Peirce algebras

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Abstract

We present a two-sorted algebra, called a Peirce algebra, of relations and sets interacting with each other. In a Peirce algebra, sets can combine with each other as in a Boolean algebra, relations can combine with each other as in a relation algebra, and in addition we have both a set-forming operator on relations (the Peirce product of Boolean modules) and a relation-forming operator on sets (a cylindrification operation). Two applications of Peirce algebras are given. The first points out that Peirce algebras provide a natural algebraic framework for modelling certain programming constructs. The second shows that the so-called terminological logics arising in knowledge representation have evolved a semantics best described as a calculus of relations interacting with sets. © 1994 BCS.

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APA

Brink, C., Britz, K., & Schmidt, R. A. (1994). Peirce algebras. Formal Aspects of Computing, 6(3), 339–358. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01215410

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