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Law of excluded middle

In logic, the law of excluded middle or the principle of excluded middle states that for every proposition, either this proposition or its negation is true.[1][2] It is one of the three laws of thought, along with the law of noncontradiction, and the law of identity; however, no system of logic is built on just these laws, and none of these laws provides inference rules, such as modus ponens or De Morgan's laws. The law is also known as the law / principle of the excluded third, in Latin principium tertii exclusi. Another Latin designation for this law is tertium non datur or "no third [possibility] is given". In classical logic, the law is a tautology.

The principle should not be confused with the semantical principle of bivalence, which states that every proposition is either true or false. The principle of bivalence always implies the law of excluded middle, while the converse is not always true. A commonly cited counterexample uses statements unprovable now, but provable in the future to show that the law of excluded middle may apply when the principle of bivalence fails.[3]

History edit

Aristotle edit

The earliest known formulation is in Aristotle's discussion of the principle of non-contradiction, first proposed in On Interpretation,[4] where he says that of two contradictory propositions (i.e. where one proposition is the negation of the other) one must be true, and the other false.[5] He also states it as a principle in the Metaphysics book 3, saying that it is necessary in every case to affirm or deny,[6] and that it is impossible that there should be anything between the two parts of a contradiction.[7]

Aristotle wrote that ambiguity can arise from the use of ambiguous names, but cannot exist in the facts themselves:

It is impossible, then, that "being a man" should mean precisely "not being a man", if "man" not only signifies something about one subject but also has one significance. … And it will not be possible to be and not to be the same thing, except in virtue of an ambiguity, just as if one whom we call "man", and others were to call "not-man"; but the point in question is not this, whether the same thing can at the same time be and not be a man in name, but whether it can be in fact. (Metaphysics 4.4, W. D. Ross (trans.), GBWW 8, 525–526).

Aristotle's assertion that "it will not be possible to be and not to be the same thing" would be written in propositional logic as ~(P ∧ ~P). In modern so called classical logic, this statement is equivalent to the law of excluded middle (P ∨ ~P), through distribution of the negation in Aristotle's assertion. The former claims that no statement is both true and false, while the latter requires that any statement is either true or false.

But Aristotle also writes, "since it is impossible that contradictories should be at the same time true of the same thing, obviously contraries also cannot belong at the same time to the same thing" (Book IV, CH 6, p. 531). He then proposes that "there cannot be an intermediate between contradictories, but of one subject we must either affirm or deny any one predicate" (Book IV, CH 7, p. 531). In the context of Aristotle's traditional logic, this is a remarkably precise statement of the law of excluded middle, P ∨ ~P.

Also in On Interpretation, Aristotle seems to deny the law of excluded middle in the case of future contingents, in his discussion on the sea battle.

Leibniz edit

Its usual form, "Every judgment is either true or false" [footnote 9] …"(from Kolmogorov in van Heijenoort, p. 421) footnote 9: "This is Leibniz's very simple formulation (see Nouveaux Essais, IV,2)" (ibid p 421)

Bertrand Russell and Principia Mathematica edit

The principle was stated as a theorem of propositional logic by Russell and Whitehead in Principia Mathematica as:

 .[8]

So just what is "truth" and "falsehood"? At the opening PM quickly announces some definitions:

Truth-values. The "truth-value" of a proposition is truth if it is true and falsehood if it is false* [*This phrase is due to Frege] … the truth-value of "p ∨ q" is truth if the truth-value of either p or q is truth, and is falsehood otherwise … that of "~ p" is the opposite of that of p …" (pp. 7–8)

This is not much help. But later, in a much deeper discussion ("Definition and systematic ambiguity of Truth and Falsehood" Chapter II part III, p. 41 ff), PM defines truth and falsehood in terms of a relationship between the "a" and the "b" and the "percipient". For example "This 'a' is 'b'" (e.g. "This 'object a' is 'red'") really means "'object a' is a sense-datum" and "'red' is a sense-datum", and they "stand in relation" to one another and in relation to "I". Thus what we really mean is: "I perceive that 'This object a is red'" and this is an undeniable-by-3rd-party "truth".

PM further defines a distinction between a "sense-datum" and a "sensation":

That is, when we judge (say) "this is red", what occurs is a relation of three terms, the mind, and "this", and "red". On the other hand, when we perceive "the redness of this", there is a relation of two terms, namely the mind and the complex object "the redness of this" (pp. 43–44).

Russell reiterated his distinction between "sense-datum" and "sensation" in his book The Problems of Philosophy (1912), published at the same time as PM (1910–1913):

Let us give the name of "sense-data" to the things that are immediately known in sensation: such things as colours, sounds, smells, hardnesses, roughnesses, and so on. We shall give the name "sensation" to the experience of being immediately aware of these things … The colour itself is a sense-datum, not a sensation. (p. 12)

Russell further described his reasoning behind his definitions of "truth" and "falsehood" in the same book (Chapter XII, Truth and Falsehood).

Consequences of the law of excluded middle in Principia Mathematica edit

From the law of excluded middle, formula ✸2.1 in Principia Mathematica, Whitehead and Russell derive some of the most powerful tools in the logician's argumentation toolkit. (In Principia Mathematica, formulas and propositions are identified by a leading asterisk and two numbers, such as "✸2.1".)

✸2.1 ~pp "This is the Law of excluded middle" (PM, p. 101).

The proof of ✸2.1 is roughly as follows: "primitive idea" 1.08 defines pq = ~pq. Substituting p for q in this rule yields pp = ~pp. Since pp is true (this is Theorem 2.08, which is proved separately), then ~pp must be true.

✸2.11 p ∨ ~p (Permutation of the assertions is allowed by axiom 1.4)
✸2.12 p → ~(~p) (Principle of double negation, part 1: if "this rose is red" is true then it's not true that "'this rose is not-red' is true".)
✸2.13 p ∨ ~{~(~p)} (Lemma together with 2.12 used to derive 2.14)
✸2.14 ~(~p) → p (Principle of double negation, part 2)
✸2.15 (~pq) → (~qp) (One of the four "Principles of transposition". Similar to 1.03, 1.16 and 1.17. A very long demonstration was required here.)
✸2.16 (pq) → (~q → ~p) (If it's true that "If this rose is red then this pig flies" then it's true that "If this pig doesn't fly then this rose isn't red.")
✸2.17 ( ~p → ~q ) → (qp) (Another of the "Principles of transposition".)
✸2.18 (~pp) → p (Called "The complement of reductio ad absurdum. It states that a proposition which follows from the hypothesis of its own falsehood is true" (PM, pp. 103–104).)

Most of these theorems—in particular ✸2.1, ✸2.11, and ✸2.14—are rejected by intuitionism. These tools are recast into another form that Kolmogorov cites as "Hilbert's four axioms of implication" and "Hilbert's two axioms of negation" (Kolmogorov in van Heijenoort, p. 335).

Propositions ✸2.12 and ✸2.14, "double negation": The intuitionist writings of L. E. J. Brouwer refer to what he calls "the principle of the reciprocity of the multiple species, that is, the principle that for every system the correctness of a property follows from the impossibility of the impossibility of this property" (Brouwer, ibid, p. 335).

This principle is commonly called "the principle of double negation" (PM, pp. 101–102). From the law of excluded middle (✸2.1 and ✸2.11), PM derives principle ✸2.12 immediately. We substitute ~p for p in 2.11 to yield ~p ∨ ~(~p), and by the definition of implication (i.e. 1.01 p → q = ~p ∨ q) then ~p ∨ ~(~p)= p → ~(~p). QED (The derivation of 2.14 is a bit more involved.)

Reichenbach edit

It is correct, at least for bivalent logic—i.e. it can be seen with a Karnaugh map—that this law removes "the middle" of the inclusive-or used in his law (3). And this is the point of Reichenbach's demonstration that some believe the exclusive-or should take the place of the inclusive-or.

About this issue (in admittedly very technical terms) Reichenbach observes:

The tertium non datur
29. (x)[f(x) ∨ ~f(x)]
is not exhaustive in its major terms and is therefore an inflated formula. This fact may perhaps explain why some people consider it unreasonable to write (29) with the inclusive-'or', and want to have it written with the sign of the exclusive-'or'
30. (x)[f(x) ⊕ ~f(x)], where the symbol "⊕" signifies exclusive-or[9]
in which form it would be fully exhaustive and therefore nomological in the narrower sense. (Reichenbach, p. 376)

In line (30) the "(x)" means "for all" or "for every", a form used by Russell and Reichenbach; today the symbolism is usually   x. Thus an example of the expression would look like this:

  • (pig): (Flies(pig) ⊕ ~Flies(pig))
  • (For all instances of "pig" seen and unseen): ("Pig does fly" or "Pig does not fly" but not both simultaneously)

Formalists versus Intuitionists edit

From the late 1800s through the 1930s, a bitter, persistent debate raged between Hilbert and his followers versus Hermann Weyl and L. E. J. Brouwer. Brouwer's philosophy, called intuitionism, started in earnest with Leopold Kronecker in the late 1800s.

Hilbert intensely disliked Kronecker's ideas:

Kronecker insisted that there could be no existence without construction. For him, as for Paul Gordan [another elderly mathematician], Hilbert's proof of the finiteness of the basis of the invariant system was simply not mathematics. Hilbert, on the other hand, throughout his life was to insist that if one can prove that the attributes assigned to a concept will never lead to a contradiction, the mathematical existence of the concept is thereby established (Reid p. 34)

It was his [Kronecker's] contention that nothing could be said to have mathematical existence unless it could actually be constructed with a finite number of positive integers (Reid p. 26)

The debate had a profound effect on Hilbert. Reid indicates that Hilbert's second problem (one of Hilbert's problems from the Second International Conference in Paris in 1900) evolved from this debate (italics in the original):

In his second problem, [Hilbert] had asked for a mathematical proof of the consistency of the axioms of the arithmetic of real numbers.
To show the significance of this problem, he added the following observation:
"If contradictory attributes be assigned to a concept, I say that mathematically the concept does not exist" (Reid p. 71)

Thus, Hilbert was saying: "If p and ~p are both shown to be true, then p does not exist", and was thereby invoking the law of excluded middle cast into the form of the law of contradiction.

And finally constructivists … restricted mathematics to the study of concrete operations on finite or potentially (but not actually) infinite structures; completed infinite totalities … were rejected, as were indirect proof based on the Law of Excluded Middle. Most radical among the constructivists were the intuitionists, led by the erstwhile topologist L. E. J. Brouwer (Dawson p. 49)

The rancorous debate continued through the early 1900s into the 1920s; in 1927 Brouwer complained about "polemicizing against it [intuitionism] in sneering tones" (Brouwer in van Heijenoort, p. 492). But the debate was fertile: it resulted in Principia Mathematica (1910–1913), and that work gave a precise definition to the law of excluded middle, and all this provided an intellectual setting and the tools necessary for the mathematicians of the early 20th century:

Out of the rancor, and spawned in part by it, there arose several important logical developments; Zermelo's axiomatization of set theory (1908a), that was followed two years later by the first volume of Principia Mathematica, in which Russell and Whitehead showed how, via the theory of types: much of arithmetic could be developed by logicist means (Dawson p. 49)

Brouwer reduced the debate to the use of proofs designed from "negative" or "non-existence" versus "constructive" proof:

According to Brouwer, a statement that an object exists having a given property means that, and is only proved, when a method is known which in principle at least will enable such an object to be found or constructed …
Hilbert naturally disagreed.
"pure existence proofs have been the most important landmarks in the historical development of our science," he maintained. (Reid p. 155)
Brouwer refused to accept the logical principle of the excluded middle, His argument was the following:
"Suppose that A is the statement "There exists a member of the set S having the property P." If the set is finite, it is possible—in principle—to examine each member of S and determine whether there is a member of S with the property P or that every member of S lacks the property P." (this was missing a closing quote) For finite sets, therefore, Brouwer accepted the principle of the excluded middle as valid. He refused to accept it for infinite sets because if the set S is infinite, we cannot—even in principle—examine each member of the set. If, during the course of our examination, we find a member of the set with the property P, the first alternative is substantiated; but if we never find such a member, the second alternative is still not substantiated.
Since mathematical theorems are often proved by establishing that the negation would involve us in a contradiction, this third possibility which Brouwer suggested would throw into question many of the mathematical statements currently accepted.
"Taking the Principle of the Excluded Middle from the mathematician," Hilbert said, "is the same as … prohibiting the boxer the use of his fists."
"The possible loss did not seem to bother Weyl … Brouwer's program was the coming thing, he insisted to his friends in Zürich." (Reid, p. 149)

In his lecture in 1941 at Yale and the subsequent paper, Gödel proposed a solution: "that the negation of a universal proposition was to be understood as asserting the existence … of a counterexample" (Dawson, p. 157)

Gödel's approach to the law of excluded middle was to assert that objections against "the use of 'impredicative definitions'" had "carried more weight" than "the law of excluded middle and related theorems of the propositional calculus" (Dawson p. 156). He proposed his "system Σ … and he concluded by mentioning several applications of his interpretation. Among them were a proof of the consistency with intuitionistic logic of the principle ~ (∀A: (A ∨ ~A)) (despite the inconsistency of the assumption ∃ A: ~ (A ∨ ~A))" (Dawson, p. 157) (no closing parenthesis had been placed)

The debate seemed to weaken: mathematicians, logicians and engineers continue to use the law of excluded middle (and double negation) in their daily work.

Intuitionist definitions of the law (principle) of excluded middle edit

The following highlights the deep mathematical and philosophic problem behind what it means to "know", and also helps elucidate what the "law" implies (i.e. what the law really means). Their difficulties with the law emerge: that they do not want to accept as true implications drawn from that which is unverifiable (untestable, unknowable) or from the impossible or the false. (All quotes are from van Heijenoort, italics added).

Brouwer offers his definition of "principle of excluded middle"; we see here also the issue of "testability":

On the basis of the testability just mentioned, there hold, for properties conceived within a specific finite main system, the "principle of excluded middle", that is, the principle that for every system every property is either correct [richtig] or impossible, and in particular the principle of the reciprocity of the complementary species, that is, the principle that for every system the correctness of a property follows from the impossibility of the impossibility of this property. (335)[citation needed]

Kolmogorov's definition cites Hilbert's two axioms of negation

  1. A → (~AB)
  2. (AB) → { (~AB) → B}
Hilbert's first axiom of negation, "anything follows from the false", made its appearance only with the rise of symbolic logic, as did the first axiom of implication … while … the axiom under consideration [axiom 5] asserts something about the consequences of something impossible: we have to accept B if the true judgment A is regarded as false …
Hilbert's second axiom of negation expresses the principle of excluded middle. The principle is expressed here in the form in which is it used for derivations: if B follows from A as well as from ~A, then B is true. Its usual form, "every judgment is either true or false" is equivalent to that given above".
From the first interpretation of negation, that is, the interdiction from regarding the judgment as true, it is impossible to obtain the certitude that the principle of excluded middle is true … Brouwer showed that in the case of such transfinite judgments the principle of excluded middle cannot be considered obvious
footnote 9: "This is Leibniz's very simple formulation (see Nouveaux Essais, IV,2). The formulation "A is either B or not-B" has nothing to do with the logic of judgments.
footnote 10: "Symbolically the second form is expressed thus
A ∨ ~A

where ∨ means "or". The equivalence of the two forms is easily proved (p. 421)

Examples edit

For example, if P is the proposition:

Socrates is mortal.

then the law of excluded middle holds that the logical disjunction:

Either Socrates is mortal, or it is not the case that Socrates is mortal.

is true by virtue of its form alone. That is, the "middle" position, that Socrates is neither mortal nor not-mortal, is excluded by logic, and therefore either the first possibility (Socrates is mortal) or its negation (it is not the case that Socrates is mortal) must be true.

An example of an argument that depends on the law of excluded middle follows.[10] We seek to prove that

there exist two irrational numbers   and   such that   is rational.

It is known that   is irrational (see proof). Consider the number

 .

Clearly (excluded middle) this number is either rational or irrational. If it is rational, the proof is complete, and

  and  .

But if   is irrational, then let

  and  .

Then

 ,

and 2 is certainly rational. This concludes the proof.

In the above argument, the assertion "this number is either rational or irrational" invokes the law of excluded middle. An intuitionist, for example, would not accept this argument without further support for that statement. This might come in the form of a proof that the number in question is in fact irrational (or rational, as the case may be); or a finite algorithm that could determine whether the number is rational.

Non-constructive proofs over the infinite edit

The above proof is an example of a non-constructive proof disallowed by intuitionists:

The proof is non-constructive because it doesn't give specific numbers   and   that satisfy the theorem but only two separate possibilities, one of which must work. (Actually   is irrational but there is no known easy proof of that fact.) (Davis 2000:220)

(Constructive proofs of the specific example above are not hard to produce; for example   and   are both easily shown to be irrational, and  ; a proof allowed by intuitionists).

By non-constructive Davis means that "a proof that there actually are mathematic entities satisfying certain conditions would not have to provide a method to exhibit explicitly the entities in question." (p. 85). Such proofs presume the existence of a totality that is complete, a notion disallowed by intuitionists when extended to the infinite—for them the infinite can never be completed:

In classical mathematics there occur non-constructive or indirect existence proofs, which intuitionists do not accept. For example, to prove there exists an n such that P(n), the classical mathematician may deduce a contradiction from the assumption for all n, not P(n). Under both the classical and the intuitionistic logic, by reductio ad absurdum this gives not for all n, not P(n). The classical logic allows this result to be transformed into there exists an n such that P(n), but not in general the intuitionistic … the classical meaning, that somewhere in the completed infinite totality of the natural numbers there occurs an n such that P(n), is not available to him, since he does not conceive the natural numbers as a completed totality.[11] (Kleene 1952:49–50)

David Hilbert and Luitzen E. J. Brouwer both give examples of the law of excluded middle extended to the infinite. Hilbert's example: "the assertion that either there are only finitely many prime numbers or there are infinitely many" (quoted in Davis 2000:97); and Brouwer's: "Every mathematical species is either finite or infinite." (Brouwer 1923 in van Heijenoort 1967:336). In general, intuitionists allow the use of the law of excluded middle when it is confined to discourse over finite collections (sets), but not when it is used in discourse over infinite sets (e.g. the natural numbers). Thus intuitionists absolutely disallow the blanket assertion: "For all propositions P concerning infinite sets D: P or ~P" (Kleene 1952:48).[12]

Putative counterexamples to the law of excluded middle include the liar paradox or Quine's paradox. Certain resolutions of these paradoxes, particularly Graham Priest's dialetheism as formalised in LP, have the law of excluded middle as a theorem, but resolve out the Liar as both true and false. In this way, the law of excluded middle is true, but because truth itself, and therefore disjunction, is not exclusive, it says next to nothing if one of the disjuncts is paradoxical, or both true and false.

Criticisms edit

The Catuṣkoṭi (tetralemma) is an ancient alternative to the law of excluded middle, which examines all four possible assignments of truth values to a proposition and its negation. It has been important in Indian logic and Buddhist logic as well as the ancient Greek philosophical school known as Pyrrhonism.

Many modern logic systems replace the law of excluded middle with the concept of negation as failure. Instead of a proposition's being either true or false, a proposition is either true or not able to be proved true.[13] These two dichotomies only differ in logical systems that are not complete. The principle of negation as failure is used as a foundation for autoepistemic logic, and is widely used in logic programming. In these systems, the programmer is free to assert the law of excluded middle as a true fact, but it is not built-in a priori into these systems.

Mathematicians such as L. E. J. Brouwer and Arend Heyting have also contested the usefulness of the law of excluded middle in the context of modern mathematics.[14]

In mathematical logic edit

In modern mathematical logic, the excluded middle has been argued to result in possible self-contradiction. It is possible in logic to make well-constructed propositions that can be neither true nor false; a common example of this is the "Liar's paradox",[15] the statement "this statement is false", which is argued to itself be neither true nor false. Arthur Prior has argued that The Paradox is not an example of a statement that cannot be true or false. The law of excluded middle still holds here as the negation of this statement "This statement is not false", can be assigned true. In set theory, such a self-referential paradox can be constructed by examining the set "the set of all sets that do not contain themselves". This set is unambiguously defined, but leads to a Russell's paradox:[16][17] does the set contain, as one of its elements, itself? However, in the modern Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory, this type of contradiction is no longer admitted. Furthermore, paradoxes of self reference can be constructed without even invoking negation at all, as in Curry's paradox.[citation needed] Very few mathematicians work in areas which allow for The Law of Excluded Middle to be false, as it is not compatible with the standard axiomatic system, ZFC. Namely, it is not compatible with the Axiom of Choice.[18]

Analogous laws edit

Some systems of logic have different but analogous laws. For some finite n-valued logics, there is an analogous law called the law of excluded n+1th. If negation is cyclic and "∨" is a "max operator", then the law can be expressed in the object language by (P ∨ ~P ∨ ~~P ∨ ... ∨ ~...~P), where "~...~" represents n−1 negation signs and "∨ ... ∨" n−1 disjunction signs. It is easy to check that the sentence must receive at least one of the n truth values (and not a value that is not one of the n).

Other systems reject the law entirely.[specify]

Law of the weak excluded middle edit

A particularly well-studied intermediate logic is given by De Morgan logic, which adds the axiom   to intuitionistic logic, which is sometimes called the law of the weak excluded middle.

This is equivalent to a few other statements:

  • Satisfying all of De Morgan's laws including  
  •  
  •  

See also edit

  • Brouwer–Hilbert controversy – foundational controversy in twentieth-century mathematics: an account on the formalist-intuitionist divide around the Law of the excluded middle
  • Consequentia mirabilis – Pattern of reasoning in propositional logic
  • Constructive set theory
  • Diaconescu's theorem
  • Dichotomy – Splitting of a whole into exactly two non-overlapping parts; dyadic relations and processes
  • Law of excluded fourth – System including an indeterminate value
  • Law of excluded middle is untrue in many-valued logic – Propositional calculus in which there are more than two truth values such as ternary logic – System including an indeterminate value and fuzzy logic – System for reasoning about vagueness
  • Laws of thought – Axioms of rational discourse
  • Limited principle of omniscience – Mathematical concept
  • Logical graph – Diagram of graphical syntaxs: a graphical syntax for propositional logic
  • Logical determinism – view that a proposition about the future is either necessarily true, or its negation is necessarily true: the application excluded middle to modal – Type of formal logic propositions
  • Mathematical constructivism
  • Non-affirming negation in the Prasangika – Doctrinal distinction within Tibetan Buddhism school of Buddhism, another system in which the law of excluded middle is untrue
  • Peirce's law – Axiom used in logic and philosophy: another way of turning intuition classical

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Laws of thought". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Realism – Metaphysical realism and objective truth". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  3. ^ Tomassi, Paul (1999). Logic. Routledge. p. 124. ISBN 978-0-415-16696-6.
  4. ^ P. T. Geach, The Law of Excluded Middle in Logic Matters, p. 74
  5. ^ On Interpretation, c. 9
  6. ^ Metaphysics B 2, 996b 26–30
  7. ^ Metaphysics Γ 7, 1011b 26–27
  8. ^ Alfred North Whitehead, Bertrand Russell (1910), Principia Mathematica, Cambridge, p. 105
  9. ^ The original symbol as used by Reichenbach is an upside down V, nowadays used for AND. The AND for Reichenbach is the same as that used in Principia Mathematica – a "dot" cf p. 27 where he shows a truth table where he defines "a.b". Reichenbach defines the exclusive-or on p. 35 as "the negation of the equivalence". One sign used nowadays is a circle with a + in it, i.e. ⊕ (because in binary, a ⊕ b yields modulo-2 addition – addition without carry). Other signs are ≢ (not identical to), or ≠ (not equal to).
  10. ^ This well-known example of a non-constructive proof depending on the law of excluded middle can be found in many places, for example: Megill, Norman. Metamath: A Computer Language for Pure Mathematics. footnote on p. 17. and Davis 2000:220, footnote 2.
  11. ^ In a comparative analysis (pp. 43–59) of the three "-isms" (and their foremost spokesmen)—Logicism (Russell and Whitehead), Intuitionism (Brouwer) and Formalism (Hilbert)—Kleene turns his thorough eye toward intuitionism, its "founder" Brouwer, and the intuitionists' complaints with respect to the law of excluded middle as applied to arguments over the "completed infinite".
  12. ^ For more about the conflict between the intuitionists (e.g. Brouwer) and the formalists (Hilbert) see Foundations of mathematics and Intuitionism.
  13. ^ Clark, Keith (1978). Logic and Data Bases (PDF). Springer-Verlag. pp. 293–322 (Negation as a failure). doi:10.1007/978-1-4684-3384-5_11.
  14. ^ Detlefsen, Michael (January 1992). "Proof and Knowledge in Mathematics" by Michael Detlefsen. Routledge. ISBN 9780415068055.
  15. ^ Priest, Graham (28 November 2010). "Paradoxical Truth". Opinionator. Retrieved 10 September 2023.
  16. ^ Kevin C. Klement, "Russell's Paradox". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  17. ^ Priest, Graham (1983). "The Logical Paradoxes and the Law of Excluded Middle". The Philosophical Quarterly. 33 (131): 160–165. doi:10.2307/2218742. JSTOR 2218742.
  18. ^ Diaconescu, Radu (August 1975). "Axiom of Choice and Complementation" (PDF). Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. 51 (1): 176–178. doi:10.1090/S0002-9939-1975-0373893-X. Retrieved 13 March 2024.

References edit

  • Aquinas, Thomas, "Summa Theologica", Fathers of the English Dominican Province (trans.), Daniel J. Sullivan (ed.), vols. 19–20 in Robert Maynard Hutchins (ed.), Great Books of the Western World, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., Chicago, Illinois, 1952. Cited as GB 19–20.
  • Aristotle, "Metaphysics", W.D. Ross (trans.), vol. 8 in Robert Maynard Hutchins (ed.), Great Books of the Western World, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., Chicago, Illinois, 1952. Cited as GB 8. 1st published, W.D. Ross (trans.), The Works of Aristotle, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK.
  • Martin Davis 2000, Engines of Logic: Mathematicians and the Origin of the Computer, W. W. Norton & Company, NewYork, New York, ISBN 0-393-32229-7 pbk.
  • Dawson, J., Logical Dilemmas, The Life and Work of Kurt Gödel, A.K. Peters, Wellesley, Massachusetts, 1997.
  • van Heijenoort, J., From Frege to Gödel, A Source Book in Mathematical Logic, 1879–1931, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1967. Reprinted with corrections, 1977.
  • Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer, 1923, On the significance of the principle of excluded middle in mathematics, especially in function theory [reprinted with commentary, p. 334, van Heijenoort]
  • Andrei Nikolaevich Kolmogorov, 1925, On the principle of excluded middle, [reprinted with commentary, p. 414, van Heijenoort]
  • Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer, 1927, On the domains of definitions of functions,[reprinted with commentary, p. 446, van Heijenoort] Although not directly germane, in his (1923) Brouwer uses certain words defined in this paper.
  • Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer, 1927(2), Intuitionistic reflections on formalism,[reprinted with commentary, p. 490, van Heijenoort]
  • Stephen C. Kleene 1952 original printing, 1971 6th printing with corrections, 10th printing 1991, Introduction to Metamathematics, North-Holland Publishing Company, Amsterdam, New York, ISBN 0-7204-2103-9.
  • Kneale, W. and Kneale, M., The Development of Logic, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 1962. Reprinted with corrections, 1975.
  • Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell, Principia Mathematica to *56, Cambridge at the University Press 1962 (Second Edition of 1927, reprinted). Extremely difficult because of arcane symbolism, but a must-have for serious logicians.
  • Bertrand Russell, An Inquiry Into Meaning and Truth. The William James Lectures for 1940 delivered at Harvard University.
  • Bertrand Russell, The Problems of Philosophy, With a New Introduction by John Perry, Oxford University Press, New York, 1997 edition (first published 1912). Easy to read.
  • Bertrand Russell, The Art of Philosophizing and Other Essays, Littlefield, Adams & Co., Totowa, New Jersey, 1974 edition (first published 1968). Includes a wonderful essay on "The Art of drawing Inferences".
  • Hans Reichenbach, Elements of Symbolic Logic, Dover, New York, 1947, 1975.
  • Tom Mitchell, Machine Learning, WCB McGraw–Hill, 1997.
  • Constance Reid, Hilbert, Copernicus: Springer–Verlag New York, Inc. 1996, first published 1969. Contains a wealth of biographical information, much derived from interviews.
  • Bart Kosko, Fuzzy Thinking: The New Science of Fuzzy Logic, Hyperion, New York, 1993. Fuzzy thinking at its finest but a good introduction to the concepts.
  • David Hume, An Inquiry Concerning Human Understanding, reprinted in Great Books of the Western World Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 35, 1952, p. 449 ff. This work was published by Hume in 1758 as his rewrite of his "juvenile" Treatise of Human Nature: Being An attempt to introduce the experimental method of Reasoning into Moral Subjects Vol. I, Of The Understanding first published 1739, reprinted as: David Hume, A Treatise of Human Nature, Penguin Classics, 1985. Also see: David Applebaum, The Vision of Hume, Vega, London, 2001: a reprint of a portion of An Inquiry starts on p. 94 ff

External links edit

excluded, middle, confused, with, fallacy, excluded, middle, this, article, uses, forms, logical, notation, concise, description, symbols, used, this, notation, list, logic, symbols, logic, excluded, middle, principle, excluded, middle, states, that, every, pr. Not to be confused with fallacy of the excluded middle This article uses forms of logical notation For a concise description of the symbols used in this notation see List of logic symbols In logic the law of excluded middle or the principle of excluded middle states that for every proposition either this proposition or its negation is true 1 2 It is one of the three laws of thought along with the law of noncontradiction and the law of identity however no system of logic is built on just these laws and none of these laws provides inference rules such as modus ponens or De Morgan s laws The law is also known as the law principle of the excluded third in Latin principium tertii exclusi Another Latin designation for this law is tertium non datur or no third possibility is given In classical logic the law is a tautology The principle should not be confused with the semantical principle of bivalence which states that every proposition is either true or false The principle of bivalence always implies the law of excluded middle while the converse is not always true A commonly cited counterexample uses statements unprovable now but provable in the future to show that the law of excluded middle may apply when the principle of bivalence fails 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Aristotle 1 2 Leibniz 1 3 Bertrand Russell and Principia Mathematica 1 3 1 Consequences of the law of excluded middle in Principia Mathematica 1 4 Reichenbach 1 5 Formalists versus Intuitionists 1 6 Intuitionist definitions of the law principle of excluded middle 2 Examples 2 1 Non constructive proofs over the infinite 3 Criticisms 3 1 In mathematical logic 4 Analogous laws 4 1 Law of the weak excluded middle 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 External linksHistory editAristotle edit The earliest known formulation is in Aristotle s discussion of the principle of non contradiction first proposed in On Interpretation 4 where he says that of two contradictory propositions i e where one proposition is the negation of the other one must be true and the other false 5 He also states it as a principle in the Metaphysics book 3 saying that it is necessary in every case to affirm or deny 6 and that it is impossible that there should be anything between the two parts of a contradiction 7 Aristotle wrote that ambiguity can arise from the use of ambiguous names but cannot exist in the facts themselves It is impossible then that being a man should mean precisely not being a man if man not only signifies something about one subject but also has one significance And it will not be possible to be and not to be the same thing except in virtue of an ambiguity just as if one whom we call man and others were to call not man but the point in question is not this whether the same thing can at the same time be and not be a man in name but whether it can be in fact Metaphysics 4 4 W D Ross trans GBWW 8 525 526 Aristotle s assertion that it will not be possible to be and not to be the same thing would be written in propositional logic as P P In modern so called classical logic this statement is equivalent to the law of excluded middle P P through distribution of the negation in Aristotle s assertion The former claims that no statement is both true and false while the latter requires that any statement is either true or false But Aristotle also writes since it is impossible that contradictories should be at the same time true of the same thing obviously contraries also cannot belong at the same time to the same thing Book IV CH 6 p 531 He then proposes that there cannot be an intermediate between contradictories but of one subject we must either affirm or deny any one predicate Book IV CH 7 p 531 In the context of Aristotle s traditional logic this is a remarkably precise statement of the law of excluded middle P P Also in On Interpretation Aristotle seems to deny the law of excluded middle in the case of future contingents in his discussion on the sea battle Leibniz edit Its usual form Every judgment is either true or false footnote 9 from Kolmogorov in van Heijenoort p 421 footnote 9 This is Leibniz s very simple formulation see Nouveaux Essais IV 2 ibid p 421 Bertrand Russell and Principia Mathematica edit The principle was stated as a theorem of propositional logic by Russell and Whitehead in Principia Mathematica as 2 11 p p displaystyle mathbf 2 cdot 11 vdash p vee thicksim p nbsp 8 So just what is truth and falsehood At the opening PM quickly announces some definitions Truth values The truth value of a proposition is truth if it is true and falsehood if it is false This phrase is due to Frege the truth value of p q is truth if the truth value of either p or q is truth and is falsehood otherwise that of p is the opposite of that of p pp 7 8 This is not much help But later in a much deeper discussion Definition and systematic ambiguity of Truth and Falsehood Chapter II part III p 41 ff PM defines truth and falsehood in terms of a relationship between the a and the b and the percipient For example This a is b e g This object a is red really means object a is a sense datum and red is a sense datum and they stand in relation to one another and in relation to I Thus what we really mean is I perceive that This object a is red and this is an undeniable by 3rd party truth PM further defines a distinction between a sense datum and a sensation That is when we judge say this is red what occurs is a relation of three terms the mind and this and red On the other hand when we perceive the redness of this there is a relation of two terms namely the mind and the complex object the redness of this pp 43 44 Russell reiterated his distinction between sense datum and sensation in his book The Problems of Philosophy 1912 published at the same time as PM 1910 1913 Let us give the name of sense data to the things that are immediately known in sensation such things as colours sounds smells hardnesses roughnesses and so on We shall give the name sensation to the experience of being immediately aware of these things The colour itself is a sense datum not a sensation p 12 Russell further described his reasoning behind his definitions of truth and falsehood in the same book Chapter XII Truth and Falsehood Consequences of the law of excluded middle in Principia Mathematica edit From the law of excluded middle formula 2 1 in Principia Mathematica Whitehead and Russell derive some of the most powerful tools in the logician s argumentation toolkit In Principia Mathematica formulas and propositions are identified by a leading asterisk and two numbers such as 2 1 2 1 p p This is the Law of excluded middle PM p 101 The proof of 2 1 is roughly as follows primitive idea 1 08 defines p q p q Substituting p for q in this rule yields p p p p Since p p is true this is Theorem 2 08 which is proved separately then p p must be true 2 11 p p Permutation of the assertions is allowed by axiom 1 4 2 12 p p Principle of double negation part 1 if this rose is red is true then it s not true that this rose is not red is true 2 13 p p Lemma together with 2 12 used to derive 2 14 2 14 p p Principle of double negation part 2 2 15 p q q p One of the four Principles of transposition Similar to 1 03 1 16 and 1 17 A very long demonstration was required here 2 16 p q q p If it s true that If this rose is red then this pig flies then it s true that If this pig doesn t fly then this rose isn t red 2 17 p q q p Another of the Principles of transposition 2 18 p p p Called The complement of reductio ad absurdum It states that a proposition which follows from the hypothesis of its own falsehood is true PM pp 103 104 Most of these theorems in particular 2 1 2 11 and 2 14 are rejected by intuitionism These tools are recast into another form that Kolmogorov cites as Hilbert s four axioms of implication and Hilbert s two axioms of negation Kolmogorov in van Heijenoort p 335 Propositions 2 12 and 2 14 double negation The intuitionist writings of L E J Brouwer refer to what he calls the principle of the reciprocity of the multiple species that is the principle that for every system the correctness of a property follows from the impossibility of the impossibility of this property Brouwer ibid p 335 This principle is commonly called the principle of double negation PM pp 101 102 From the law of excluded middle 2 1 and 2 11 PM derives principle 2 12 immediately We substitute p for p in 2 11 to yield p p and by the definition of implication i e 1 01 p q p q then p p p p QED The derivation of 2 14 is a bit more involved Reichenbach edit It is correct at least for bivalent logic i e it can be seen with a Karnaugh map that this law removes the middle of the inclusive or used in his law 3 And this is the point of Reichenbach s demonstration that some believe the exclusive or should take the place of the inclusive or About this issue in admittedly very technical terms Reichenbach observes The tertium non datur 29 x f x f x is not exhaustive in its major terms and is therefore an inflated formula This fact may perhaps explain why some people consider it unreasonable to write 29 with the inclusive or and want to have it written with the sign of the exclusive or dd 30 x f x f x where the symbol signifies exclusive or 9 in which form it would be fully exhaustive and therefore nomological in the narrower sense Reichenbach p 376 dd In line 30 the x means for all or for every a form used by Russell and Reichenbach today the symbolism is usually displaystyle forall nbsp x Thus an example of the expression would look like this pig Flies pig Flies pig For all instances of pig seen and unseen Pig does fly or Pig does not fly but not both simultaneously Formalists versus Intuitionists edit From the late 1800s through the 1930s a bitter persistent debate raged between Hilbert and his followers versus Hermann Weyl and L E J Brouwer Brouwer s philosophy called intuitionism started in earnest with Leopold Kronecker in the late 1800s Hilbert intensely disliked Kronecker s ideas Kronecker insisted that there could be no existence without construction For him as for Paul Gordan another elderly mathematician Hilbert s proof of the finiteness of the basis of the invariant system was simply not mathematics Hilbert on the other hand throughout his life was to insist that if one can prove that the attributes assigned to a concept will never lead to a contradiction the mathematical existence of the concept is thereby established Reid p 34 It was his Kronecker s contention that nothing could be said to have mathematical existence unless it could actually be constructed with a finite number of positive integers Reid p 26 The debate had a profound effect on Hilbert Reid indicates that Hilbert s second problem one of Hilbert s problems from the Second International Conference in Paris in 1900 evolved from this debate italics in the original In his second problem Hilbert had asked for a mathematical proof of the consistency of the axioms of the arithmetic of real numbers To show the significance of this problem he added the following observation If contradictory attributes be assigned to a concept I say that mathematically the concept does not exist Reid p 71 dd Thus Hilbert was saying If p and p are both shown to be true then p does not exist and was thereby invoking the law of excluded middle cast into the form of the law of contradiction And finally constructivists restricted mathematics to the study of concrete operations on finite or potentially but not actually infinite structures completed infinite totalities were rejected as were indirect proof based on the Law of Excluded Middle Most radical among the constructivists were the intuitionists led by the erstwhile topologist L E J Brouwer Dawson p 49 The rancorous debate continued through the early 1900s into the 1920s in 1927 Brouwer complained about polemicizing against it intuitionism in sneering tones Brouwer in van Heijenoort p 492 But the debate was fertile it resulted in Principia Mathematica 1910 1913 and that work gave a precise definition to the law of excluded middle and all this provided an intellectual setting and the tools necessary for the mathematicians of the early 20th century Out of the rancor and spawned in part by it there arose several important logical developments Zermelo s axiomatization of set theory 1908a that was followed two years later by the first volume of Principia Mathematica in which Russell and Whitehead showed how via the theory of types much of arithmetic could be developed by logicist means Dawson p 49 Brouwer reduced the debate to the use of proofs designed from negative or non existence versus constructive proof According to Brouwer a statement that an object exists having a given property means that and is only proved when a method is known which in principle at least will enable such an object to be found or constructed Hilbert naturally disagreed pure existence proofs have been the most important landmarks in the historical development of our science he maintained Reid p 155 dd Brouwer refused to accept the logical principle of the excluded middle His argument was the following dd Suppose that A is the statement There exists a member of the set S having the property P If the set is finite it is possible in principle to examine each member of S and determine whether there is a member of S with the property P or that every member of S lacks the property P this was missing a closing quote For finite sets therefore Brouwer accepted the principle of the excluded middle as valid He refused to accept it for infinite sets because if the set S is infinite we cannot even in principle examine each member of the set If during the course of our examination we find a member of the set with the property P the first alternative is substantiated but if we never find such a member the second alternative is still not substantiated Since mathematical theorems are often proved by establishing that the negation would involve us in a contradiction this third possibility which Brouwer suggested would throw into question many of the mathematical statements currently accepted Taking the Principle of the Excluded Middle from the mathematician Hilbert said is the same as prohibiting the boxer the use of his fists The possible loss did not seem to bother Weyl Brouwer s program was the coming thing he insisted to his friends in Zurich Reid p 149 dd In his lecture in 1941 at Yale and the subsequent paper Godel proposed a solution that the negation of a universal proposition was to be understood as asserting the existence of a counterexample Dawson p 157 Godel s approach to the law of excluded middle was to assert that objections against the use of impredicative definitions had carried more weight than the law of excluded middle and related theorems of the propositional calculus Dawson p 156 He proposed his system S and he concluded by mentioning several applications of his interpretation Among them were a proof of the consistency with intuitionistic logic of the principle A A A despite the inconsistency of the assumption A A A Dawson p 157 no closing parenthesis had been placed The debate seemed to weaken mathematicians logicians and engineers continue to use the law of excluded middle and double negation in their daily work Intuitionist definitions of the law principle of excluded middle edit The following highlights the deep mathematical and philosophic problem behind what it means to know and also helps elucidate what the law implies i e what the law really means Their difficulties with the law emerge that they do not want to accept as true implications drawn from that which is unverifiable untestable unknowable or from the impossible or the false All quotes are from van Heijenoort italics added Brouwer offers his definition of principle of excluded middle we see here also the issue of testability On the basis of the testability just mentioned there hold for properties conceived within a specific finite main system the principle of excluded middle that is the principle that for every system every property is either correct richtig or impossible and in particular the principle of the reciprocity of the complementary species that is the principle that for every system the correctness of a property follows from the impossibility of the impossibility of this property 335 citation needed dd Kolmogorov s definition cites Hilbert s two axioms of negation A A B A B A B B Hilbert s first axiom of negation anything follows from the false made its appearance only with the rise of symbolic logic as did the first axiom of implication while the axiom under consideration axiom 5 asserts something about the consequences of something impossible we have to accept B if the true judgment A is regarded as false Hilbert s second axiom of negation expresses the principle of excluded middle The principle is expressed here in the form in which is it used for derivations if B follows from A as well as from A then B is true Its usual form every judgment is either true or false is equivalent to that given above From the first interpretation of negation that is the interdiction from regarding the judgment as true it is impossible to obtain the certitude that the principle of excluded middle is true Brouwer showed that in the case of such transfinite judgments the principle of excluded middle cannot be considered obvious footnote 9 This is Leibniz s very simple formulation see Nouveaux Essais IV 2 The formulation A is either B or not B has nothing to do with the logic of judgments footnote 10 Symbolically the second form is expressed thus dd A A where means or The equivalence of the two forms is easily proved p 421 Examples editFor example if P is the proposition Socrates is mortal then the law of excluded middle holds that the logical disjunction Either Socrates is mortal or it is not the case that Socrates is mortal is true by virtue of its form alone That is the middle position that Socrates is neither mortal nor not mortal is excluded by logic and therefore either the first possibility Socrates is mortal or its negation it is not the case that Socrates is mortal must be true An example of an argument that depends on the law of excluded middle follows 10 We seek to prove that there exist two irrational numbers a displaystyle a nbsp and b displaystyle b nbsp such that a b displaystyle a b nbsp is rational It is known that 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 nbsp is irrational see proof Consider the number 2 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 sqrt 2 nbsp Clearly excluded middle this number is either rational or irrational If it is rational the proof is complete and a 2 displaystyle a sqrt 2 nbsp and b 2 displaystyle b sqrt 2 nbsp But if 2 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 sqrt 2 nbsp is irrational then let a 2 2 displaystyle a sqrt 2 sqrt 2 nbsp and b 2 displaystyle b sqrt 2 nbsp Then a b 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 displaystyle a b left sqrt 2 sqrt 2 right sqrt 2 sqrt 2 left sqrt 2 cdot sqrt 2 right sqrt 2 2 2 nbsp and 2 is certainly rational This concludes the proof In the above argument the assertion this number is either rational or irrational invokes the law of excluded middle An intuitionist for example would not accept this argument without further support for that statement This might come in the form of a proof that the number in question is in fact irrational or rational as the case may be or a finite algorithm that could determine whether the number is rational Non constructive proofs over the infinite edit The above proof is an example of a non constructive proof disallowed by intuitionists The proof is non constructive because it doesn t give specific numbers a displaystyle a nbsp and b displaystyle b nbsp that satisfy the theorem but only two separate possibilities one of which must work Actually a 2 2 displaystyle a sqrt 2 sqrt 2 nbsp is irrational but there is no known easy proof of that fact Davis 2000 220 Constructive proofs of the specific example above are not hard to produce for example a 2 displaystyle a sqrt 2 nbsp and b log 2 9 displaystyle b log 2 9 nbsp are both easily shown to be irrational and a b 3 displaystyle a b 3 nbsp a proof allowed by intuitionists By non constructive Davis means that a proof that there actually are mathematic entities satisfying certain conditions would not have to provide a method to exhibit explicitly the entities in question p 85 Such proofs presume the existence of a totality that is complete a notion disallowed by intuitionists when extended to the infinite for them the infinite can never be completed In classical mathematics there occur non constructive or indirect existence proofs which intuitionists do not accept For example to prove there exists an n such that P n the classical mathematician may deduce a contradiction from the assumption for all n not P n Under both the classical and the intuitionistic logic by reductio ad absurdum this gives not for all n not P n The classical logic allows this result to be transformed into there exists an n such that P n but not in general the intuitionistic the classical meaning that somewhere in the completed infinite totality of the natural numbers there occurs an n such that P n is not available to him since he does not conceive the natural numbers as a completed totality 11 Kleene 1952 49 50 David Hilbert and Luitzen E J Brouwer both give examples of the law of excluded middle extended to the infinite Hilbert s example the assertion that either there are only finitely many prime numbers or there are infinitely many quoted in Davis 2000 97 and Brouwer s Every mathematical species is either finite or infinite Brouwer 1923 in van Heijenoort 1967 336 In general intuitionists allow the use of the law of excluded middle when it is confined to discourse over finite collections sets but not when it is used in discourse over infinite sets e g the natural numbers Thus intuitionists absolutely disallow the blanket assertion For all propositions P concerning infinite sets D P or P Kleene 1952 48 12 Putative counterexamples to the law of excluded middle include the liar paradox or Quine s paradox Certain resolutions of these paradoxes particularly Graham Priest s dialetheism as formalised in LP have the law of excluded middle as a theorem but resolve out the Liar as both true and false In this way the law of excluded middle is true but because truth itself and therefore disjunction is not exclusive it says next to nothing if one of the disjuncts is paradoxical or both true and false Criticisms editThe Catuṣkoṭi tetralemma is an ancient alternative to the law of excluded middle which examines all four possible assignments of truth values to a proposition and its negation It has been important in Indian logic and Buddhist logic as well as the ancient Greek philosophical school known as Pyrrhonism Many modern logic systems replace the law of excluded middle with the concept of negation as failure Instead of a proposition s being either true or false a proposition is either true or not able to be proved true 13 These two dichotomies only differ in logical systems that are not complete The principle of negation as failure is used as a foundation for autoepistemic logic and is widely used in logic programming In these systems the programmer is free to assert the law of excluded middle as a true fact but it is not built in a priori into these systems Mathematicians such as L E J Brouwer and Arend Heyting have also contested the usefulness of the law of excluded middle in the context of modern mathematics 14 In mathematical logic edit In modern mathematical logic the excluded middle has been argued to result in possible self contradiction It is possible in logic to make well constructed propositions that can be neither true nor false a common example of this is the Liar s paradox 15 the statement this statement is false which is argued to itself be neither true nor false Arthur Prior has argued that The Paradox is not an example of a statement that cannot be true or false The law of excluded middle still holds here as the negation of this statement This statement is not false can be assigned true In set theory such a self referential paradox can be constructed by examining the set the set of all sets that do not contain themselves This set is unambiguously defined but leads to a Russell s paradox 16 17 does the set contain as one of its elements itself However in the modern Zermelo Fraenkel set theory this type of contradiction is no longer admitted Furthermore paradoxes of self reference can be constructed without even invoking negation at all as in Curry s paradox citation needed Very few mathematicians work in areas which allow for The Law of Excluded Middle to be false as it is not compatible with the standard axiomatic system ZFC Namely it is not compatible with the Axiom of Choice 18 Analogous laws editSome systems of logic have different but analogous laws For some finite n valued logics there is an analogous law called the law of excludedn 1th If negation is cyclic and is a max operator then the law can be expressed in the object language by P P P P where represents n 1 negation signs and n 1 disjunction signs It is easy to check that the sentence must receive at least one of the n truth values and not a value that is not one of the n Other systems reject the law entirely specify Law of the weak excluded middle edit A particularly well studied intermediate logic is given by De Morgan logic which adds the axiom P P displaystyle neg P lor neg neg P nbsp to intuitionistic logic which is sometimes called the law of the weak excluded middle This is equivalent to a few other statements Satisfying all of De Morgan s laws including P Q P Q displaystyle neg P land Q leftrightarrow neg P lor neg Q nbsp P Q P Q displaystyle P to Q lor neg P to neg Q nbsp P Q R P Q P R displaystyle P to Q lor neg R to P to Q lor P to neg R nbsp See also editBrouwer Hilbert controversy foundational controversy in twentieth century mathematicsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback an account on the formalist intuitionist divide around the Law of the excluded middle Consequentia mirabilis Pattern of reasoning in propositional logic Constructive set theory Diaconescu s theorem Dichotomy Splitting of a whole into exactly two non overlapping parts dyadic relations and processes Law of excluded fourth System including an indeterminate valuePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Law of excluded middle is untrue in many valued logic Propositional calculus in which there are more than two truth values such as ternary logic System including an indeterminate valuePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets and fuzzy logic System for reasoning about vagueness Laws of thought Axioms of rational discoursePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Limited principle of omniscience Mathematical concept Logical graph Diagram of graphical syntaxs a graphical syntax for propositional logic Logical determinism view that a proposition about the future is either necessarily true or its negation is necessarily truePages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback the application excluded middle to modal Type of formal logic propositions Mathematical constructivism Non affirming negation in the Prasangika Doctrinal distinction within Tibetan BuddhismPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets school of Buddhism another system in which the law of excluded middle is untrue Peirce s law Axiom used in logic and philosophy another way of turning intuition classicalFootnotes edit Laws of thought Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 20 March 2021 Realism Metaphysical realism and objective truth Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 20 March 2021 Tomassi Paul 1999 Logic Routledge p 124 ISBN 978 0 415 16696 6 P T Geach The Law of Excluded Middle in Logic Matters p 74 On Interpretation c 9 Metaphysics B 2 996b 26 30 Metaphysics G 7 1011b 26 27 Alfred North Whitehead Bertrand Russell 1910 Principia Mathematica Cambridge p 105 The original symbol as used by Reichenbach is an upside down V nowadays used for AND The AND for Reichenbach is the same as that used in Principia Mathematica a dot cf p 27 where he shows a truth table where he defines a b Reichenbach defines the exclusive or on p 35 as the negation of the equivalence One sign used nowadays is a circle with a in it i e because in binary a b yields modulo 2 addition addition without carry Other signs are not identical to or not equal to This well known example of a non constructive proof depending on the law of excluded middle can be found in many places for example Megill Norman Metamath A Computer Language for Pure Mathematics footnote on p 17 and Davis 2000 220 footnote 2 In a comparative analysis pp 43 59 of the three isms and their foremost spokesmen Logicism Russell and Whitehead Intuitionism Brouwer and Formalism Hilbert Kleene turns his thorough eye toward intuitionism its founder Brouwer and the intuitionists complaints with respect to the law of excluded middle as applied to arguments over the completed infinite For more about the conflict between the intuitionists e g Brouwer and the formalists Hilbert see Foundations of mathematics and Intuitionism Clark Keith 1978 Logic and Data Bases PDF Springer Verlag pp 293 322 Negation as a failure doi 10 1007 978 1 4684 3384 5 11 Detlefsen Michael January 1992 Proof and Knowledge in Mathematics by Michael Detlefsen Routledge ISBN 9780415068055 Priest Graham 28 November 2010 Paradoxical Truth Opinionator Retrieved 10 September 2023 Kevin C Klement Russell s Paradox Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Priest Graham 1983 The Logical Paradoxes and the Law of Excluded Middle The Philosophical Quarterly 33 131 160 165 doi 10 2307 2218742 JSTOR 2218742 Diaconescu Radu August 1975 Axiom of Choice and Complementation PDF Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society 51 1 176 178 doi 10 1090 S0002 9939 1975 0373893 X Retrieved 13 March 2024 References editAquinas Thomas Summa Theologica Fathers of the English Dominican Province trans Daniel J Sullivan ed vols 19 20 in Robert Maynard Hutchins ed Great Books of the Western World Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Chicago Illinois 1952 Cited as GB 19 20 Aristotle Metaphysics W D Ross trans vol 8 in Robert Maynard Hutchins ed Great Books of the Western World Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Chicago Illinois 1952 Cited as GB 8 1st published W D Ross trans The Works of Aristotle Oxford University Press Oxford UK Martin Davis 2000 Engines of Logic Mathematicians and the Origin of the Computer W W Norton amp Company NewYork New York ISBN 0 393 32229 7 pbk Dawson J Logical Dilemmas The Life and Work of Kurt Godel A K Peters Wellesley Massachusetts 1997 van Heijenoort J From Frege to Godel A Source Book in Mathematical Logic 1879 1931 Harvard University Press Cambridge Massachusetts 1967 Reprinted with corrections 1977 Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer 1923 On the significance of the principle of excluded middle in mathematics especially in function theory reprinted with commentary p 334 van Heijenoort Andrei Nikolaevich Kolmogorov 1925 On the principle of excluded middle reprinted with commentary p 414 van Heijenoort Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer 1927 On the domains of definitions of functions reprinted with commentary p 446 van Heijenoort Although not directly germane in his 1923 Brouwer uses certain words defined in this paper Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer 1927 2 Intuitionistic reflections on formalism reprinted with commentary p 490 van Heijenoort Stephen C Kleene 1952 original printing 1971 6th printing with corrections 10th printing 1991 Introduction to Metamathematics North Holland Publishing Company Amsterdam New York ISBN 0 7204 2103 9 Kneale W and Kneale M The Development of Logic Oxford University Press Oxford UK 1962 Reprinted with corrections 1975 Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell Principia Mathematica to 56 Cambridge at the University Press 1962 Second Edition of 1927 reprinted Extremely difficult because of arcane symbolism but a must have for serious logicians Bertrand Russell An Inquiry Into Meaning and Truth The William James Lectures for 1940 delivered at Harvard University Bertrand Russell The Problems of Philosophy With a New Introduction by John Perry Oxford University Press New York 1997 edition first published 1912 Easy to read Bertrand Russell The Art of Philosophizing and Other Essays Littlefield Adams amp Co Totowa New Jersey 1974 edition first published 1968 Includes a wonderful essay on The Art of drawing Inferences Hans Reichenbach Elements of Symbolic Logic Dover New York 1947 1975 Tom Mitchell Machine Learning WCB McGraw Hill 1997 Constance Reid Hilbert Copernicus Springer Verlag New York Inc 1996 first published 1969 Contains a wealth of biographical information much derived from interviews Bart Kosko Fuzzy Thinking The New Science of Fuzzy Logic Hyperion New York 1993 Fuzzy thinking at its finest but a good introduction to the concepts David Hume An Inquiry Concerning Human Understanding reprinted in Great Books of the Western World Encyclopaedia Britannica Volume 35 1952 p 449 ff This work was published by Hume in 1758 as his rewrite of his juvenile Treatise of Human Nature Being An attempt to introduce the experimental method of Reasoning into Moral Subjects Vol I Of The Understanding first published 1739 reprinted as David Hume A Treatise of Human Nature Penguin Classics 1985 Also see David Applebaum The Vision of Hume Vega London 2001 a reprint of a portion of An Inquiry starts on p 94 ffExternal links edit Contradiction entry in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Law of excluded middle amp oldid 1216112987, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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