relevance logic
mathematical logic system that imposes certain restrictions on implication
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relevance logic
Summary
relevance logic ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (59 views/month).[1]
Key Facts
- relevance logic's subclass of is recorded as substructural logic[2].
- relevance logic's subclass of is recorded as modal logic[3].
- relevance logic's subclass of is recorded as non-classical logic[4].
- relevance logic's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0198ph[5].
- relevance logic's Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy ID is recorded as logic-relevance[6].
- relevance logic's significant person is recorded as Ivan Orlov[7].
- relevance logic's significant person is recorded as Wilhelm Ackermann[8].
- relevance logic's significant person is recorded as Alonzo Church[9].
- relevance logic's significant person is recorded as Nuel Belnap[10].
- relevance logic's significant person is recorded as Alan Ross Anderson[11].
- relevance logic's significant person is recorded as Richard Sylvan[12].
- relevance logic's significant person is recorded as Bob Meyer[13].
- relevance logic's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as relevance-logic[14].
- relevance logic's nLab ID is recorded as relevance logic[15].
- relevance logic's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 197470904[16].
- relevance logic's theorized by is recorded as Ivan Orlov[17].
- relevance logic's KBpedia ID is recorded as RelevanceLogic[18].
Why It Matters
relevance logic ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (59 views/month).[1] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19]