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by evincarofautumn
5148 days ago
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It’s just a linguistic phenomenon. In English, at least, the prefix meta- denotes not only a single level of metaness (if you will) but also two levels or more, e.g., meta-metaclass → metaclass. So the “closed loop” is there only for convenience, like saying “and so on”. If we were being precise, we would explicitly denote the level at which we were working. However, we tend not to do so for two reasons: first, that we rarely work with n-meta things for high n; and second, that being explicit is just plain unwieldy. It’s for the same reason that we follow line, square, and cube with 4-cube, 5-cube, &c. |
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however, once you hit that second level of abstraction, you have almost invariably added enough flexibility that the range of templates your template-maker can make includes templates for other template makers. that is, it's not just a quirk of linguistics that a meta-meta-template-maker is called a meta-template-maker, they really do tend to be objects on the same level of abstraction and flexibility.