Modalities in vector logic (Q1344440): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 18:29, 10 December 2024
scientific article
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English | Modalities in vector logic |
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Modalities in vector logic (English)
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27 August 1995
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The core idea of vector logic is to represent the classical truth values \(W\), \(F\) as two linearly independent vectors \(a_ 1\), \(a_ 2\) of some real vector space, and to represent truth functions by matrices. This idea is first extended to the many-valued case in taking the convex hull of \(\{a_ 1, a_ 2\}\) as set of truth degrees. On this basis, secondly, the old idea of Łukasiewicz and Tarski, to define \(\lozenge p=_{\text{def}}\neg p\to p\) in a 3-valued logic, is adapted in such a way that \(\lozenge p\) is defined truth-functionally as the limit of a suitable sequence of vectors. There is no discussion concerning the existence of these limits. But there is proven a sequence of formulas which also hold true in the standard systems of modal logic. Nevertheless, the meaning of this reformulation remains unclear.
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modelling standard connectives
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modal operators
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vector-based semantics
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representation of truth-functions by matrices
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vector logic
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truth degrees
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modal logic
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