“…However, because of the ubiquity of the logical relations that they visualize, Aristotelian diagrams are now also used in other scientific and engineering disciplines, such as cognitive science [5,6], neuroscience [7], natural language processing [8], law [9][10][11], linguistics [12][13][14][15] and artificial intelligence. Within the latter field, Aristotelian diagrams have been used to study various logic-based approaches to knowledge representation, including fuzzy logic [16][17][18][19][20], modal-epistemic logic [21][22][23][24][25] and probabilistic logic [26][27][28]. Furthermore, Aristotelian diagrams are also used extensively to study (the connections between) other types of knowledge representation formalisms, such as formal argumentation theory [29][30][31][32], fuzzy set theory [33][34][35][36], formal concept analysis and possibility theory [37][38][39], rough set theory [37,40,41], multiple-criteria decision-making [42][43][44] and the theory of logical and analogical proportions [45]…”