Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2022. - 195 p. - ISBN 1527580148.
Those who want to
understand logic, if they manage to pass at least an initial, though far from simple,
modern course of study, eventually conclude that practically logic consists in formulating premises and a
taken-from-nowhere assertion in an incomprehensible language and then proving or disproving
cause-consequence links between them. Conversely, many topical tasks of logical analysis, such as
forming and testing hypotheses, inferring consequences with predefined properties, and searching for, and analysis of, logical errors and inconsistencies in reasoning, among others, are outside the scope of this discourse. They are scattered haphazardly in works on theory of
argumentation, non-classical logics, and artificial intelligence. This book demonstrates the capabilities of two relatively simple mathematical systems
developed by the authors, namely
E-structures and n-tuple algebra, which allow the modelling of various types of reasoning and solve the above and some other tasks of
logical analysis.
Boris Kulik - Institute for Problems in Mechanical Engineering of the
Russian Academy of SciencesAlexander Fridman - Institute for Informatics and Mathematical Modelling, Kola Science Centre of the
Russian Academy of SciencesTrue PDF (A5 format)