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Auteur principal: Borgeke, Pelle Brooke
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2026
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.11848
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author Borgeke, Pelle Brooke
author_facet Borgeke, Pelle Brooke
contents Here we show, in the second paper in a series of articles, methods to calculate propositional statements with algebraic polyno mials as symbols for the connectives, which here are named operators. In the first article, we explained this formulation of the Propositional Calculus. In short, we transform to a dual space, which we here refer to as a polynomial family, which is another shape of DBNF. We name the polynomial families as PBNF, which stands for Polynomial Boolean Normal Form. We just use the one law of inference, the rule of Substi tution. We can use different polynomial families in the House of PBNF, depending on the statement form, making it even simpler. It is also pos sible to find new theorems and generalize older ones, for example, those given by Church and Barkley Rosser (see follow-up article) concerning duality.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2602_11848
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle PBNF-transform as a formulation of Propositional Calculus, II
Borgeke, Pelle Brooke
Logic
Here we show, in the second paper in a series of articles, methods to calculate propositional statements with algebraic polyno mials as symbols for the connectives, which here are named operators. In the first article, we explained this formulation of the Propositional Calculus. In short, we transform to a dual space, which we here refer to as a polynomial family, which is another shape of DBNF. We name the polynomial families as PBNF, which stands for Polynomial Boolean Normal Form. We just use the one law of inference, the rule of Substi tution. We can use different polynomial families in the House of PBNF, depending on the statement form, making it even simpler. It is also pos sible to find new theorems and generalize older ones, for example, those given by Church and Barkley Rosser (see follow-up article) concerning duality.
title PBNF-transform as a formulation of Propositional Calculus, II
topic Logic
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.11848