English edit

Etymology edit

equi- +‎ logical

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

equilogical (not comparable)

  1. Related by a logical tautology.
    • 1997, Raymond Hickey, Stanisław Puppel, Language History and Linguistic Modelling, →ISBN:
      The logical conditional p -> q may be interpreted by a statement couched in the words of the everyday language, say, materialiter, or by a concept(ual complex) that "considers all four rows of its truth table as equilogical and equiempirical.
    • 2001, Erik Hansen, The Synchronic Fallacy: Historical Investigations with a Theory of History:
      Hjelmslev does not realise that change and stability are equilogical concepts. Change is the contradictory of stability = Stability is the contradictory of change.
    • 2007, Hans Frede Nielsen, Irregularities in Modern English, →ISBN, page 4:
      To commit the Phenomenal Error is to explain or describe either of two equilogical or equiempirical phenomena on the basis of or in terms of the other phenomenon.
  2. (mathematics) Pertaining to topological spaces that are Cartesian closed categories.
    • 2015, Giuseppe Rosolini, “The category of equilogical spaces and the effective topos as homotopical quotients”, in arXiv[1]:
      We show that the two models of extensional type theory, those given by the category of equilogical spaces and by the effective topos, are homotopical quotients of categories of 2-groupoids..