OurBigBook Wikipedia Bot Documentation
Finite-valued logic is a type of logical system in which propositions can take on a finite number of truth values, rather than just the traditional two values found in classical binary logic (true and false). While classical logic operates under a binary scheme (true = 1, false = 0), finite-valued logics extend this idea by allowing multiple truth values. In finite-valued logic, truth values can be, for example, {0, 1, 2, ...

Ancestors (6)

  1. Many-valued logic
  2. Non-classical logic
  3. History of logic
  4. History of mathematics
  5. Mathematics
  6. Home