u/OC-alert

Does an Astroboy fic of this type exist?

I've decided that "learn to control you powers/emotions or they control you" is a situation I want to see Atom in, with the high stakes of potentially causing great destruction.

Him needing to learn to use his powers properly, so he doesn't use them horribly in a panic, seems like too good a plot point to pass up, but unfortunately I'm very bad at writing things myself.

I have read "Defense Syatems Armed" but it's not quite the thing I'm looking for.

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u/OC-alert — 22 hours ago
▲ 6 r/logic

Why can't logic describe partial truth or intensity of truth?

I think I kind of understand why boolean logic can't describe partial truths - it's a system designed purely to describe what is true or false in a binary sense.

But why isn't there a single form of logic that describes partial or intensities of truths?

I've actually gotten somewhat mixed messages on this. Some people say that fuzzy logic describes partial truths or intensities of truths, but some people seem to say that fuzzy logic technically only deals with probability that something is true.

How is this so? Is it that probability of a truth and intensity of a truth are actually logically the same thing?

For example. I don't see anything logically wrong with saying an apple weighs 70 grams, but it's not a binary issue as to whether the apple does or doesn't "weigh", right? That's an issue that has more or less truth.

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u/OC-alert — 2 days ago

Eli5 Why logic can't describe partial truth or intensity of truth?

I think I kind of understand why boolean logic can't describe partial truths - it's a system designed purely to describe what is true or false in a binary sense.

But why isn't there a single form of logic that describes partial or intensities of truths?

I've actually gotten somewhat mixed messages on this. Some people say that fuzzy logical describes partial truths or intensities of truths, but some people seem to say that fuzzy logic technically only deals with probability that something is true.

How is this so? Is it that probability of a truth and intensity of a truth are actually logically the same thing?

reddit.com
u/OC-alert — 2 days ago

First of all, I should probably phrase this is a more objective way.

How to the cells in a multicellular organism actually operate as one, instead of all doing their own separate thing?

I know that on some level cell signalling must be involved, and I know a bit about paracrine endocrine, autocrine, and gap junction signals, but is there a beginner-friendly way to explain how cell communication brings a multicellular organism together?

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u/OC-alert — 19 days ago