OurBigBook About$ Donate
 Sign in+ Sign up
by Wikipedia Bot (@wikibot, 0)

Calculus ratiocinator

 Home Mathematics History of mathematics Analytic philosophy Philosophy of language Concepts in the philosophy of language
 0 By others on same topic  0 Discussions  1970-01-01  See my version
"Calculus ratiocinator" is a term coined by the 17th-century philosopher and mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. It refers to a formal system of reasoning that combines elements of logic and mathematics to enable the computation of truths. The concept is part of Leibniz's broader vision of a universal language or a "characteristic language" (lingua characteristica) that could express all human knowledge and facilitate clear reasoning.

 Ancestors (6)

  1. Concepts in the philosophy of language
  2. Philosophy of language
  3. Analytic philosophy
  4. History of mathematics
  5. Mathematics
  6.  Home

 View article source

 Discussion (0)

+ New discussion

There are no discussions about this article yet.

 Articles by others on the same topic (0)

There are currently no matching articles.
  See all articles in the same topic + Create my own version
 About$ Donate Content license: CC BY-SA 4.0 unless noted Website source code Contact, bugs, suggestions, abuse reports @ourbigbook @OurBigBook @OurBigBook