482 ON THE TRIADIC ARRANGEMENTS OF SEVEN AND FIFTEEN THINGS. [82
The order of the letters in a triad has been thus far disregarded. There are
some properties which depend upon considering the triads obtained by cyclical per
mutations of the three letters as identical, but distinct from the triads obtained by
a permutation of two letters, or inversion. Thus abc, bca, cab are to be considered
as identical inter se, but distinct from the triads acb, cba, bac, which are also identical
inter se. I write down the system (equivalent, as far as the mere combination of the
letters is concerned, to the system at the commencement of this paper)
ade, afg, bdf, bge, cdg, cef, cba,
derived, it is to be observed, from a pair of triads, ade, afg, by a cyclical permutation of
the e, f g, and by successively changing the a into b and into c, the remaining triad
of the system being the letters a, b, c taken in an inverse order. Let it be proposed
to derive the system in the same manner from any other two triads of the system;
for instance, from the triads acb, ade. The process of derivation gives
acb, ade, gcd, geb, fee, fbd, fga, ( x )
which is, in fact, the original system. But attempt to derive the system from the
two triads ebg, efc, the process of derivation gives
ebg, efc, dbf deg, abc, agf ade,
which is not the original system, inasmuch as the triads dbf deg, abc, agf are in
versions of the triads bdf, cdg, cba, afg of the original system. The point to be
attended to, however, is, that both triads of the pair dbf deg, or of the pair abc,
agf are inversions of the triads of the corresponding pair in the original system;
the pair is either reproduced (as the pair efc, dbf), or there is an inversion of both
triads. Where there is no such inversion of the triads of a pair, the system may
be said to be properly reproduced; and where there is inversion of the triads of one
or more pairs, to be improperly reproduced. There is no difficulty in seeing that the
system is properly reproduced from a pair of triads containing in common any one
of the letters a, b, c or d, and improperly reproduced from pairs of triads containing
in common any one of the letters d, e or f It is owing to the reproduction, proper
or improper, of the system from any pair of duads that it is possible to form a
system of “ octaves ” analogous to the quaternions of Sir William Hamilton; the
impossibility of a corresponding system of fifteen imaginary quantities arises from the
circumstance of there being always, in whatever manner the system of triads is
formed, an inversion of a single triad of some one or more pairs of triads containing
a letter in common. When the system is considered as successively derived from
different pairs,, the system is not according to the previous definition reproduced either
properly or improperly. A system of triads having the necessary properties with
respect to the mere combination of the letters (viz. that a/3y and aSe being any two
1 The order of the letters /, g is selected so as to reproduce the original system so far as the mere
combination of the letters is concerned.