Differential logic
Differential logic is the component of logic whose object is the successful description of variation — for example, the aspects of change, difference, distribution, and diversity — in universes of discourse that are subject to logical description. In formal logic, differential logic treats the principles that govern the use of a differential logical calculus, that is, a formal system with the expressive capacity to describe change and diversity in logical universes of discourse.
A simple example of a differential logical calculus is furnished by a differential propositional calculus. This augments ordinary propositional calculus in the same way that the differential calculus of Leibniz and Newton augments the analytic geometry of Descartes.
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- Differential Logic @ Beta Wikiversity
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- Differential Logic @ NetKnowledge
- Differential Logic @ SemanticWeb
Logical operators
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- Propositional calculus
- Sole sufficient operator
- Truth table
- Universe of discourse
- Zeroth order logic
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Portions of the above article were adapted from the following sources under the GNU Free Documentation License, under other applicable licenses, or by permission of the copyright holders.
- Differential Logic, MyWikiBiz
- Differential Logic, Beta Wikiversity
- Differential Logic, MathWeb Wiki
- Differential Logic, NetKnowledge
- Differential Logic, P2P Foundation
- Differential Logic, PlanetMath
- Differential Logic, PlanetPhysics
- Differential Logic, Semantic Web
- Differential Logic, Google Knol
- Differential Logic, GetWiki
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