Three-Valued Logic
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A Three-Valued Logic is a Logic that ...
- See: Grigore Moisil, Logic, Many-Valued Logic, Truth Value, Principle of Bivalence, Boolean Logic, Jan Łukasiewicz, C. I. Lewis.
References
2017
- (Wikipedia, 2017) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/three-valued_logic Retrieved:2017-6-15.
- In logic, a three-valued logic (also trinary logic, trivalent, ternary, or trilean,sometimes abbreviated 3VL) is any of several many-valued logic systems in which there are three truth values indicating true, false and some indeterminate third value. This is contrasted with the more commonly known bivalent logics (such as classical sentential or Boolean logic) which provide only for true and false. Conceptual form and basic ideas were initially created by Jan Łukasiewicz and C. I. Lewis. These were then re-formulated by Grigore Moisil in an axiomatic algebraic form, and also extended to n-valued logics in 1945.