6 found
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Frank Markham Brown [3]Frank Malloy Brown [2]Frank M. Brown [1]
  1.  5
    Towards the automation of set theory and its logic.Frank Malloy Brown - 1978 - Artificial Intelligence 10 (3):281-316.
  2.  31
    George Boole's Deductive System.Frank Markham Brown - 2009 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 50 (3):303-330.
    The deductive system in Boole's Laws of Thought (LT) involves both an algebra, which we call proto-Boolean, and a "general method in Logic" making use of that algebra. Our object is to elucidate these two components of Boole's system, to prove his principal results, and to draw some conclusions not explicit in LT. We also discuss some examples of incoherence in LT; these mask the genius of Boole's design and account for much of the puzzled and disparaging commentary LT has (...)
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  3.  3
    An experimental logic based on the fundamental deduction principle.Frank M. Brown - 1986 - Artificial Intelligence 30 (2):117-263.
  4.  35
    Consequences, consistency, and independence in Boolean algebras.Frank Markham Brown & Sergiu Rudeanu - 1981 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 22 (1):45-62.
  5.  6
    An investigation into the goals of research in automatic theorem proving as related to mathematical reasoning.Frank Malloy Brown - 1980 - Artificial Intelligence 14 (3):221-242.
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  6.  12
    McColl and Minimization.Frank Markham Brown - 2010 - History and Philosophy of Logic 31 (4):337-348.
    In 1952, Quine showed that the problem of reducing a propositional formula to a simplest normal equivalent can be solved in two steps, viz., (i) express the given formula, Φ, equivalently as the disjunction of all its prime implicants, and (ii) find all non-redundant disjunctions of the latter that are equivalent to Φ (Quine 1952). However, it seems not generally known that an ingenious form of the same two-step process was published by Hugh McColl in 1878.
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