Existential Graphs - 4.372-417 - Notes
     
372 *1 Peirce's contribution to an article of that title in Baldwin's Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology, vol. 2, pp. 645-50; 393 is by Peirce and Mrs. C. L Franklin.
374 *1 See 3.136c.
375 *1 Pure Logic, chs. 6 and 15; (1864).
385 *1 Better: Something is ~A and ~B.
391 *1 See 3.351f, 3.499f.
  *2 See 3.330ff, 3.492ff.
  *3 See his Substitution of Similars; §41 (1869); Pure Logic, p. 111 (1890).
  *4 p. 79.
392 *1 See 3.510.
393 *1 Johns Hopkins Studies in Logic, p. 25ff.
  *2 Logik, (1880, 1883).
394 *1 A Syllabus of Certain Topics of Logic, pp. 15-23. Alfred Mudge & Son, Boston (1903). Continuing 2.226.
395 *1 Most of the terms such as "symbol," "replica," "rheme," "legisign" used in this paper are defined in vol. 2, bk. II, ch. 2.
  *P1 "I abandon this inappropriate term, replica, Mr. Kempe having already ('Memoir on the Theory of Mathematical Form' [Philosophical Transactions, Royal Society (1886)], §170) given it another meaning. I now call it an instance." -- marginal note, c. 1910.
410 *1 I.e., a broken cut.
414 z1 Notice that this terminology (derived from the Aristotelian-Scholastic tradition) is perfectly in accord with contemporary Object-Oriented Programming. Zeman's Existential Graph Classes, in fact, fit this, even to the names of the objects.
  *1 But see 579.
416 z1 The Ligature also is reflected in Zeman's Existential Graph Classes; it is, effectively, a Collection of Lines of Identity representing a common "individual"; the Ligature there as here is not itself a graph.
  z2 In Zeman's OOP version of EG, the least-inclusive area in which a ligature lies is the scope of that ligature.
417 *1 But see 580.
  *2 For the code of permissions for the Gamma part, which was not discussed in this printed pamphlet, see below, 470-1, and chapters 5 and 7.