logistic
adjective
- pertaining to logistics
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ləˈd͡ʒɪs.tɪk/ / /lɒd͡ʒˈɪs.tɪk/ / /loʊˈd͡ʒɪs.tɪk/
adj
Etymology: From French logistique, from loger (“to lodge”) or logis (“lodging place”).
- Relating to logistics.
noun
Etymology: From French logistique, from Ancient Greek λογιστικός (logistikós, “practiced in arithmetic; rational”), from λογίζομαι (logízomai, “I reason, I calculate”), from λόγος (lógos, “reason, computation”), whence English logos, logic, logarithm, etc.; modern mathematical use influenced by related logarithmic. Sense of “logistic function” by Pierre François Verhulst (1845) in French, then borrowed into English. Verhulst does not explain his choice of naming, but he contrasts it with the logarithmic curve (also from λόγος (lógos)), and it is presumably by analogy with arithmetic and geometric (other divisions of mathematics), as his discussion of arithmetic growth and geometric growth precede his discussion of logistic growth. The term logistic and logistical also found occasional mathematical use in English prior to 1800, from the same Greek origin.
- A logistic function or graph of a logistic curve.
- The art of calculation.
- Sexagesimal arithmetic.