Comments

  • Pointer, please.

    Thank you. It might take me a little while to get through my new homework. :- ) I'll report back.

    BTW, while these domains do seem to be separate, it seems that life's most interesting problems/issues/relationships are dynamic.

    knowledge = f(learning) + ...
    learning = f(knowledge) + ...

    The more I learn, the less I know. What does that say about logic if it can't deal with these things? :wink:
  • Pointer, please.

    Thanks.

    Not so interested in the "which came first" question. It simply isn't an important question in this context.

    Let me try a different path that might make the "word salad" less obscure.

    In computer science we have the important concept of increment: X = X + 1
    From a traditional logic perspective, this is absurd. It only makes sense in the context of allowing state, or allowing the variable (register) X to change values (instantiation) over time. Ignoring the original seed, the current instantiation of X is dependent on the prior instantiation of X. There is causality. So, if X has a value x, then there was an X with the value x - 1. Yes, ultimately, this iterates all the way back to the seed (note: ignoring overflow if you know what that means in this context).

    Would you state this as X -> X - 1 ? (or X <- X + 1? or, X < X + 1? or ≡? or ⊃? or ⇒ or ⇔... ). If this conditional is true, isn't the contrapositive ¬ (X - 1) -> ¬ X also true?

    When we allow general logical variables to change state, and we create situations where the state change is causal (can't think of a case where this couldn't be true), we have a situation where the normal logic rules seem to apply, but not really. Without going into details of "where I'm going" with this (which is far more complex), I am trying to figure out if there is a body of knowledge/rules/techniques for dealing such situations. I'm guessing that there must be, because almost all life is based upon non-static agents. I can't find it. I hope that I'm simply looking in the wrong places and asking the wrong people.