Iconicity and Abduction

New York, USA: Springer. Edited by Rocco Gangle (2016)
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Abstract

This book consolidates and extends the authors’ work on the connection between iconicity and abductive inference. It emphasizes a pragmatic, experimental and fallibilist view of knowledge without sacrificing formal rigor. Within this context, the book focuses particularly on scientific knowledge and its prevalent use of mathematics. To find an answer to the question “What kind of experimental activity is the scientific employment of mathematics?” the book addresses the problems involved in formalizing abductive cognition. For this, it implements the concept and method of iconicity, modeling this theoretical framework mathematically through category theory and topoi. Peirce's concept of iconic signs is treated in depth, and it is shown how Peirce's diagrammatic logical notation of Existential Graphs makes use of iconicity and how important features of this iconicity are representable within category theory. Alain Badiou’s set-theoretical model of truth procedures and his relational sheaf-based theory of phenomenology are then integrated within the Peircean logical context. Finally, the book opens the path towards a more naturalist interpretation of the abductive models developed in Peirce and Badiou through an analysis of several recent attempts to reformulate quantum mechanics with categorical methods. Overall, the book offers a comprehensive and rigorous overview of past approaches to iconic semiotics and abduction, and it encompasses new extensions of these methods towards an innovative naturalist interpretation of abductive reasoning.

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Chapters

Categorical Iconicity in Peirce’s Existential Graphs

The notion of iconicity developed in the previous chapter might appear open to the objection that the use of any such conception of iconic “structure” to model abduction must err either on the side of being too formal and thus insensitive to the concrete, existential details of the situation at hand... see more

Iconicity in Peirce’s Semiotics

The hypothesis of the mathematician is always the conception of a system of relations. In order that they may be reasoned about mathematically, these relations must be conceived as embodied in some kind of objects; but the character of the objects, apart from the relations, is utterly immaterial. Th... see more

Modeling Abductive Reasoning

The following chapter introduces the problem of abduction understood as a form of practical reasoning. It is necessary to state up front that the scope and stakes of this problem vastly exceed what may be adequately measured or encompassed here.

Phenomenology and Iconicity in Badiou’s Logics of Worlds

Ontology and Abduction in Badiou’s Being and Event

Abductive Realism in Topos Theory

The foundation of Badiou’s ontological schema relies on the notion of a transcendental T. As emerged from the analysis in the last chapter, T is in fact best understood as a two-fold entity: It is used to measure the degree of identity of relations between objects in the world, and, on the other han... see more

Phenomenology and Iconicity in Badiou’s Logics of Worlds

Is it possible to extend in an abductive manner the specifically iconic dimension of the mathematical modeling of reality implicit in Badiou’s austerely binary ontology? To a certain extent, Badiou himself has already done so.

Ontology and Abduction in Badiou’s Being and Event

In this chapter, we look at the problem of abductive inference as refracted through a mathematical context quite different from the topological areas and cuts of Peirce’s graphs as analyzed in the previous chapter. Rather than the relational nestings of areas within graphs and the categorical struct... see more

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