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The Logical Status of Diagrams
 
 
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The Logical Status of Diagrams [Hardcover]

Sun-Joo Shin (Author)

Price: $95.00 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

January 27, 1995 052146157X 978-0521461573
Diagrams are widely used in reasoning about problems in physics, mathematics, and logic, but have traditionally been considered to be only heuristic tools and not valid elements of mathematical proof. This book challenges the prejudice against visualization in the history of logic and mathematics and provides a formal foundation for work on natural reasoning in a visual mode. The author presents Venn diagrams as a formal system of representation and specifies rules of transformation that make this system sound and complete. The soundness of the diagrammatic system refutes the contention that graphical representation is misleading in reasoning. The book concludes with a discussion of some fundamental differences between graphical systems and linguistic systems.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"I will conclude by offering general praise for a work that really does deserve praise. Even more, it deserves to be read by those mathematicians and logicians who adhere to the general prejudice against diagrams. Shin has gone much farther than anyone in showing how a diagrammatic system can hold its own as a medium for reasoning....this book is clear and convincing....Shin's mastery and manipulation of her technical tools is always thorough and lucid. All in all, this is a very impressive, valuable piece of work." Modern Logic

"The book is refreshing in its clarity and modesty, and in its regular return to historial precedents. It will give welcome reassurance to all those logicians for whom pictures seem indisputably the simplest way for the mind to comprehend syllogistic reasoning." M. Schiff, Choice

"...The author's style is nice, very precise and approachable. The soundness and completeness of Venn systems provide a legitimate reason why logicians should be interested in nonlinguistic representation systems. Undoubtedly, this will be one of the rare inspiring sources motivating others to work in the field of visual representation systems." Branislav Boricic, Mathematical Reviews

"Shin has shown that sysytems of diagrams can be developed that precisley parallel axiomatic formal systems for monadic predicate logic....Shin correctly points out what diagram systems and verbal systems can both do...that realistic pictures...can't." Phillip L. Peterson, Philosophy in Review

Book Description

Diagrams are widely used in reasoning about problems in physics, mathematics, and logic, but have traditionally been considered to be only heuristic tools and not valid elements of mathematical proof. This book challenges this prejudice against visualization in the history of logic and mathematics provides a formal foundation for work on natural reasoning in a visual mode. The author presents Venn diagrams as a formal system of representation and specifies rules of transformation that make this system sound and complete. The soundness of the diagrammatic system refutes the contention that graphical representation is misleading in reasoning. The book concludes with a discussion of some fundamental differences between graphical systems and linguistic systems.This pathbreaking book will have important influence on research in logic, philosophy, and knowledge representation.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"Diagrams have been widely used in reasoning, for example, in solving problems in physics, mathematics, and logic." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
maximal diagram, perceptually obvious way, diagrammatic objects, given counterpart relation, maximal representation theorem, new syntactic device, conjunctive information, linguistic representation systems, new closed curve, disjunctive information, diagrammatic systems, atomic diagram, same symbol type, primary diagram, minimal region, closed curve interior, categorical sentences, fewer conventions, smallest set satisfying, sentential logic, existential graphs, representing facts, basic regions, perceptual inferences, sentence symbol
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Definition Let, Proof Suppose, Proof Refer, John Venn
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