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This is a work in progress - all rights reserved.
Copyright © 2006-2007 Tony Giovia
13. Maps and Territories
13.1 - A map defines a territory or another map. (Definition)
13.2 - When a map defines another map, it is equivalent to a rule defining a level. (Definition)
13.3 - When a map defines a three-dimensional object, it is equivalent to a rule defining a territory. (Definition)
13.4 - The context “Nothingness” exists as a map, but it is not identical to the three-dimensional territory it describes.
13.5 - Maps and territories exist in a relationship with each other, but they are not dimensionally equivalent.
13.6 - Maps and territories exist in a relationship with each other, but intervening levels may be required to complete the relationship.
This further defines the relationship between Ideas and physical objects. It is intended to clarify the common observation “The map is not the territory.” in terms of Ideas and physical three-dimensional objects.
Maps can define other maps or they can define three-dimensional objects. This is what we mean by every rule is a level, and every level is a rule. A level whose rule includes other rules is a map of the other rules – other logical contexts. In turn, one or more of the included rules can refer to a territory – a three-dimensional object.
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