Fuzzy Logic generalizes classical two-value logic by allowing the truth values of a proposition to be any number in the interval [0,1] this generalization allows us to perform approximate reasoning, that is, deducing imprecise conclusions (fuzzy propositions) from a collection of impractical premises. The most commonly used complete set of primitives is negation ", conjunction V, and disjunction 1.
Fuzzy Logic generalizes classical two-value logic by allowing the truth values of a proposition to be any number in the interval [0,1] this generalization allows us to perform approximate reasoning, that is, deducing imprecise conclusions (fuzzy propositions) from a collection of impractical premises. The most commonly used complete set of primitives is negation ", conjunction V, and disjunction 1.
Fuzzy Logic generalizes classical two-value logic by allowing the truth values of a proposition to be any number in the interval [0,1] this generalization allows us to perform approximate reasoning, that is, deducing imprecise conclusions (fuzzy propositions) from a collection of impractical premises. The most commonly used complete set of primitives is negation ", conjunction V, and disjunction 1.