1- Period between 00:00 (midnight) until 06:00 (6:00 AM).
2- Darkness period between midnight until before dawn.
2- Darkness period between midnight until before dawn.
Oh-dark-thirty.
by ÝÝÝÝÝ February 5, 2026
Get the oh-dark-thirty mug.1- Period between 00:00 (midnight) until 06:00 (6:00 AM).
2- Darkness period between midnight until before dawn.
2- Darkness period between midnight until before dawn.
Zero-dark-thirty.
by ÝÝÝÝÝ February 5, 2026
Get the zero-dark-thirty mug.Related Words
by Papasmut March 8, 2026
Get the looking for a third mug.A logical principle that rejects the classical law of excluded middle (either a proposition is true or its negation is true). Instead, the law of the included third allows for a third truth-value: a proposition can be both true and false, or neither, or somewhere in between. It is foundational for paraconsistent logic, fuzzy logic, and dialectical thinking, where contradictions are not automatically fatal but can be integrated into reasoning. In complex systems—such as social contradictions, quantum superpositions, or borderline cases—a strict true/false binary fails; the included third acknowledges that reality often contains overlapping, ambiguous, or transitional states.
Example: “In a dialectical view, capitalism and socialism are not mutually exclusive; the law of the included third allows for hybrid economies where both elements coexist and transform.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
Get the Law of the Included Third mug.A logical extension proposing that there is not just one third value but a spectrum of intermediate truth-values—a “spectrum” between true and false, where propositions can be partially true, probable, or contextually graded. The spectral third replaces binary logic with a continuum, often used in quantum logic, fuzzy logic, and probability theory. It recognizes that many statements (e.g., “the system is stable”) are matters of degree, not absolutes. The spectral third allows for nuanced reasoning where truth is not a switch but a gradient.
Example: “The claim that ‘democracy exists’ is not simply true or false; under the law of the spectral third, we evaluate it as a spectrum—from fully democratic to barely so—capturing gradations the binary misses.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
Get the Law of the Spectral Third mug.A principle asserting that there are infinitely many truth-values beyond simple true and false—a continuous infinity of possible truth degrees, corresponding to real numbers between 0 and 1. This is the foundation of infinite-valued logics (e.g., Łukasiewicz logic). The infinite third allows for modeling vague concepts, probabilities, and gradual transitions without forcing a binary cutoff. In practice, it underpins fuzzy control systems, machine learning confidence scores, and any domain where certainty is a matter of degree.
Example: “The diagnosis wasn’t ‘disease or no disease’; the law of the infinite third let us assign a 0.73 probability, capturing the uncertainty that binary logic couldn’t.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
Get the Law of the Infinite Third mug.A principle that rejects an absolute, context‑free third value; instead, truth-values are relative to a framework, perspective, or reference system. The relative third acknowledges that what counts as a third state (e.g., “undecided,” “both,” “neither”) depends on the conceptual scheme being used. It is central to relativistic and perspectival approaches in logic, where the “third” is not a fixed value but emerges from the relationship between the proposition and the judging framework.
Example: “In one legal system, the defendant is guilty; in another, not guilty. The law of the relative third recognizes a third state—‘guilty under system A, not under system B’—without insisting on a universal verdict.”
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 24, 2026
Get the Law of the Relative Third mug.