| Thomas Metzinger - 1995 - 580 sidor
...— in addition to the formalism of the two-valued logics of being, ie the three logical principles (the Law of Identity, the Law of Contradiction and the Law of Excluded Middle, the tertium non datur) — the concept of time appears. Time appears as a necessary background to objectify... | |
| Rāmacandra Miśra - 1998 - 474 sidor
...(I) The Three Laws of Formal Logic: Their Nature and Scope The three laws of Formal Logic, namely, the Law of Identity, the Law of Contradiction and the Law of Excluded Middle are conceived as universally true. They are formal in nature and express the most general nature of... | |
| 吳汝鈞 - 2000 - 678 sidor
...kind of syllogism can be seen in the verse as: Laws of Thought The laws of thought usually consist of the law of identity, the law of contradiction and the law of the excluded middle. Nagarjuna's arguments have less to do with the law of identity. other hand often... | |
| Edward Wayne Younkins - 2005 - 404 sidor
...epistemology, all thinking takes place in accordance with these laws, which are known respectively as the "law of identity," the "law of contradiction," and the "law of excluded middle." But, these are not just laws of thinking, they are laws of things, they are statements that are attributed... | |
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