English, asked by sanubasumatary03, 4 months ago

what is the ideal of logic?​

Answers

Answered by arthkunder33
0

We discriminate within ideal beliefs, i.e. those assumptions which satisfy specific 'idealized' characteristics which are unlikely to be dominated by real agents, and real characteristics.

Answered by hemadilipyadav
0

Answer:

Definition 3.17 A ¬-paraconsistent logic L is called ideal, if it is normal (i.e., ¬-contained in classical logic and has a proper implication), maximal relative to classical logic, and maximally paraconsistent

Explanation:

Answer. We discriminate within ideal beliefs, i.e. those assumptions which satisfy specific 'idealized' characteristics which are unlikely to be dominated by real agents, and real characteristics.

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