Neutrosophic logic




<logic> (Or "Smarandache logic") A generalisation of fuzzy logic based on Neutrosophy.

A proposition is t true, i indeterminate, and f false, where t, i, and f are real values from the ranges T, I, F, with no restriction on T, I, F, or the sum n=t+i+f.

Neutrosophic logic thus generalises:

- intuitionistic logic, which supports incomplete theories (for 0<n<100 and i=0, 0<=t,i,f<=100);

- fuzzy logic (for n=100 and i=0, and 0<=t,i,f<=100);

- Boolean logic (for n=100 and i=0, with t,f either 0 or 100);

- multi-valued logic (for 0<=t,i,f<=100);

- paraconsistent logic (for n>100 and i=0, with both t,f<100);

- dialetheism, which says that some contradictions are true (for t=f=100 and i=0; some paradoxes can be denoted this way).

Compared with all other logics, neutrosophic logic introduces a percentage of "indeterminacy" - due to unexpected parameters hidden in some propositions.

It also allows each component t,i,f to "boil over" 100 or "freeze" under 0.

For example, in some tautologies t>100, called "overtrue".

Home (http://www.gallup.unm.edu/~smarandache/NeutLog.txt).

["Neutrosophy / Neutrosophic probability, set, and logic", F. Smarandache, American Research Press, 1998].



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