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(2011) Otto Neurath and the unity of science, Dordrecht, Springer.

Searching for the unity of science

from classical logic to abductive logical systems

Ángel Nepomuceno , Fernando Soler , Atocha Aliseda

pp. 201-212

From an informational point of view, an inference or argumentation can be considered as a finite sequence of sentences of a language, not arbitrarily ordered, for which one may distinguish an initial group of sentences called premises, followed by another sentence called conclusion. The set of premises (or set of reasons) may be empty, but the conclusion has to be present.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-0143-4_15


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Full citation:

Nepomuceno, Á. , Soler, F. , Aliseda, A. (2011)., Searching for the unity of science: from classical logic to abductive logical systems, in J. Symons, O. Pombo & J. M. . Torres (eds.), Otto Neurath and the unity of science, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 201-212.

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