Unicist Logic: The Ontogenetic Logic that Underlies the Real World


Introduction

The basic structure of unicist ontogenetic logic was discovered in 1986 after 10 years of research on evolution. The research continued through multiple applications that involved the development of unicist ontology, unicist concepts, functionalist principles, and binary actions, all of which are consequences of the principles and rules of unicist logic. 

 By 2024, the evolution laws based on unicist logic could finally be validated, leading to the launch of Unicist Logic in the scientific community after nearly 40 years of use in developing adaptive solutions and forecasting adaptive environments (future scenarios). 

There are multiple logics. The logics that preexisted are all reasoning processes that apply to the solution of specific problems. The paradigm shift of unicist logic is that its ontogenesis is not a need to reason to manage problems, but the understanding of the intrinsic and extrinsic functionality of things. Unicist logic explains why things work. Its use in reasoning processes is necessary when the functionality of things needs to be addressed.

Unicist logic emulated the ontogenetic intelligence of nature and enabled the development of unicist AI, which is a fundamentals-based AI designed to handle adaptability. 

This logic defines the possibilities of an adaptive entity, and its mathematics helps avoid fallacious decision-making due to the strictness of the integration rules of the constituents of an adaptive entity.

About the Unicist Ontogenetic Logic 

The unicist ontogenetic logic underlies the functionality of all adaptive systems, whether they are living beings or artificial entities. All natural systems in the real world are more or less adaptive. The fittest individuals are those whose adaptations are best suited to their environment, making them more likely to survive longer. The unicist logic underlies the intelligence of living beings and the principles and properties of all types of artificial adaptive entities. Therefore, it is the logic that needs to be used to deal with adaptability in the real world. 

Intelligence necessarily operates driven by principles and rules to function in terms of adaptability within an environment. It is the inherent logic that defines the functionality of all adaptive systems in the universe. 

It provides the structure of the unicist ontology that defines things based on their functionality and the consequent functionalist principles that define the purpose, active function, and energy conservation functions of all entities that are part of a system. Unicist logic provides the structure of the intelligence of living beings and of the principles and properties of artificial adaptive entities.

Intelligence is the ability to develop actions that ensure the functionality, dynamics, and evolution of things, inherent to all adaptive entities in the universe. This implies that different domains use different types of intelligence according to the level of evolution of the adaptive entities. When we talk about living beings, we call it intelligence; when we discuss artificial adaptive entities, we refer to properties. 

Humans possess a type of intelligence that is homologous to the intelligence of animals at a superior level of evolution. Plants exhibit a different type of intelligence, yet it serves the same purpose. Chemical elements, whether organic or inorganic, have properties that are homologous to the intelligence of living beings.

Unicist logic, as the genetic logic of living beings and the logic that defines the functionality of adaptive artificial entities, was based on the discovery of the intelligence that underlies nature, defined by a purpose, an active and entropic principle, and an energy conservation principle, integrated by a supplementation law and a complementation law.

 Unicist logic, a double dialectical logic, drives the functionality, dynamics, and evolution of all adaptive systems, whether they are living beings or artificial entities. In living beings, it defines the functionality of their intelligence; in inanimate adaptive entities, it establishes the principles and properties of their functionality, dynamics, and evolution.

On the one hand, you will find the unicist logical explanation of the functionality of living entities including enzymes, motor and sensory nervous systems, axons, and trees. On the other hand, you will find the explanation of how unicist logic defines the functionalist principles of inorganic chemical elements, atoms, alloys, airplanes, electric motors, cultures, businesses, safety matches, and education. 

Conclusion 

The rules of unicist logic underlie the functionality of all adaptive systems, whether they are living beings or artificial entities. Unicist logic underlies the intelligence of living beings and the principles and properties of all types of adaptive entities. 

This is the logic that must be employed to effectively handle adaptability in the real world. It is a triadic logic that moves beyond the dualistic rational approach, which deals with the functionality of things based on the conjunction of elements (and) instead of using exclusive disjunctions (or). 

This approach allows for a universal understanding of intelligence, unified by its role in promoting adaptability and functionality, yet diversified by the specific mechanisms and capabilities of different entities.

You can learn how to manage the unicist ontogenetic logic by using the Multilingual Unicist Virtual Researcher

The Unicist Research Institute

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