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Re: Peirce's Rules Of Inference: msg#00004inquiry
o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o PROI. Note 2 o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o Frithjof Dau wrote: > > Hi, > > On Donnerstag 21 Juni 2007 12:46 Jon Awbrey wrote: > > > > Responding to messages by John Sowa and Frithjof Dau: > > > > One of these issues had to do with a conceptual inefficiency in the > > representation of logical equality (logical equivalence, iff, <=>). > > > > If you look at the topological dual form of Peirce's graph for x <=> y, > > you get this: > > > > y o o x > > | | > > x o o y > > \ / > > @ > > > > In other words, (x => y) & (y => x). > > I agree: The representation of equivalence is IMHO > a (maybe even _the_ ) major downside of Peirce's notation. I first ran into this in connection with the ancient (in AI time) dispute between connectionists and symbolicists over the so-called "XOR problem", basically turning on the fact that 2 of the 16 boolean functions, namely, XOR and EQU, are not efficiently implemented by threshold-type neurons. Here's a somewhat anecdotal discussion of the work that I did on that: http://forum.wolframscience.com/printthread.php?threadid=630&perpage=11 > > The fact that each variable is mentioned twice turned out > > to be an efficiency boondoggle under the constraints that > > I was working, and it remains a conceptual ineffficiency > > under any conditions. > > > > The way that I eventually solved this was by introducing > > the following cactus form: > > > > x y > > o---o > > \ / > > @ > > > > Under the analogous existential interpretation, > > this has the meaning x =/= y, that is, x XOR y. > > > > From that we get x = y (or x <=> y if you prefer) > > by negating it, yielding the following cactus form: > > > > x y > > o---o > > \ / > > o > > | > > @ > > > You might have a look at the works of Pavel Kocura, who works > on EGs as well (in a quite unsolid way, I have to say ...). Anyhow, > he uses a new notation for equivalence, which is an oval, separated > by a vertical line into two halfs. > > Anyhow, you have to alter (extend) the calculus for this new syntax. Yes, I do know some of the additional axioms that are required, but I have yet to pin it down to the most elegant or minimal set. Additional discussion here: http://www.centiare.com/Directory:Jon_Awbrey/Papers/Propositional_Equation_Reasoning_Systems The basic construct is generalized from negation to the so-called "minimal negation operators": As graphs these are drawn as cactus lobes: x x y x y z o o---o o-o-o | \ / \ / @ @ @ ... As text expressions by means of parentheses: (x) (x, y) (x, y, z) ... The analogue of the existential interpretation assigns the meaning: "just one false among the corresponding list of arguments", that is: not x, x=/=y, just one false among {x, y, z}, ... There is some exposition here: http://www.centiare.com/Minimal_negation_operator Jon Awbrey CC: http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/ o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o inquiry e-lab: http://stderr.org/pipermail/inquiry/ ¢iare: http://www.centiare.com/Directory:Jon_Awbrey getwiki: http://www.getwiki.net/-User_talk:Jon_Awbrey zhongwen wp: http://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jon_Awbrey http://www.altheim.com/ceryle/wiki/Wiki.jsp?page=JonAwbrey wp review: http://wikipediareview.com/index.php?showuser=398 o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o~~~~~~~~~o |
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