Propositional Logic.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Propositional Logic.
Authors: Rautenberg, Wolfgang
Source: Concise Introduction to Mathematical Logic (9781441912206); 2010, p1-40, 40p
Abstract: Propositional logic, by which we here mean two-valued propositional logic, arises from analyzing connections of given sentences A, B, such as ]> These connection operations can be approximately described by two-valued logic. There are other connections that have temporal or local features, for instance, first A then B or here A there B, as well as unary modal operators like it is necessarily true that, whose analysis goes beyond the scope of two-valued logic. These operators are the subject of temporal, modal, or other subdisciplines of many-valued or nonclassical logic. Furthermore, the connections that we began with may have a meaning in other versions of logic that two-valued logic only incompletely captures. This pertains in particular to their meaning in natural or everyday language, where meaning may strongly depend on context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4419-1221-3_1
Database: Complementary Index