Franco De Los Ríos, Camilo A.Rodríguez González, Juan TinguaroMontero De Juan, Francisco JavierDe Moraes, Roine MarcosKerre, Etienne E.Machado, Liliane dos SantosLu, Jie2023-06-192023-06-192014Franco, C.A., Rodríguez, J.T., Montero, J.: BIPOLARITY IN SOCIAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS. En: Decision Making and Soft Computing. pp. 336-339. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, João Pessoa (Paraíba), Brazil (2014)978-981-4619-96-710.1142/9789814619998_0057https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/35731PART 3. FOUNDATIONS OF COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCEThe polarity of concepts and the dialectic process by which its meaning emerges has been subject of interest since the ancient Greeks. Recently, the term Bipolarity has been used in social and mathematical sciences, referring to the measurement of the meaning of concepts. It is claimed that the measuring process has to consider at least an associated pair of meaningful opposites, such that some type of structure is used to analyze the aspect of reality that is being modeled. From this point of view, we take a quick overview on the genealogy of Bipolarity, discussing some ideas about the nature of negative knowledge, and how it has been examined recently, and not so recently, by the mathematical community.engBipolarity in social sciences and mathematicsbook parthttps//doi.org/10.1142/9789814619998_0057http://www.worldscientific.com/doi/abs/10.1142/9789814619998_0057restricted access519.8Investigación operativa (Matemáticas)1207 Investigación Operativa