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hypostatic abstraction (Definition)

Hypostatic abstraction is a formal operation that takes an element of information, as expressed in a proposition $ X\ \operatorname{is}\ Y,$ and conceives its information to consist in the relation between that subject and another subject, as expressed in the proposition $ X\ \operatorname{has}\ Y\!\operatorname{-ness}.$ The existence of the abstract subject $ Y\!\operatorname{-ness}$ consists solely in the truth of those propositions that contain the concrete predicate $ Y.$ Hypostatic abstraction is known under many names, for example, hypostasis, objectification, reification, and subjectal abstraction. The object of discussion or thought thus introduced is termed a hypostatic object.

The above definition is adapted from one given by Charles Sanders Peirce (CP 4.235). The main thing about the formal operation of hypostatic abstraction, insofar as it can be observed to operate on formal linguistic expressions, is that it converts an adjective or some part of a predicate into an extra subject, upping the arity of the main predicate in the process.

For example, a typical case of hypostatic abstraction occurs in the transformation from ``honey is sweet" to ``honey possesses sweetness", which transformation can be viewed in the following variety of ways:

\includegraphics[scale=0.8]{HA_Fig_1}
\includegraphics[scale=0.8]{HA_Fig_2}
\includegraphics[scale=0.8]{HA_Fig_3}
\includegraphics[scale=0.8]{HA_Fig_4}

The grammatical trace of this hypostatic transformation tells of a process that abstracts the adjective ``sweet" from the predicate ``is sweet", decants the higher-arity predicate ``possesses", and precipitates the substantive ``sweetness" in the role of its correlative subject.

References and further reading

  • Peirce, Charles Sanders (1902), ``The Simplest Mathematics", CP 4.227-323 in Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, vols. 1-6, Charles Hartshorne and Paul Weiss (eds.), vols. 7-8, Arthur W. Burks (ed.), Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1931-1935, 1958. Cited as (CP volume.paragraph).
  • Zeman, J. Jay (1982), ``Peirce on Abstraction", The Monist, 65 (1982), 211-229. Reprinted, pp. 293-311 in The Relevance of Charles Peirce, Eugene Freeman (ed.), Monist Library of Philosophy, La Salle, IL, 1983. Online.




"hypostatic abstraction" is owned by Jon Awbrey.
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See Also: prescisive abstraction, continuous predicate

Other names:  hypostasis, objectification, reification, subjectal abstraction
Also defines:  abstract object, formal object, hypostatic object
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Cross-references: transformation, arity, expressions, Charles Sanders Peirce, object, predicate, relation, proposition, information, operation
There are 9 references to this entry.

This is version 14 of hypostatic abstraction, born on 2008-03-12, modified 2009-06-04.
Object id is 10391, canonical name is HypostaticAbstraction.
Accessed 3568 times total.

Classification:
AMS MSC00A30 (General :: General and miscellaneous specific topics :: Philosophy of mathematics)
 03A05 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: Philosophical and critical)
 03B15 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: General logic :: Higher-order logic and type theory)
 03B22 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: General logic :: Abstract deductive systems)
 03B30 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: General logic :: Foundations of classical theories )
 03B42 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: General logic :: Logic of knowledge and belief)

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