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MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Thursday May 02, 2024
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In the above passage, Peirce introduces the term ''ampheck'' for the 2-place logical connective or the binary logical operator that is currently called the ''[[joint denial]]'' in logic, the NNOR operator in computer science, or indicated by means of  phrases like "neither-nor" or "both not" in ordinary language.  For this operation he employs a symbol that the typographer most likely set by inverting the [[zodiac]] symbol for [[Aries]], but set in the text above by means of the ''curly wedge'' symbol <math>(\curlywedge).</math>
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In the above passage, Peirce introduces the term ''ampheck'' for the 2-place logical connective or the binary logical operator that is currently called the ''[[joint denial]]'' in logic, the NNOR operator in computer science, or indicated by means of  phrases like "neither-nor" or "both not" in ordinary language.  For this operation he employs a symbol that the typographer most likely set by inverting the [[zodiac]] symbol for [[Aries]], but set in the text above by means of the ''curly wedge'' symbol.
    
In the same paper, Peirce introduces a symbol for the logically dual operator.  This was rendered by the editors of his ''Collected Papers'' as an inverted Aries symbol with a bar or a serif at the top, in this way denoting the connective or logical operator that is currently called the ''[[alternative denial]]'' in logic, the NAND operator in computer science, or invoked by means of phrases like "not-and" or "not both" in ordinary language.  It is not clear whether it was Peirce himself or later writers who initiated the practice, but on account of their dual relationship it became common to refer to these two operators in the plural, as the ''amphecks''.
 
In the same paper, Peirce introduces a symbol for the logically dual operator.  This was rendered by the editors of his ''Collected Papers'' as an inverted Aries symbol with a bar or a serif at the top, in this way denoting the connective or logical operator that is currently called the ''[[alternative denial]]'' in logic, the NAND operator in computer science, or invoked by means of phrases like "not-and" or "not both" in ordinary language.  It is not clear whether it was Peirce himself or later writers who initiated the practice, but on account of their dual relationship it became common to refer to these two operators in the plural, as the ''amphecks''.
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