Symmetric Properties of the Syllogistic System Inherited From the Square of Opposition
Loading...
Files
Date
2017
Authors
Kumova, Bora İsmail
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Birkhäuser
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
Yes
OpenAIRE Downloads
3
OpenAIRE Views
4
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
The logical square Omega has a simple symmetric structure that visualises the bivalent relationships of the classical quantifiers A, I, E, O. In philosophy it is perceived as a self-complete possibilistic logic. In linguistics however its modelling capability is insufficient, since intermediate quantifiers like few, half, most, etc cannot be distinguished, which makes the existential quantifier I too generic and the universal quantifier A too specific. Furthermore, the latter is a special case of the former, i.e. A subset of I, making the square a logic with inclusive quantifiers. The inclusive quantifiers I and O can produce redundancies in linguistic systems and are too generic to differentiate any intermediate quantifiers. The redundancy can be resolved by excluding A from I, i.e. I-2=I-A, analogously E from O, i.e. O-2=O-E. Although the philosophical possibility of A subset of I is thus lost in I-2, the symmetric structure of the exclusive square (2)Omega remains preserved. The impact of the exclusion on the traditional syllogistic system S with inclusive existential quantifiers is that most of its symmetric structures are obviously lost in the syllogistic system S-2 with exclusive existential quantifiers too. Symmetry properties of S are found in the distribution of the syllogistic cases that are matched by the moods and their intersections. A syllogistic case is a distinct combination of the seven possible spaces of the Venn diagram for three sets, of which there exist 96 possible cases. Every quantifier can be represented with a fixed set of syllogistic cases and so the moods too. Therefore, the 96 cases open a universe of validity for all moods of the syllogistic system S, as well as all fuzzy-syllogistic systems S-n, with n-1 intermediate quantifiers. As a by-product of the fuzzy syllogistic system and its properties, we suggest in return that the logical square of opposition can be generalised to a fuzzy-logical graph of opposition, for 2<n.
Description
Keywords
Fuzzy logic, Reasoning, Set theory, Syllogisms, Fuzzy logic, Reasoning, Set theory, Syllogisms
Fields of Science
Citation
WoS Q
N/A
Scopus Q
N/A

OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A
Source
Square of Opposition: A Cornerstone of Thought
Volume
Issue
Start Page
81
End Page
103
PlumX Metrics
Citations
Scopus : 1
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 3
Google Scholar™


