Neutrosophy (philosophy)   (From Latin "neuter" - neutral, Greek "sophia" - skill/wisdom) A branch of philosophy, introduced by Florentin Smarandache in 1980, which studies the origin, nature, and scope of neutralities, as well as their interactions with different ideational spectra. Neutrosophy considers a proposition, theory, event, concept, or entity, "A" in relation to its opposite, "Anti-A" and that which is not A, "Non-A", and that which is neither "A" nor "Anti-A", denoted by "Neut-A". Neutrosophy is the basis of neutrosophic logic, neutrosophic probability, neutrosophic set, and neutrosophic statistics. http://gallup.unm.edu/~smarandache/NeutroSo.txt. ["Neutrosophy / Neutrosophic Probability, Set, and Logic", Florentin Smarandache, American Res. Press, 1998]. Denis Howe, The Free Online Dictionary of Computing [FOLDOC], England, http://foldoc.org/, 1998. Last updated: 1999-07-29 http://foldoc.org/neutrosophy