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  2. Intensional logic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intensional_logic

    Logic is the study of proof and deduction as manifested in language (abstracting from any underlying psychological or biological processes). [1] Logic is not a closed, completed science, and presumably, it will never stop developing: the logical analysis can penetrate into varying depths of the language [2] (sentences regarded as atomic, or splitting them to predicates applied to individual ...

  3. Extensional and intensional definitions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extensional_and...

    An intensional definition may also consist of rules or sets of axioms that define a set by describing a procedure for generating all of its members. For example, an intensional definition of square number can be "any number that can be expressed as some integer multiplied by itself". The rule—"take an integer and multiply it by itself ...

  4. Intension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intension

    An intensional statement-form is a statement-form with at least one instance such that substituting co-extensive expressions into it does not always preserve logical value. An intensional statement is a statement that is an instance of an intensional statement-form.

  5. Masked-man fallacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masked-man_fallacy

    In philosophical logic, the masked-man fallacy (also known as the intensional fallacy or epistemic fallacy) [1] is committed when one makes an illicit use of Leibniz's law in an argument. Leibniz's law states that if A and B are the same object, then A and B are indiscernible (that is, they have all the same properties).

  6. Montague grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montague_grammar

    Montague grammar is an approach to natural language semantics, named after American logician Richard Montague.The Montague grammar is based on mathematical logic, especially higher-order predicate logic and lambda calculus, and makes use of the notions of intensional logic, via Kripke models.

  7. Counterfactual conditional - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterfactual_conditional

    However, in the 1960s and 1970s, work by Robert Stalnaker and David Lewis showed that these problems are surmountable given an appropriate intensional logical framework. Work since then in formal semantics, philosophical logic, philosophy of language, and cognitive science has built on this insight, taking it in a variety of different ...

  8. Index of logic articles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Index_of_logic_articles

    Jacobus Naveros-- Jayanta Bhatta-- Jingle-jangle fallacies-- John Corcoran (logician)-- John W. Dawson, Jr-- Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics-- Journal of Automated Reasoning-- Journal of Logic, Language and Information-- Journal of Logic and Computation-- Journal of Mathematical Logic-- Journal of Philosophical Logic-- Journal of ...

  9. Transparent intensional logic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transparent_Intensional_Logic

    Transparent intensional logic (frequently abbreviated as TIL) is a logical system created by Pavel Tichý. Due to its rich procedural semantics TIL is in particular apt for the logical analysis of natural language. From the formal point of view, TIL is a hyperintensional, partial, typed lambda calculus.