| S. Korner, "Laws of thought," In Encyclopedia of Philosophy, volume 4, pages 414--17. MacMillan, New York, NY, 1967. 96 |
....to extend our rule based philosophy to function approximators, we need a method for expressing numerical quantities in terms of linguistic rules. Fuzzy logic, proposed by Zadeh in 1965, provides an ideal framework for doing just that. 1 It was Aristotle who formalized in his Laws of Thought [Kor67] the binary valued logic which is prevalent in computer systems today. However, this logic was not universally accepted. The Greek philosopher Plato provided an alternative by indicating that there was a third region between true and false where the opposites tumbled about. Multivalued logic ....
S. Korner, "Laws of thought," In Encyclopedia of Philosophy, volume 4, pages 414--17. MacMillan, New York, NY, 1967. 96
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