Cyclic negation

In many-valued logic with linearly ordered truth values, cyclic negation is a unary truth function that takes a truth value n and returns n  1 as value if n is not the lowest value; otherwise it returns the highest value.

For example, let the set of truth values be {0,1,2}, let ~ denote negation, and let p be a variable ranging over truth values. For these choices, if p = 0 then ~p = 2; and if p = 1 then ~p = 0.

Cyclic negation was originally introduced by the logician and mathematician Emil Post.

References

  • Mares, Edwin (2011), "Negation", in Horsten, Leon; Pettigrew, Richard (eds.), The Continuum Companion to Philosophical Logic, Continuum International Publishing, pp. 180–215, ISBN 9781441154231. See in particular pp. 188–189.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.