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- Law_of_identity abstract "This article uses forms of logical notation. For a concise description of the symbols used in this notation, see List of logic symbols.In logic, the law of identity is the first of the three classical laws of thought. It states that \"each thing is the same with itself and different from another\". By this it is meant that each thing (be it a universal or a particular) is composed of its own unique set of characteristic qualities or features, which the ancient Greeks called its essence. Consequently, things that have the same essence are the same thing, while things that have different essences are different things.In its symbolic representation, \"A is A\", the first element of the proposition represents the subject (thing) and the second element represents the predicate (its essence), with the copula \"is\" signifying the relation of \"identity\". Further, since a definition is an expression of the essence of that thing with which the linguistic term is associated, it follows that it is through its definition that the identity of a thing is established. For example, in the definitive proposition:\"A lawyer is a person qualified and authorized to practice law\", the subject (lawyer) and the predicate (person qualified and authorized to practice law) are declared to be one and the same thing (identical). Consequently, the Law of Identity prohibits us from rightfully calling anything other than \"a person qualified and authorized to practice law\" a \"lawyer\".In logical discourse, violations of the Law of Identity (LOI) result in the informal logical fallacy known as equivocation. That is to say, we cannot use the same term in the same discourse while having it signify different senses or meanings – even though the different meanings are conventionally prescribed to that term. In everyday language, violations of the LOI introduce ambiguity into the discourse, making it difficult to form an interpretation at the desired level of specificity.".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageID "1403190".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageLength "10639".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageOutDegree "64".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageRevisionID "690498138".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink African_Spir.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greece.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Antonius_Andreas.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Aristotle.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Ayn_Rand.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Baruch_Spinoza.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Classical_logic.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Identity.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Metaphysics.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Theorems_in_propositional_logic.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Copula_(linguistics).
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink David_Kaplan_(philosopher).
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Dialetheism.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Difference_and_Repetition.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Duns_Scotus.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Equality_(mathematics).
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Equivocation.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Essence.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Francisco_Suárez.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink George_Boole.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Gilles_Deleuze.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Gottfried_Wilhelm_Leibniz.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Hilary_Putnam.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink I_Am_What_I_Am.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink I_Am_that_I_Am.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Informal_fallacy.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink John_Locke.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink John_Searle.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Keith_Donnellan.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Law_of_noncontradiction.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Law_of_thought.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink List_of_logic_symbols.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Logic.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Mathematical_logic.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Metaphysics_(Aristotle).
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Nicholas_of_Cusa.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Organon.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Particular.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Plato.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Polysemy.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Predicate_(grammar).
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Proposition.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink René_Descartes.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Rose_is_a_rose_is_a_rose_is_a_rose.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Saul_Kripke.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Socrates.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Subject_(grammar).
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink The_Laws_of_Thought.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Theaetetus_(dialogue).
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Aquinas.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Hobbes.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Universal_(metaphysics).
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Wilhelm_Wundt.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLink Willard_Van_Orman_Quine.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLinkText "A=A".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLinkText "Law of identity".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLinkText "identical".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLinkText "identitarian".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLinkText "identity".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLinkText "law of identity".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageWikiLinkText "rule of identity".
- Law_of_identity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quote.
- Law_of_identity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Law_of_identity subject Category:Classical_logic.
- Law_of_identity subject Category:Identity.
- Law_of_identity subject Category:Metaphysics.
- Law_of_identity subject Category:Theorems_in_propositional_logic.
- Law_of_identity type Redirect.
- Law_of_identity type Theorem.
- Law_of_identity comment "This article uses forms of logical notation. For a concise description of the symbols used in this notation, see List of logic symbols.In logic, the law of identity is the first of the three classical laws of thought. It states that \"each thing is the same with itself and different from another\". By this it is meant that each thing (be it a universal or a particular) is composed of its own unique set of characteristic qualities or features, which the ancient Greeks called its essence.".
- Law_of_identity label "Law of identity".
- Law_of_identity sameAs Q2372261.
- Law_of_identity sameAs Principi_didentitat.
- Law_of_identity sameAs Ταυτότητα_(μαθηματικά).
- Law_of_identity sameAs Principio_de_identidad.
- Law_of_identity sameAs Principe_didentitxc3xa9.
- Law_of_identity sameAs חוק_הזהות.
- Law_of_identity sameAs Principio_didentitxc3xa0.
- Law_of_identity sameAs 同一性.
- Law_of_identity sameAs Zasada_tożsamości.
- Law_of_identity sameAs Princípio_da_identidade.
- Law_of_identity sameAs m.04zsgz.
- Law_of_identity sameAs Закон_тождества.
- Law_of_identity sameAs A_=_A.
- Law_of_identity sameAs Закон_тотожності.
- Law_of_identity sameAs Q2372261.
- Law_of_identity sameAs 同一律.
- Law_of_identity wasDerivedFrom Law_of_identity?oldid=690498138.
- Law_of_identity isPrimaryTopicOf Law_of_identity.