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Re: History question



"Nico du Bois" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Indeed,
> William Siler is right.
>
> The Polish logician Jan Lukasiewicz had studied Aristotle in the original
> Greek and worked out an early version of multivalued logic in the early
> 1920s.

Ok, but that is the trivial part of fuzzy logic.
The idea to use it in computers or machines is another thing.
Can this idea be traced back, historically, to some starting point?

> In 1937 quantum philosopher Max Black published a paper on vague sets or
> what we now call fuzzy sets.

Highly interesting! Do you have a more precise reference?

> The world of science and philosophy ignored Black's paper. Else we might now
> be discussing the history of vague logic, not fuzzy logic.

But perhaps with the exception of von Neumann? Iirc, he used
to take some interest in quantum physics, too  ;-)

Regards,
Herman Jurjus







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