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History of logic
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=== Buddhist logic === ==== Nagarjuna ==== [[Nagarjuna]] (c. 150–250 AD), the founder of the [[Madhyamaka]] ("Middle Way") developed an analysis known as the [[catuṣkoṭi]] (Sanskrit), a "four-cornered" system of argumentation that involves the systematic examination and rejection of each of the four possibilities of a proposition, ''P'': # ''P''; that is, being. # not ''P''; that is, not being. # [[File:Eight Patriarchs of the Shingon Sect of Buddhism Nagarjuna Cropped.jpg|thumb|Painting of Nāgārjuna from the ''Shingon Hassozō'', a series of scrolls authored by the [[Shingon]] school of Buddhism. Japan, [[Kamakura period]] (13th–14th century)]]''P'' and not ''P''; that is, being and not being. # not (''P'' or not ''P''); that is, neither being nor not being.{{Paragraph break}}Under [[propositional logic]], [[De Morgan's laws]] would imply that the fourth case is equivalent to the third case, and would be therefore superfluous, with only 3 actual cases to consider.
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