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Autore principale: Tzouvaras, Athanassios
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.11624
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author Tzouvaras, Athanassios
author_facet Tzouvaras, Athanassios
contents We approach the sorites paradox (SP) through an observer-based and time-dependent approach to truth of vague assertions. Formally the approach gives rise to a semantics, called fluxing-object semantics (FOS), because it involves models that contain ``fluxing objects'', that is, entities changing with time and observer. The models are equipped with agents (observers) and a linear and discrete time axis for time. The changing entities are represented by partial functions of time and agent, and this partiality causes truth-value gaps. If we interpret a truth-value gap as a third truth value, then FOS becomes a three-valued logic, which, quite interestingly, is proved identical to strong Kleene three-valued logic. The sorites phenomena can be represented in a structure of FOS as special objects that change imperceptibly with respect to an observer and with respect to a particular attribute. In this account the key point that eliminates the paradoxical character of sorites is the partiality of functions. When the observer is fixed the partiality corresponds to interrupted watching on his part. The interruption creates watching gaps during which the attributed property of the object as understood by the observer may change, without violating the imperceptibility condition. Interrupted watching has, according to experts on visual attention and focusing capabilities of humans, a firm physiological justification. The relationship of watching gaps with horizon crossing is also discussed.
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle An observer-based approach to the sorites paradox and the logic derived from that
Tzouvaras, Athanassios
Logic
We approach the sorites paradox (SP) through an observer-based and time-dependent approach to truth of vague assertions. Formally the approach gives rise to a semantics, called fluxing-object semantics (FOS), because it involves models that contain ``fluxing objects'', that is, entities changing with time and observer. The models are equipped with agents (observers) and a linear and discrete time axis for time. The changing entities are represented by partial functions of time and agent, and this partiality causes truth-value gaps. If we interpret a truth-value gap as a third truth value, then FOS becomes a three-valued logic, which, quite interestingly, is proved identical to strong Kleene three-valued logic. The sorites phenomena can be represented in a structure of FOS as special objects that change imperceptibly with respect to an observer and with respect to a particular attribute. In this account the key point that eliminates the paradoxical character of sorites is the partiality of functions. When the observer is fixed the partiality corresponds to interrupted watching on his part. The interruption creates watching gaps during which the attributed property of the object as understood by the observer may change, without violating the imperceptibility condition. Interrupted watching has, according to experts on visual attention and focusing capabilities of humans, a firm physiological justification. The relationship of watching gaps with horizon crossing is also discussed.
title An observer-based approach to the sorites paradox and the logic derived from that
topic Logic
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.11624