Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Florencia Ucha, in Nov. 2014
The concept of axiomatic is used in our language in an extended way to refer to everything what is evident and true, that is, it is proven that this is how it is presented and shown and then it turns out to be unquestionable and irrefutable to the questions that may arise and that want to show it as something doubtful or open concerns about he.
This concept is closely related to that ofaxiom, because precisely also what is relative to an axiom will be defined as axiomatic.
An axiom is a valid and true statement and as such it is usually considered as maxims, principles, that contribute to the training of a theory corresponding to a scientific field, for example, or they are also often used as pillars of a argument.
Both concepts, axiom and axiomatic, are certainly ancient since the Greek philosophers of Ancient Greece used them, or rather they used the Greek terms of which derived, to designate those questions that did not need any proof or verification to be accepted as valid but were simply accepted as truths unquestionable.
For example, the concept of axiom is used as a synonym for principle.
Both the concept of axiom and that of axiomatic are used in a common way in the field of exact sciences, such is the case of the Physics and Math. The so-called laws or theorems with which we usually find ourselves in the study of both sciences are precisely supported by axioms.
On the other hand, in other slightly newer sciences, such as the communication, axioms are also used to define some crucial aspects of communication between people, for example.
For the logic, an axiom is a premise Obvious to which it is accepted without objection and without requiring any demonstration and that will also be used to demonstrate many other related issues.
It is worth noting that the set of axioms that have the mission of defining or sustaining a certain theory or law at the behest of a science it will be formally called an axiomatic system.
Topics in Axiomatic