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  1. Modal Logic.Patrick Blackburn, Maarten de Rijke & Yde Venema - 2001 - Studia Logica 76 (1):142-148.
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  • On Fuzzy Logic I Many‐valued rules of inference.Jan Pavelka - 1979 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 25 (3-6):45-52.
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  • On Fuzzy Logic III. Semantical completeness of some many-valued propositional calculi.Jan Pavelka - 1979 - Zeitschrift fur mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik 25 (25-29):447-464.
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  • On Fuzzy Logic I Many‐valued rules of inference.Jan Pavelka - 1979 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 25 (3‐6):45-52.
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  • On Fuzzy Logic III. Semantical completeness of some many‐valued propositional calculi.Jan Pavelka - 1979 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 25 (25‐29):447-464.
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  • Modal Logic: Graph. Darst.Patrick Blackburn, Maarten de Rijke & Yde Venema - 2001 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Maarten de Rijke & Yde Venema.
    This modern, advanced textbook reviews modal logic, a field which caught the attention of computer scientists in the late 1970's.
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  • Extending Łukasiewicz Logics with a Modality: Algebraic Approach to Relational Semantics.Georges Hansoul & Bruno Teheux - 2013 - Studia Logica 101 (3):505-545.
    This paper presents an algebraic approach of some many-valued generalizations of modal logic. The starting point is the definition of the [0, 1]-valued Kripke models, where [0, 1] denotes the well known MV-algebra. Two types of structures are used to define validity of formulas: the class of frames and the class of Ł n -valued frames. The latter structures are frames in which we specify in each world u the set (a subalgebra of Ł n ) of the allowed truth (...)
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  • Metamathematics of Fuzzy Logic.Petr Hájek - 1998 - Dordrecht, Boston and London: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    This book presents a systematic treatment of deductive aspects and structures of fuzzy logic understood as many valued logic sui generis. It aims to show that fuzzy logic as a logic of imprecise (vague) propositions does have well-developed formal foundations and that most things usually named ‘fuzzy inference’ can be naturally understood as logical deduction. It is for mathematicians, logicians, computer scientists, specialists in artificial intelligence and knowledge engineering, and developers of fuzzy logic.
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  • Modal logic.Yde Venema - 2000 - Philosophical Review 109 (2):286-289.
    Modern modal logic originated as a branch of philosophical logic in which the concepts of necessity and possibility were investigated by means of a pair of dual operators that are added to a propositional or first-order language. The field owes much of its flavor and success to the introduction in the 1950s of the “possible-worlds” semantics in which the modal operators are interpreted via some “accessibility relation” connecting possible worlds. In subsequent years, modal logic has received attention as an attractive (...)
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  • Book Reviews. [REVIEW]P. Hájek - 2002 - Studia Logica 72 (3):433-443.
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  • On Fuzzy Logic II. Enriched residuated lattices and semantics of propositional calculi.Jan Pavelka - 1979 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 25 (7‐12):119-134.
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  • Many-valued modal logics.Melvin C. Fitting - unknown
    Two families of many-valued modal logics are investigated. Semantically, one family is characterized using Kripke models that allow formulas to take values in a finite many-valued logic, at each possible world. The second family generalizes this to allow the accessibility relation between worlds also to be many-valued. Gentzen sequent calculi are given for both versions, and soundness and completeness are established.
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  • Many-valued modal logics II.Melvin Fitting - unknown
    Suppose there are several experts, with some dominating others (expert A dominates expert B if B says something is true whenever A says it is). Suppose, further, that each of the experts has his or her own view of what is possible — in other words each of the experts has their own Kripke model in mind (subject, of course, to the dominance relation that may hold between experts). How will they assign truth values to sentences in a common modal (...)
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  • A Proof Of Completeness For Continuous First-order Logic.Arthur Pedersen & Itaï Ben Yaacov - 2010 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 75 (1):168-190.
    Continuous first-order logic has found interest among model theorists who wish to extend the classical analysis of “algebraic” structures to various natural classes of complete metric structures. With research in continuous first-order logic preoccupied with studying the model theory of this framework, we find a natural question calls for attention. Is there an interesting set of axioms yielding a completeness result?The primary purpose of this article is to show that a certain, interesting set of axioms does indeed yield a completeness (...)
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  • A proof of completeness for continuous first-order logic.Itaï Ben Yaacov & Arthur Paul Pedersen - 2010 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 75 (1):168-190.
    -/- Continuous first-order logic has found interest among model theorists who wish to extend the classical analysis of “algebraic” structures (such as fields, group, and graphs) to various natural classes of complete metric structures (such as probability algebras, Hilbert spaces, and Banach spaces). With research in continuous first-order logic preoccupied with studying the model theory of this framework, we find a natural question calls for attention. Is there an interesting set of axioms yielding a completeness result? -/- The primary purpose (...)
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  • On Fuzzy Logic II. Enriched residuated lattices and semantics of propositional calculi.Jan Pavelka - 1979 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 25 (7-12):119-134.
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  • A note on infinitary continuous logic.Stefano Baratella - 2015 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 61 (6):448-457.
    We show how to extend the Continuous Propositional Logic by means of an infinitary rule in order to achieve a Strong Completeness Theorem. Eventually we investigate how to recover a weak version of the Deduction Theorem.
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