.
_______________________________________________ fis mailing list fis@listas.unizar.es https://webmail.unizar.es/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fis