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Ambiguity

Ambiguity is the type of meaning in which a phrase, statement, or resolution is not explicitly defined, making several interpretations, others describe it as a concept or statement that has no real reference. A common aspect of ambiguity is uncertainty. It is thus an attribute of any idea or statement whose intended meaning cannot be definitively resolved, according to a rule or process with a finite number of steps. (The prefix ambi- reflects the idea of "two", as in "two meanings".)

Sir John Tenniel's illustration of the Caterpillar for Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is noted for its ambiguous central figure, whose head can be viewed as being a human male's face with a pointed nose and chin, or as being the head end of an actual caterpillar, with the first two right "true" legs visible.[1]

The concept of ambiguity is generally contrasted with vagueness. In ambiguity, specific and distinct interpretations are permitted (although some may not be immediately obvious), whereas with vague information it is difficult to form any interpretation at the desired level of specificity.

Linguistic forms edit

Lexical ambiguity is contrasted with semantic ambiguity. The former represents a choice between a finite number of known and meaningful context-dependent interpretations. The latter represents a choice between any number of possible interpretations, none of which may have a standard agreed-upon meaning. This form of ambiguity is closely related to vagueness.

Ambiguity in human language is argued to reflect principles of efficient communication.[2][3] Languages that communicate efficiently will avoid sending information that is redundant with information provided in the context. This can be shown mathematically to result in a system that is ambiguous when context is neglected. In this way, ambiguity is viewed as a generally useful feature of a linguistic system.

Linguistic ambiguity can be a problem in law, because the interpretation of written documents and oral agreements is often of paramount importance.

 
Structural analysis of an ambiguous Spanish sentence:
Pepe vio a Pablo enfurecido.
Interpretation 1: When Pepe was angry, then he saw Pablo.
Interpretation 2: Pepe saw that Pablo was angry.
Here, the syntactic tree in figure represents interpretation 2.

Lexical ambiguity edit

The lexical ambiguity of a word or phrase applies to it having more than one meaning in the language to which the word belongs.[4] "Meaning" here refers to whatever should be represented by a good dictionary. For instance, the word "bank" has several distinct lexical definitions, including "financial institution" and "edge of a river". Or consider "apothecary". One could say "I bought herbs from the apothecary". This could mean one actually spoke to the apothecary (pharmacist) or went to the apothecary (pharmacy).

The context in which an ambiguous word is used often makes it clearer which of the meanings is intended. If, for instance, someone says "I put $100 in the bank", most people would not think someone used a shovel to dig in the mud. However, some linguistic contexts do not provide sufficient information to make a used word clearer.

Lexical ambiguity can be addressed by algorithmic methods that automatically associate the appropriate meaning with a word in context, a task referred to as word-sense disambiguation.

The use of multi-defined words requires the author or speaker to clarify their context, and sometimes elaborate on their specific intended meaning (in which case, a less ambiguous term should have been used). The goal of clear concise communication is that the receiver(s) have no misunderstanding about what was meant to be conveyed. An exception to this could include a politician whose "weasel words" and obfuscation are necessary to gain support from multiple constituents with mutually exclusive conflicting desires from his or her candidate of choice. Ambiguity is a powerful tool of political science.

More problematic are words whose multiple meanings express closely related concepts. "Good", for example, can mean "useful" or "functional" (That's a good hammer), "exemplary" (She's a good student), "pleasing" (This is good soup), "moral" (a good person versus the lesson to be learned from a story), "righteous", etc. "I have a good daughter" is not clear about which sense is intended. The various ways to apply prefixes and suffixes can also create ambiguity ("unlockable" can mean "capable of being opened" or "impossible to lock").

Semantic and syntactic ambiguity edit

 
Which is wet: the food, or the cat?

Semantic ambiguity occurs when a word, phrase or sentence, taken out of context, has more than one interpretation. In "We saw her duck" (example due to Richard Nordquist), the words "her duck" can refer either

  1. to the person's bird (the noun "duck", modified by the possessive pronoun "her"), or
  2. to a motion she made (the verb "duck", the subject of which is the objective pronoun "her", object of the verb "saw").[5]

Syntactic ambiguity arises when a sentence can have two (or more) different meanings because of the structure of the sentence—its syntax. This is often due to a modifying expression, such as a prepositional phrase, the application of which is unclear. "He ate the cookies on the couch", for example, could mean that he ate those cookies that were on the couch (as opposed to those that were on the table), or it could mean that he was sitting on the couch when he ate the cookies. "To get in, you will need an entrance fee of $10 or your voucher and your drivers' license." This could mean that you need EITHER ten dollars OR BOTH your voucher and your license. Or it could mean that you need your license AND you need EITHER ten dollars OR a voucher. Only rewriting the sentence, or placing appropriate punctuation can resolve a syntactic ambiguity.[5] For the notion of, and theoretic results about, syntactic ambiguity in artificial, formal languages (such as computer programming languages), see Ambiguous grammar.

Usually, semantic and syntactic ambiguity go hand in hand. The sentence "We saw her duck" is also syntactically ambiguous. Conversely, a sentence like "He ate the cookies on the couch" is also semantically ambiguous. Rarely, but occasionally, the different parsings of a syntactically ambiguous phrase result in the same meaning. For example, the command "Cook, cook!" can be parsed as "Cook (noun used as vocative), cook (imperative verb form)!", but also as "Cook (imperative verb form), cook (noun used as vocative)!". It is more common that a syntactically unambiguous phrase has a semantic ambiguity; for example, the lexical ambiguity in "Your boss is a funny man" is purely semantic, leading to the response "Funny ha-ha or funny peculiar?"

Spoken language can contain many more types of ambiguities that are called phonological ambiguities, where there is more than one way to compose a set of sounds into words. For example, "ice cream" and "I scream". Such ambiguity is generally resolved according to the context. A mishearing of such, based on incorrectly resolved ambiguity, is called a mondegreen.

Philosophy edit

Philosophers (and other users of logic) spend a lot of time and effort searching for and removing (or intentionally adding) ambiguity in arguments because it can lead to incorrect conclusions and can be used to deliberately conceal bad arguments. For example, a politician might say, "I oppose taxes which hinder economic growth", an example of a glittering generality. Some will think they oppose taxes in general because they hinder economic growth. Others may think they oppose only those taxes that they believe will hinder economic growth. In writing, the sentence can be rewritten to reduce possible misinterpretation, either by adding a comma after "taxes" (to convey the first sense) or by changing "which" to "that" (to convey the second sense) or by rewriting it in other ways. The devious politician hopes that each constituent will interpret the statement in the most desirable way, and think the politician supports everyone's opinion. However, the opposite can also be true—an opponent can turn a positive statement into a bad one if the speaker uses ambiguity (intentionally or not). The logical fallacies of amphiboly and equivocation rely heavily on the use of ambiguous words and phrases.

In continental philosophy (particularly phenomenology and existentialism), there is much greater tolerance of ambiguity, as it is generally seen as an integral part of the human condition. Martin Heidegger argued that the relation between the subject and object is ambiguous, as is the relation of mind and body, and part and whole. In Heidegger's phenomenology, Dasein is always in a meaningful world, but there is always an underlying background for every instance of signification. Thus, although some things may be certain, they have little to do with Dasein's sense of care and existential anxiety, e.g., in the face of death. In calling his work Being and Nothingness an "essay in phenomenological ontology" Jean-Paul Sartre follows Heidegger in defining the human essence as ambiguous, or relating fundamentally to such ambiguity. Simone de Beauvoir tries to base an ethics on Heidegger's and Sartre's writings (The Ethics of Ambiguity), where she highlights the need to grapple with ambiguity: "as long as there have been philosophers and they have thought, most of them have tried to mask it ... And the ethics which they have proposed to their disciples has always pursued the same goal. It has been a matter of eliminating the ambiguity by making oneself pure inwardness or pure externality, by escaping from the sensible world or being engulfed by it, by yielding to eternity or enclosing oneself in the pure moment." Ethics cannot be based on the authoritative certainty given by mathematics and logic, or prescribed directly from the empirical findings of science. She states: "Since we do not succeed in fleeing it, let us, therefore, try to look the truth in the face. Let us try to assume our fundamental ambiguity. It is in the knowledge of the genuine conditions of our life that we must draw our strength to live and our reason for acting". Other continental philosophers suggest that concepts such as life, nature, and sex are ambiguous. Corey Anton has argued that we cannot be certain what is separate from or unified with something else: language, he asserts, divides what is not, in fact, separate. Following Ernest Becker, he argues that the desire to 'authoritatively disambiguate' the world and existence has led to numerous ideologies and historical events such as genocide. On this basis, he argues that ethics must focus on 'dialectically integrating opposites' and balancing tension, rather than seeking a priori validation or certainty. Like the existentialists and phenomenologists, he sees the ambiguity of life as the basis of creativity.

Literature and rhetoric edit

In literature and rhetoric, ambiguity can be a useful tool. Groucho Marx's classic joke depends on a grammatical ambiguity for its humor, for example: "Last night I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas, I'll never know". Songs and poetry often rely on ambiguous words for artistic effect, as in the song title "Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue" (where "blue" can refer to the color, or to sadness).

In the narrative, ambiguity can be introduced in several ways: motive, plot, character. F. Scott Fitzgerald uses the latter type of ambiguity with notable effect in his novel The Great Gatsby.

Mathematical notation edit

Mathematical notation is a helpful tool that eliminates a lot of misunderstandings associated with natural language in physics and other sciences. Nonetheless, there are still some inherent ambiguities due to lexical, syntactic, and semantic reasons that persist in mathematical notation.

Names of functions edit

The ambiguity in the style of writing a function should not be confused with a multivalued function, which can (and should) be defined in a deterministic and unambiguous way. Several special functions still do not have established notations. Usually, the conversion to another notation requires to scale the argument or the resulting value; sometimes, the same name of the function is used, causing confusions. Examples of such underestablished functions:

Expressions edit

Ambiguous expressions often appear in physical and mathematical texts. It is common practice to omit multiplication signs in mathematical expressions. Also, it is common to give the same name to a variable and a function, for example,  . Then, if one sees  , there is no way to distinguish whether it means   multiplied by  , or function   evaluated at argument equal to  . In each case of use of such notations, the reader is supposed to be able to perform the deduction and reveal the true meaning.

Creators of algorithmic languages try to avoid ambiguities. Many algorithmic languages (C++ and Fortran) require the character * as symbol of multiplication. The Wolfram Language used in Mathematica allows the user to omit the multiplication symbol, but requires square brackets to indicate the argument of a function; square brackets are not allowed for grouping of expressions. Fortran, in addition, does not allow use of the same name (identifier) for different objects, for example, function and variable; in particular, the expression   is qualified as an error.

The order of operations may depend on the context. In most programming languages, the operations of division and multiplication have equal priority and are executed from left to right. Until the last century, many editorials assumed that multiplication is performed first, for example,   is interpreted as  ; in this case, the insertion of parentheses is required when translating the formulas to an algorithmic language. In addition, it is common to write an argument of a function without parenthesis, which also may lead to ambiguity. In the scientific journal style, one uses roman letters to denote elementary functions, whereas variables are written using italics. For example, in mathematical journals the expression   does not denote the sine function, but the product of the three variables  ,  ,  , although in the informal notation of a slide presentation it may stand for  .

Commas in multi-component subscripts and superscripts are sometimes omitted; this is also potentially ambiguous notation. For example, in the notation  , the reader can only infer from the context whether it means a single-index object, taken with the subscript equal to product of variables  ,   and  , or it is an indication to a trivalent tensor.

Examples of potentially confusing ambiguous mathematical expressions edit

An expression such as   can be understood to mean either   or  . Often the author's intention can be understood from the context, in cases where only one of the two makes sense, but an ambiguity like this should be avoided, for example by writing   or  .

The expression   means   in several texts, though it might be thought to mean  , since   commonly means  . Conversely,   might seem to mean  , as this exponentiation notation usually denotes function iteration: in general,   means  . However, for trigonometric and hyperbolic functions, this notation conventionally means exponentiation of the result of function application.

The expression   can be interpreted as meaning  ; however, it is more commonly understood to mean  .

Notations in quantum optics and quantum mechanics edit

It is common to define the coherent states in quantum optics with   and states with fixed number of photons with  . Then, there is an "unwritten rule": the state is coherent if there are more Greek characters than Latin characters in the argument, and  -photon state if the Latin characters dominate. The ambiguity becomes even worse, if   is used for the states with certain value of the coordinate, and   means the state with certain value of the momentum, which may be used in books on quantum mechanics. Such ambiguities easily lead to confusions, especially if some normalized adimensional, dimensionless variables are used. Expression   may mean a state with single photon, or the coherent state with mean amplitude equal to 1, or state with momentum equal to unity, and so on. The reader is supposed to guess from the context.

Ambiguous terms in physics and mathematics edit

Some physical quantities do not yet have established notations; their value (and sometimes even dimension, as in the case of the Einstein coefficients), depends on the system of notations. Many terms are ambiguous. Each use of an ambiguous term should be preceded by the definition, suitable for a specific case. Just like Ludwig Wittgenstein states in Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus: "... Only in the context of a proposition has a name meaning."[7]

A highly confusing term is gain. For example, the sentence "the gain of a system should be doubled", without context, means close to nothing.

  • It may mean that the ratio of the output voltage of an electric circuit to the input voltage should be doubled.
  • It may mean that the ratio of the output power of an electric or optical circuit to the input power should be doubled.
  • It may mean that the gain of the laser medium should be doubled, for example, doubling the population of the upper laser level in a quasi-two level system (assuming negligible absorption of the ground-state).

The term intensity is ambiguous when applied to light. The term can refer to any of irradiance, luminous intensity, radiant intensity, or radiance, depending on the background of the person using the term.

Also, confusions may be related with the use of atomic percent as measure of concentration of a dopant, or resolution of an imaging system, as measure of the size of the smallest detail that still can be resolved at the background of statistical noise. See also Accuracy and precision.

The Berry paradox arises as a result of systematic ambiguity in the meaning of terms such as "definable" or "nameable". Terms of this kind give rise to vicious circle fallacies. Other terms with this type of ambiguity are: satisfiable, true, false, function, property, class, relation, cardinal, and ordinal.[8]

Mathematical interpretation of ambiguity edit

 
The Necker cube and impossible cube, an underdetermined and overdetermined object, respectively.

In mathematics and logic, ambiguity can be considered to be an instance of the logical concept of underdetermination—for example,   leaves open what the value of   is—while its opposite[further explanation needed] is a self-contradiction, also called inconsistency, paradoxicalness, or oxymoron, or in mathematics an inconsistent system—such as  , which has no solution.

Logical ambiguity and self-contradiction is analogous to visual ambiguity and impossible objects, such as the Necker cube and impossible cube, or many of the drawings of M. C. Escher.[9]

Constructed language edit

Some languages have been created with the intention of avoiding ambiguity, especially lexical ambiguity. Lojban and Loglan are two related languages that have been created for this, focusing chiefly on syntactic ambiguity as well. The languages can be both spoken and written. These languages are intended to provide a greater technical precision over big natural languages, although historically, such attempts at language improvement have been criticized. Languages composed from many diverse sources contain much ambiguity and inconsistency. The many exceptions to syntax and semantic rules are time-consuming and difficult to learn.

Biology edit

In structural biology, ambiguity has been recognized as a problem for studying protein conformations.[10] The analysis of a protein three-dimensional structure consists in dividing the macromolecule into subunits called domains. The difficulty of this task arises from the fact that different definitions of what a domain is can be used (e.g. folding autonomy, function, thermodynamic stability, or domain motions), which sometimes results in a single protein having different—yet equally valid—domain assignments.

Christianity and Judaism edit

Christianity and Judaism employ the concept of paradox synonymously with "ambiguity". Many Christians and Jews endorse Rudolf Otto's description of the sacred as 'mysterium tremendum et fascinans', the awe-inspiring mystery that fascinates humans.[dubious ] The apocryphal Book of Judith is noted for the "ingenious ambiguity"[11] expressed by its heroine; for example, she says to the villain of the story, Holofernes, "my lord will not fail to achieve his purposes", without specifying whether my lord refers to the villain or to God.[12][13]

The orthodox Catholic writer G. K. Chesterton regularly employed paradox to tease out the meanings in common concepts that he found ambiguous or to reveal meaning often overlooked or forgotten in common phrases: the title of one of his most famous books, Orthodoxy (1908), itself employed such a paradox.[14]

Music edit

In music, pieces or sections that confound expectations and may be or are interpreted simultaneously in different ways are ambiguous, such as some polytonality, polymeter, other ambiguous meters or rhythms, and ambiguous phrasing, or (Stein 2005, p. 79) any aspect of music. The music of Africa is often purposely ambiguous. To quote Sir Donald Francis Tovey (1935, p. 195), "Theorists are apt to vex themselves with vain efforts to remove uncertainty just where it has a high aesthetic value."

Visual art edit

 
This image can be interpreted three ways: as the letters "K B", as the mathematical inequality "1 < 13", or as the letters "V D" with their mirror image.[10]

In visual art, certain images are visually ambiguous, such as the Necker cube, which can be interpreted in two ways. Perceptions of such objects remain stable for a time, then may flip, a phenomenon called multistable perception. The opposite of such ambiguous images are impossible objects.[15]

Pictures or photographs may also be ambiguous at the semantic level: the visual image is unambiguous, but the meaning and narrative may be ambiguous: is a certain facial expression one of excitement or fear, for instance?

Social psychology and the bystander effect edit

In social psychology, ambiguity is a factor used in determining peoples' responses to various situations. High levels of ambiguity in an emergency (e.g. an unconscious man lying on a park bench) make witnesses less likely to offer any sort of assistance, due to the fear that they may have misinterpreted the situation and acted unnecessarily. Alternately, non-ambiguous emergencies (e.g. an injured person verbally asking for help) elicit more consistent intervention and assistance. With regard to the bystander effect, studies have shown that emergencies deemed ambiguous trigger the appearance of the classic bystander effect (wherein more witnesses decrease the likelihood of any of them helping) far more than non-ambiguous emergencies.[16]

Computer science edit

In computer science, the SI prefixes kilo-, mega- and giga- were historically used in certain contexts to mean either the first three powers of 1024 (1024, 10242 and 10243) contrary to the metric system in which these units unambiguously mean one thousand, one million, and one billion. This usage is particularly prevalent with electronic memory devices (e.g. DRAM) addressed directly by a binary machine register where a decimal interpretation makes no practical sense.

Subsequently, the Ki, Mi, and Gi prefixes were introduced so that binary prefixes could be written explicitly, also rendering k, M, and G unambiguous in texts conforming to the new standard—this led to a new ambiguity in engineering documents lacking outward trace of the binary prefixes (necessarily indicating the new style) as to whether the usage of k, M, and G remains ambiguous (old style) or not (new style). 1 M (where M is ambiguously 1000000 or 1048576) is less uncertain than the engineering value 1.0×106 (defined to designate the interval 950000 to 1050000). As non-volatile storage devices begin to exceed 1 GB in capacity (where the ambiguity begins to routinely impact the second significant digit), GB and TB almost always mean 109 and 1012 bytes.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "And do you see its long nose and chin? At least, they look exactly like a nose and chin, that is don't they? But they really are two of its legs. You know a Caterpillar has got quantities of legs: you can see more of them, further down." Carroll, Lewis. The Nursery "Alice". Dover Publications (1966), p 27.
  2. ^ Piantadosi, Steven; Tily, Hal; Gibson, Edward (2012). "The communicative function of ambiguity in language". Cognition. 122 (3): 280–291. doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2011.10.004. hdl:1721.1/102465. PMID 22192697. S2CID 13726095.
  3. ^ Finn, Emily (19 January 2012). "The advantage of ambiguity". MIT Press.
  4. ^ Steven L. Small; Garrison W Cottrell; Michael K Tanenhaus (22 October 2013). Lexical Ambiguity Resolution: Perspective from Psycholinguistics, Neuropsychology and Artificial Intelligence. Elsevier Science. ISBN 978-0-08-051013-2.
  5. ^ a b Critical Thinking, 10th ed., Ch 3, Moore, Brooke N. and Parker, Richard. McGraw-Hill, 2012
  6. ^ a b Abramovits, M.; Stegun, I. Handbook on mathematical functions. p. 228.
  7. ^ Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1999). Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. Dover Publications Inc. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-486-40445-5.
  8. ^ Russell/Whitehead, Principia Mathematica
  9. ^ Goldstein, Laurence (1996). "Reflexivity, Contradiction, Paradox and M. C. Escher". Leonardo. 29 (4): 299–308. doi:10.2307/1576313. JSTOR 1576313. S2CID 191403643.
  10. ^ a b Postic, Guillaume; Ghouzam, Yassine; Chebrek, Romain; Gelly, Jean-Christophe (2017). "An ambiguity principle for assigning protein structural domains". Science Advances. 3 (1): e1600552. Bibcode:2017SciA....3E0552P. doi:10.1126/sciadv.1600552. ISSN 2375-2548. PMC 5235333. PMID 28097215.
  11. ^ Jerusalem Bible (1966), footnote a at Judith 11:5
  12. ^ Judith 11:6
  13. ^ deSilva, David A. (20 February 2018). Introducing the Apocrypha: Message, Context, and Significance. Baker Books. p. 102. ISBN 978-1-4934-1307-2.
  14. ^ Chesterton, G. K., Orthodoxy, especially p. 32
  15. ^ Seckel, Al (2009). Optical Illusions: The Science of Visual Perception. Canada: Firefly Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1554071722.
  16. ^ Mason, David; Allen, Bem P. (1976). "The Bystander Effect as a Function of Ambiguity and Emergency Character". The Journal of Social Psychology. 100: 145–146. doi:10.1080/00224545.1976.9711917.

External links edit

ambiguity, other, uses, disambiguation, ambiguous, redirects, here, film, ambiguous, film, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writing, better, articles, suggestions, september, 2017, learn, when, remove,. For other uses see Ambiguity disambiguation Ambiguous redirects here For the film see Ambiguous film This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions September 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ambiguity is the type of meaning in which a phrase statement or resolution is not explicitly defined making several interpretations others describe it as a concept or statement that has no real reference A common aspect of ambiguity is uncertainty It is thus an attribute of any idea or statement whose intended meaning cannot be definitively resolved according to a rule or process with a finite number of steps The prefix ambi reflects the idea of two as in two meanings Sir John Tenniel s illustration of the Caterpillar for Lewis Carroll s Alice s Adventures in Wonderland is noted for its ambiguous central figure whose head can be viewed as being a human male s face with a pointed nose and chin or as being the head end of an actual caterpillar with the first two right true legs visible 1 The concept of ambiguity is generally contrasted with vagueness In ambiguity specific and distinct interpretations are permitted although some may not be immediately obvious whereas with vague information it is difficult to form any interpretation at the desired level of specificity Contents 1 Linguistic forms 1 1 Lexical ambiguity 1 2 Semantic and syntactic ambiguity 2 Philosophy 3 Literature and rhetoric 4 Mathematical notation 4 1 Names of functions 4 2 Expressions 4 3 Examples of potentially confusing ambiguous mathematical expressions 4 4 Notations in quantum optics and quantum mechanics 4 5 Ambiguous terms in physics and mathematics 5 Mathematical interpretation of ambiguity 6 Constructed language 7 Biology 8 Christianity and Judaism 9 Music 10 Visual art 11 Social psychology and the bystander effect 12 Computer science 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksLinguistic forms editLexical ambiguity is contrasted with semantic ambiguity The former represents a choice between a finite number of known and meaningful context dependent interpretations The latter represents a choice between any number of possible interpretations none of which may have a standard agreed upon meaning This form of ambiguity is closely related to vagueness Ambiguity in human language is argued to reflect principles of efficient communication 2 3 Languages that communicate efficiently will avoid sending information that is redundant with information provided in the context This can be shown mathematically to result in a system that is ambiguous when context is neglected In this way ambiguity is viewed as a generally useful feature of a linguistic system Linguistic ambiguity can be a problem in law because the interpretation of written documents and oral agreements is often of paramount importance nbsp Structural analysis of an ambiguous Spanish sentence Pepe vio a Pablo enfurecido Interpretation 1 When Pepe was angry then he saw Pablo Interpretation 2 Pepe saw that Pablo was angry Here the syntactic tree in figure represents interpretation 2 Lexical ambiguity edit The lexical ambiguity of a word or phrase applies to it having more than one meaning in the language to which the word belongs 4 Meaning here refers to whatever should be represented by a good dictionary For instance the word bank has several distinct lexical definitions including financial institution and edge of a river Or consider apothecary One could say I bought herbs from the apothecary This could mean one actually spoke to the apothecary pharmacist or went to the apothecary pharmacy The context in which an ambiguous word is used often makes it clearer which of the meanings is intended If for instance someone says I put 100 in the bank most people would not think someone used a shovel to dig in the mud However some linguistic contexts do not provide sufficient information to make a used word clearer Lexical ambiguity can be addressed by algorithmic methods that automatically associate the appropriate meaning with a word in context a task referred to as word sense disambiguation The use of multi defined words requires the author or speaker to clarify their context and sometimes elaborate on their specific intended meaning in which case a less ambiguous term should have been used The goal of clear concise communication is that the receiver s have no misunderstanding about what was meant to be conveyed An exception to this could include a politician whose weasel words and obfuscation are necessary to gain support from multiple constituents with mutually exclusive conflicting desires from his or her candidate of choice Ambiguity is a powerful tool of political science More problematic are words whose multiple meanings express closely related concepts Good for example can mean useful or functional That s a good hammer exemplary She s a good student pleasing This is good soup moral a good person versus the lesson to be learned from a story righteous etc I have a good daughter is not clear about which sense is intended The various ways to apply prefixes and suffixes can also create ambiguity unlockable can mean capable of being opened or impossible to lock Semantic and syntactic ambiguity edit nbsp Which is wet the food or the cat Semantic ambiguity occurs when a word phrase or sentence taken out of context has more than one interpretation In We saw her duck example due to Richard Nordquist the words her duck can refer either to the person s bird the noun duck modified by the possessive pronoun her or to a motion she made the verb duck the subject of which is the objective pronoun her object of the verb saw 5 Syntactic ambiguity arises when a sentence can have two or more different meanings because of the structure of the sentence its syntax This is often due to a modifying expression such as a prepositional phrase the application of which is unclear He ate the cookies on the couch for example could mean that he ate those cookies that were on the couch as opposed to those that were on the table or it could mean that he was sitting on the couch when he ate the cookies To get in you will need an entrance fee of 10 or your voucher and your drivers license This could mean that you need EITHER ten dollars OR BOTH your voucher and your license Or it could mean that you need your license AND you need EITHER ten dollars OR a voucher Only rewriting the sentence or placing appropriate punctuation can resolve a syntactic ambiguity 5 For the notion of and theoretic results about syntactic ambiguity in artificial formal languages such as computer programming languages see Ambiguous grammar Usually semantic and syntactic ambiguity go hand in hand The sentence We saw her duck is also syntactically ambiguous Conversely a sentence like He ate the cookies on the couch is also semantically ambiguous Rarely but occasionally the different parsings of a syntactically ambiguous phrase result in the same meaning For example the command Cook cook can be parsed as Cook noun used as vocative cook imperative verb form but also as Cook imperative verb form cook noun used as vocative It is more common that a syntactically unambiguous phrase has a semantic ambiguity for example the lexical ambiguity in Your boss is a funny man is purely semantic leading to the response Funny ha ha or funny peculiar Spoken language can contain many more types of ambiguities that are called phonological ambiguities where there is more than one way to compose a set of sounds into words For example ice cream and I scream Such ambiguity is generally resolved according to the context A mishearing of such based on incorrectly resolved ambiguity is called a mondegreen Philosophy editPhilosophers and other users of logic spend a lot of time and effort searching for and removing or intentionally adding ambiguity in arguments because it can lead to incorrect conclusions and can be used to deliberately conceal bad arguments For example a politician might say I oppose taxes which hinder economic growth an example of a glittering generality Some will think they oppose taxes in general because they hinder economic growth Others may think they oppose only those taxes that they believe will hinder economic growth In writing the sentence can be rewritten to reduce possible misinterpretation either by adding a comma after taxes to convey the first sense or by changing which to that to convey the second sense or by rewriting it in other ways The devious politician hopes that each constituent will interpret the statement in the most desirable way and think the politician supports everyone s opinion However the opposite can also be true an opponent can turn a positive statement into a bad one if the speaker uses ambiguity intentionally or not The logical fallacies of amphiboly and equivocation rely heavily on the use of ambiguous words and phrases In continental philosophy particularly phenomenology and existentialism there is much greater tolerance of ambiguity as it is generally seen as an integral part of the human condition Martin Heidegger argued that the relation between the subject and object is ambiguous as is the relation of mind and body and part and whole In Heidegger s phenomenology Dasein is always in a meaningful world but there is always an underlying background for every instance of signification Thus although some things may be certain they have little to do with Dasein s sense of care and existential anxiety e g in the face of death In calling his work Being and Nothingness an essay in phenomenological ontology Jean Paul Sartre follows Heidegger in defining the human essence as ambiguous or relating fundamentally to such ambiguity Simone de Beauvoir tries to base an ethics on Heidegger s and Sartre s writings The Ethics of Ambiguity where she highlights the need to grapple with ambiguity as long as there have been philosophers and they have thought most of them have tried to mask it And the ethics which they have proposed to their disciples has always pursued the same goal It has been a matter of eliminating the ambiguity by making oneself pure inwardness or pure externality by escaping from the sensible world or being engulfed by it by yielding to eternity or enclosing oneself in the pure moment Ethics cannot be based on the authoritative certainty given by mathematics and logic or prescribed directly from the empirical findings of science She states Since we do not succeed in fleeing it let us therefore try to look the truth in the face Let us try to assume our fundamental ambiguity It is in the knowledge of the genuine conditions of our life that we must draw our strength to live and our reason for acting Other continental philosophers suggest that concepts such as life nature and sex are ambiguous Corey Anton has argued that we cannot be certain what is separate from or unified with something else language he asserts divides what is not in fact separate Following Ernest Becker he argues that the desire to authoritatively disambiguate the world and existence has led to numerous ideologies and historical events such as genocide On this basis he argues that ethics must focus on dialectically integrating opposites and balancing tension rather than seeking a priori validation or certainty Like the existentialists and phenomenologists he sees the ambiguity of life as the basis of creativity Literature and rhetoric editIn literature and rhetoric ambiguity can be a useful tool Groucho Marx s classic joke depends on a grammatical ambiguity for its humor for example Last night I shot an elephant in my pajamas How he got in my pajamas I ll never know Songs and poetry often rely on ambiguous words for artistic effect as in the song title Don t It Make My Brown Eyes Blue where blue can refer to the color or to sadness In the narrative ambiguity can be introduced in several ways motive plot character F Scott Fitzgerald uses the latter type of ambiguity with notable effect in his novel The Great Gatsby Mathematical notation editMathematical notation is a helpful tool that eliminates a lot of misunderstandings associated with natural language in physics and other sciences Nonetheless there are still some inherent ambiguities due to lexical syntactic and semantic reasons that persist in mathematical notation Names of functions edit The ambiguity in the style of writing a function should not be confused with a multivalued function which can and should be defined in a deterministic and unambiguous way Several special functions still do not have established notations Usually the conversion to another notation requires to scale the argument or the resulting value sometimes the same name of the function is used causing confusions Examples of such underestablished functions Sinc function Elliptic integral of the third kind translating elliptic integral form MAPLE to Mathematica one should replace the second argument to its square dealing with complex values this may cause problems Exponential integral 6 Hermite polynomial 6 775 Expressions edit Ambiguous expressions often appear in physical and mathematical texts It is common practice to omit multiplication signs in mathematical expressions Also it is common to give the same name to a variable and a function for example f f x displaystyle f f x nbsp Then if one sees f f y 1 displaystyle f f y 1 nbsp there is no way to distinguish whether it means f f x displaystyle f f x nbsp multiplied by y 1 displaystyle y 1 nbsp or function f displaystyle f nbsp evaluated at argument equal to y 1 displaystyle y 1 nbsp In each case of use of such notations the reader is supposed to be able to perform the deduction and reveal the true meaning Creators of algorithmic languages try to avoid ambiguities Many algorithmic languages C and Fortran require the character as symbol of multiplication The Wolfram Language used in Mathematica allows the user to omit the multiplication symbol but requires square brackets to indicate the argument of a function square brackets are not allowed for grouping of expressions Fortran in addition does not allow use of the same name identifier for different objects for example function and variable in particular the expression f f x displaystyle f f x nbsp is qualified as an error The order of operations may depend on the context In most programming languages the operations of division and multiplication have equal priority and are executed from left to right Until the last century many editorials assumed that multiplication is performed first for example a b c displaystyle a bc nbsp is interpreted as a b c displaystyle a bc nbsp in this case the insertion of parentheses is required when translating the formulas to an algorithmic language In addition it is common to write an argument of a function without parenthesis which also may lead to ambiguity In the scientific journal style one uses roman letters to denote elementary functions whereas variables are written using italics For example in mathematical journals the expression s i n displaystyle sin nbsp does not denote the sine function but the product of the three variables s displaystyle s nbsp i displaystyle i nbsp n displaystyle n nbsp although in the informal notation of a slide presentation it may stand for sin displaystyle sin nbsp Commas in multi component subscripts and superscripts are sometimes omitted this is also potentially ambiguous notation For example in the notation T m n k displaystyle T mnk nbsp the reader can only infer from the context whether it means a single index object taken with the subscript equal to product of variables m displaystyle m nbsp n displaystyle n nbsp and k displaystyle k nbsp or it is an indication to a trivalent tensor Examples of potentially confusing ambiguous mathematical expressions edit An expression such as sin 2 a 2 displaystyle sin 2 alpha 2 nbsp can be understood to mean either sin a 2 2 displaystyle sin alpha 2 2 nbsp or sin a 2 2 displaystyle sin alpha 2 2 nbsp Often the author s intention can be understood from the context in cases where only one of the two makes sense but an ambiguity like this should be avoided for example by writing sin 2 a 2 displaystyle sin 2 alpha 2 nbsp or 1 2 sin 2 a textstyle frac 1 2 sin 2 alpha nbsp The expression sin 1 a displaystyle sin 1 alpha nbsp means arcsin a displaystyle arcsin alpha nbsp in several texts though it might be thought to mean sin a 1 displaystyle sin alpha 1 nbsp since sin n a displaystyle sin n alpha nbsp commonly means sin a n displaystyle sin alpha n nbsp Conversely sin 2 a displaystyle sin 2 alpha nbsp might seem to mean sin sin a displaystyle sin sin alpha nbsp as this exponentiation notation usually denotes function iteration in general f 2 x displaystyle f 2 x nbsp means f f x displaystyle f f x nbsp However for trigonometric and hyperbolic functions this notation conventionally means exponentiation of the result of function application The expression a 2 b displaystyle a 2b nbsp can be interpreted as meaning a 2 b displaystyle a 2 b nbsp however it is more commonly understood to mean a 2 b displaystyle a 2b nbsp Notations in quantum optics and quantum mechanics edit It is common to define the coherent states in quantum optics with a displaystyle alpha rangle nbsp and states with fixed number of photons with n displaystyle n rangle nbsp Then there is an unwritten rule the state is coherent if there are more Greek characters than Latin characters in the argument and n displaystyle n nbsp photon state if the Latin characters dominate The ambiguity becomes even worse if x displaystyle x rangle nbsp is used for the states with certain value of the coordinate and p displaystyle p rangle nbsp means the state with certain value of the momentum which may be used in books on quantum mechanics Such ambiguities easily lead to confusions especially if some normalized adimensional dimensionless variables are used Expression 1 displaystyle 1 rangle nbsp may mean a state with single photon or the coherent state with mean amplitude equal to 1 or state with momentum equal to unity and so on The reader is supposed to guess from the context Ambiguous terms in physics and mathematics edit Some physical quantities do not yet have established notations their value and sometimes even dimension as in the case of the Einstein coefficients depends on the system of notations Many terms are ambiguous Each use of an ambiguous term should be preceded by the definition suitable for a specific case Just like Ludwig Wittgenstein states in Tractatus Logico Philosophicus Only in the context of a proposition has a name meaning 7 A highly confusing term is gain For example the sentence the gain of a system should be doubled without context means close to nothing It may mean that the ratio of the output voltage of an electric circuit to the input voltage should be doubled It may mean that the ratio of the output power of an electric or optical circuit to the input power should be doubled It may mean that the gain of the laser medium should be doubled for example doubling the population of the upper laser level in a quasi two level system assuming negligible absorption of the ground state The term intensity is ambiguous when applied to light The term can refer to any of irradiance luminous intensity radiant intensity or radiance depending on the background of the person using the term Also confusions may be related with the use of atomic percent as measure of concentration of a dopant or resolution of an imaging system as measure of the size of the smallest detail that still can be resolved at the background of statistical noise See also Accuracy and precision The Berry paradox arises as a result of systematic ambiguity in the meaning of terms such as definable or nameable Terms of this kind give rise to vicious circle fallacies Other terms with this type of ambiguity are satisfiable true false function property class relation cardinal and ordinal 8 Mathematical interpretation of ambiguity edit nbsp The Necker cube and impossible cube an underdetermined and overdetermined object respectively In mathematics and logic ambiguity can be considered to be an instance of the logical concept of underdetermination for example X Y displaystyle X Y nbsp leaves open what the value of X displaystyle X nbsp is while its opposite further explanation needed is a self contradiction also called inconsistency paradoxicalness or oxymoron or in mathematics an inconsistent system such as X 2 X 3 displaystyle X 2 X 3 nbsp which has no solution Logical ambiguity and self contradiction is analogous to visual ambiguity and impossible objects such as the Necker cube and impossible cube or many of the drawings of M C Escher 9 Constructed language editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some languages have been created with the intention of avoiding ambiguity especially lexical ambiguity Lojban and Loglan are two related languages that have been created for this focusing chiefly on syntactic ambiguity as well The languages can be both spoken and written These languages are intended to provide a greater technical precision over big natural languages although historically such attempts at language improvement have been criticized Languages composed from many diverse sources contain much ambiguity and inconsistency The many exceptions to syntax and semantic rules are time consuming and difficult to learn Biology editIn structural biology ambiguity has been recognized as a problem for studying protein conformations 10 The analysis of a protein three dimensional structure consists in dividing the macromolecule into subunits called domains The difficulty of this task arises from the fact that different definitions of what a domain is can be used e g folding autonomy function thermodynamic stability or domain motions which sometimes results in a single protein having different yet equally valid domain assignments Christianity and Judaism editChristianity and Judaism employ the concept of paradox synonymously with ambiguity Many Christians and Jews endorse Rudolf Otto s description of the sacred as mysterium tremendum et fascinans the awe inspiring mystery that fascinates humans dubious discuss The apocryphal Book of Judith is noted for the ingenious ambiguity 11 expressed by its heroine for example she says to the villain of the story Holofernes my lord will not fail to achieve his purposes without specifying whether my lord refers to the villain or to God 12 13 The orthodox Catholic writer G K Chesterton regularly employed paradox to tease out the meanings in common concepts that he found ambiguous or to reveal meaning often overlooked or forgotten in common phrases the title of one of his most famous books Orthodoxy 1908 itself employed such a paradox 14 Music editIn music pieces or sections that confound expectations and may be or are interpreted simultaneously in different ways are ambiguous such as some polytonality polymeter other ambiguous meters or rhythms and ambiguous phrasing or Stein 2005 p 79 any aspect of music The music of Africa is often purposely ambiguous To quote Sir Donald Francis Tovey 1935 p 195 Theorists are apt to vex themselves with vain efforts to remove uncertainty just where it has a high aesthetic value Visual art edit nbsp This image can be interpreted three ways as the letters K B as the mathematical inequality 1 lt 13 or as the letters V D with their mirror image 10 In visual art certain images are visually ambiguous such as the Necker cube which can be interpreted in two ways Perceptions of such objects remain stable for a time then may flip a phenomenon called multistable perception The opposite of such ambiguous images are impossible objects 15 Pictures or photographs may also be ambiguous at the semantic level the visual image is unambiguous but the meaning and narrative may be ambiguous is a certain facial expression one of excitement or fear for instance Social psychology and the bystander effect editIn social psychology ambiguity is a factor used in determining peoples responses to various situations High levels of ambiguity in an emergency e g an unconscious man lying on a park bench make witnesses less likely to offer any sort of assistance due to the fear that they may have misinterpreted the situation and acted unnecessarily Alternately non ambiguous emergencies e g an injured person verbally asking for help elicit more consistent intervention and assistance With regard to the bystander effect studies have shown that emergencies deemed ambiguous trigger the appearance of the classic bystander effect wherein more witnesses decrease the likelihood of any of them helping far more than non ambiguous emergencies 16 Computer science editIn computer science the SI prefixes kilo mega and giga were historically used in certain contexts to mean either the first three powers of 1024 1024 10242 and 10243 contrary to the metric system in which these units unambiguously mean one thousand one million and one billion This usage is particularly prevalent with electronic memory devices e g DRAM addressed directly by a binary machine register where a decimal interpretation makes no practical sense Subsequently the Ki Mi and Gi prefixes were introduced so that binary prefixes could be written explicitly also rendering k M and G unambiguous in texts conforming to the new standard this led to a new ambiguity in engineering documents lacking outward trace of the binary prefixes necessarily indicating the new style as to whether the usage of k M and G remains ambiguous old style or not new style 1 M where M is ambiguously 1000 000 or 1048 576 is less uncertain than the engineering value 1 0 106 defined to designate the interval 950000 to 1050 000 As non volatile storage devices begin to exceed 1 GB in capacity where the ambiguity begins to routinely impact the second significant digit GB and TB almost always mean 109 and 1012 bytes See also editAbbreviation Ambiguity law Ambiguity tolerance Amphibology Buzzword Decision problem Discrete mathematics Double entendre Equivocation Essentially contested concept Fallacy Formal fallacy Golden hammer Informal fallacy Pleonasm Self reference Semantics Uncertainty Volatility uncertainty complexity and ambiguity Word sense disambiguationReferences edit And do you see its long nose and chin At least they look exactly like a nose and chin that is don t they But they really are two of its legs You know a Caterpillar has got quantities of legs you can see more of them further down Carroll Lewis The Nursery Alice Dover Publications 1966 p 27 Piantadosi Steven Tily Hal Gibson Edward 2012 The communicative function of ambiguity in language Cognition 122 3 280 291 doi 10 1016 j cognition 2011 10 004 hdl 1721 1 102465 PMID 22192697 S2CID 13726095 Finn Emily 19 January 2012 The advantage of ambiguity MIT Press Steven L Small Garrison W Cottrell Michael K Tanenhaus 22 October 2013 Lexical Ambiguity Resolution Perspective from Psycholinguistics Neuropsychology and Artificial Intelligence Elsevier Science ISBN 978 0 08 051013 2 a b Critical Thinking 10th ed Ch 3 Moore Brooke N and Parker Richard McGraw Hill 2012 a b Abramovits M Stegun I Handbook on mathematical functions p 228 Wittgenstein Ludwig 1999 Tractatus Logico Philosophicus Dover Publications Inc p 39 ISBN 978 0 486 40445 5 Russell Whitehead Principia Mathematica Goldstein Laurence 1996 Reflexivity Contradiction Paradox and M C Escher Leonardo 29 4 299 308 doi 10 2307 1576313 JSTOR 1576313 S2CID 191403643 a b Postic Guillaume Ghouzam Yassine Chebrek Romain Gelly Jean Christophe 2017 An ambiguity principle for assigning protein structural domains Science Advances 3 1 e1600552 Bibcode 2017SciA 3E0552P doi 10 1126 sciadv 1600552 ISSN 2375 2548 PMC 5235333 PMID 28097215 Jerusalem Bible 1966 footnote a at Judith 11 5 Judith 11 6 deSilva David A 20 February 2018 Introducing the Apocrypha Message Context and Significance Baker Books p 102 ISBN 978 1 4934 1307 2 Chesterton G K Orthodoxy especially p 32 Seckel Al 2009 Optical Illusions The Science of Visual Perception Canada Firefly Books Ltd ISBN 978 1554071722 Mason David Allen Bem P 1976 The Bystander Effect as a Function of Ambiguity and Emergency Character The Journal of Social Psychology 100 145 146 doi 10 1080 00224545 1976 9711917 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Ambiguity nbsp Look up ambiguity in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Media related to Ambiguity at Wikimedia Commons Zalta Edward N ed Ambiguity Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Ambiguity at the Indiana Philosophy Ontology Project Ambiguity at PhilPapers Collection of Ambiguous or Inconsistent Incomplete Statements Leaving out ambiguities when writing Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ambiguity amp oldid 1189950177, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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