John, List:

JFS: For convenience, see the attached Delta376.txt.


I appreciate the complete transcription, although it would still be very
helpful if you could quote specific sentences that you interpret as
supporting each of your claims.

JFS: I believe that there is no way to interpret that text without
acknowledging the fact that it is the beginning of a specification of Delta
graphs. Note the ending of the second paragraph: "I shall now have to add a
Delta part in order to deal with modals.  A cross division of the
description which here, as in that of 1903, is given precedence over the
other is into the Conventions, the Rules, and the working of the System."


Your quotation here omits the crucial first part of the only sentence in R
L376 that mentions Delta--"The better exposition of 1903 divided the system
into three parts, distinguished as the Alpha, the Beta, and the Gamma,
parts; a division I shall here adhere to, although I shall now have to add
a *Delta *part in order to deal with modals." Accordingly, I believe that
there is no way to interpret the 19 extant pages of this letter *as *the
beginning of a specification of (only) Delta graphs. On the contrary,
Peirce plainly states his intention to describe *all four parts* of EGs,
but he never gets around to explaining their differences, let alone dealing
with modals or discussing anything else that is unique to the new Delta
part.

JFS: Then the paragraph immediately after that begins "The Conventions."
And it continues with a specification of the conventions for something. I
cannot imagine that the "something" is anything other than Delta graphs.


Your failure of imagination is not dispositive. Can you identify even *one
sentence* from the entire section on "The Conventions"--or, for that
matter, the rest of the letter--that is about EGs but *not *applicable to
Alpha, Beta, and Gamma?

JFS: Note the later discussion about different "parts" of the phemic sheet,
which may be asserted and interpreted in different ways.


Peirce states, "For they two [utterer and interpreter] may conceive that
the 'phemic sheet' embraces many papers, so that one part of it is before
the common attention at one time and another part at another, and that
actual conventions between them equivalent to scribed graphs make some of
those pieces relate to one subject and part to another." As I have noted
before, the different parts relate to different *subjects *to which both
parties pay attention at different times--equivalent what Peirce describes
in previous texts such as R 280 (c. 1905) and CP 4.561n (1908), both of
which I quoted last week (
https://list.iupui.edu/sympa/arc/peirce-l/2024-03/msg00004.html). As such,
this concept is fully applicable to Alpha, Beta, and Gamma EGs--it does not
exclusively "deal with modals," and thus is not unique to Delta EGs.

JFS: That is why metalanguage must be used to state the many kinds of
modality that Peirce discusses in the attached text.


Peirce indeed briefly discusses modality in R L376, but he does not address
how to represent and reason about modal propositions using EGs, which is
his only stated reason for needing a Delta part.

JFS: But the original MS, a copy of which you included in your note, had a
thin line that connected the oval to the word 'is'. I suspect that who drew
that diagram thought that the thin line between the oval and the word 'is'
was just part of the word 'is'. But in his handwiriting, Peirce never drew
a line in front of an initial letter 'i'. Therefore, that graph was
mistakenly drawn.


Thank you for correcting my mistake. I noticed that line, drawn even more
lightly than the one in the first EG on RLT 151, but assumed that it was
part of Peirce's cursive "i"--just as Ketner evidently did. However, after
looking at a few other manuscripts, I agree that Peirce generally *did not*
include such a line when handwriting "i" as the first letter of a word, so
there is indeed a lightly drawn line connecting the oval (containing a
proposition) to the rheme (whose blank that proposition fills). Of course,
I already brought to your attention his similar notation in a later
manuscript--R 492 (1903), erroneously reproduced in CP 4.471 but corrected
by both Roberts and Pietarinen--where the oval and line are dotted instead
of lightly drawn (
https://list.iupui.edu/sympa/arc/peirce-l/2024-02/msg00141.html). This
notation in Gamma EGs asserts a proposition about a proposition, but there
is no hint of anything like it in R L376 (nor R 514).

Regards,

Jon Alan Schmidt - Olathe, Kansas, USA
Structural Engineer, Synechist Philosopher, Lutheran Christian
www.LinkedIn.com/in/JonAlanSchmidt / twitter.com/JonAlanSchmidt

On Mon, Mar 11, 2024 at 3:56 PM John F Sowa <s...@bestweb.net> wrote:

> Jon, Jeff, Gary, List,
>
> I am now writing the article on Delta graphs.  In a few days, I'll send a
> preview.  For convenience, see the attached Delta376.txt.  (Since Peirce's
> paragraphs tend to be very long, I added some additional paragraph breaks,)
>
>
> I believe that there is no way to interpret that text without
> acknowledging the fact that it is the beginning of a specification of Delta
> graphs.   Note the ending of the second paragraph:
>
> "I shall now have to add a Delta part in order to deal with modals.  A
> cross division of the description which here, as in that of 1903, is given
> precedence over the other is into the Conventions, the Rules, and the
> working of the System."
>
> Then the paragraph immediately after that begins "The Conventions."  And
> it continues with a specification of he conventions for something.  I
> cannot imagine that  the "something" is anything other than Delta graphs.
>  (That paragraph break, by the way, is Peirce's.)
>
> Note the later discussion about different "parts" of the phemic sheet,
> which may be asserted and interpreted in different ways.  That is why
> metalanguage must be used to state the many kinds of modality that Peirce
> discusses in the attached text.
>
> John
>
> I'll also mention that three people misinterpreted the two diagrams on p.
> 151 of RLT  --  you, me, and Ken Ketner.   I misinterpreted the first
> diagram as having a line of identity between an oval that encloses the
> sentence "You are a good girl".  With that interpretation, it would assert
> "There exists a proposition that you are a good girl, and that proposition
> is much to be wished."  But you correctly noticed that the line is so thin
> that it cannot be interpreted as a line of identity.  Peirce did not state
> any reading for that complete EG.  Therefore, I read it as asserting a
> complete grammatical sentence "That you are a good girl is much to be
> wished.  That assertion is correct.  It is logically equivalent to the
> above reading, but it is not syntactically equivalent to it.
>
> Then Ken Ketner (or somebody else who drew the second EG) did not show an
> attached line between the oval and the verb phrase "is false."  But the
> original MS, a copy of which you included in your note, had a thin line
> that connected the oval to the word 'is'.  I suspect that who drew that
> diagram thought that the thin line between the oval and the word 'is' was
> just part of the word 'is'.  But in his handwiriting, Peirce never drew a
> line in front of an initial letter 'i'.  Therefore, that graph was
> mistakenly drawn.
>
> Neither you nor Ken noticed that error.  You did mention that Peirce had
> not introduced the convention of using an oval for negation until the next
> example.  That is true, but it does not excuse the mistake of not noticing
> the thin line that connects the previous oval to the word 'is.
>
> There is much more to say, and I'll include it in the preview, which I
> plan to send in the next few days.
>
> John
>
> In that case, I believe that the thin line implies that the proposition in
> the oval is a *THING *that is the  subject of the verb phrase "is much to
> be wished."
>
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