The New Encyclopædia BritannicaEncyclopædia Britannica, 1992 |
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Page 58
... interpretation can be given to the starred forms . The important point is that the confidence with which a phonetic interpretation is assigned to the phonemes that are reconstructed will vary from one phoneme to another . It should be ...
... interpretation can be given to the starred forms . The important point is that the confidence with which a phonetic interpretation is assigned to the phonemes that are reconstructed will vary from one phoneme to another . It should be ...
Page 237
... interpretation , the interpretation should not prejudge the validity of what Boole called the process of analysis ; i.e. , the process whereby interpretable combina- tions of symbols are obtained . Whereas Leibniz sought a calculus that ...
... interpretation , the interpretation should not prejudge the validity of what Boole called the process of analysis ; i.e. , the process whereby interpretable combina- tions of symbols are obtained . Whereas Leibniz sought a calculus that ...
Page 559
... interpretation , all the state- ments expressible in it . Thus , A , is said to be formally undecidable in S. In showing ~ A , unprovable ( and true ) , the assumption was used ( for x = q ) that ~ A , is provable in S only when true ...
... interpretation , all the state- ments expressible in it . Thus , A , is said to be formally undecidable in S. In showing ~ A , unprovable ( and true ) , the assumption was used ( for x = q ) that ~ A , is provable in S only when true ...
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