**Links to**: [[All things mirrored]], [[Del Horror en la Copia]], [[Symmetry]], [[Mirror]], [[Homotopy Type Theory]], [[Ontology]], [[Analogy]], [[Homotopy]], [[Identity]], [[Univalence principle]], [[Equivalence and difference]], [[Generalization]], [[Abstraction]], [[Platonism]], [[Lying]], [[Likeness]]. _See also_: [[Electron micrograph of mirror surface]].   >“The first and simplest kind of truth is the resemblance of a copy. It may be roughly stated to consist in a sameness of predicates. [. . .] A false copy is one which claims to resemble an object which it does not resemble. But this never fully occurs, for two reasons; in the first place, the falsehood does not lie in the copy itself but in the _claim_ which is made for it, in the _superscription_ for instance; in the second place, as there must be _some_ resemblance between the copy and its object, this falsehood cannot be entire. Hence there is no absolute truth or falsehood of copies.” Peirce, first Harvard lecture, W 1:169–170. (p. 19).   >“Copies are therefore not bearers of truth-values, indices (like a person’s name) are conventional and do not have genuine generality, so not fit for logic either. Logic deals with symbols (ibid., p. 20).”