Abstract
In this paper we relax the assumption that the logical constants of ordinary first-order logic be linearly ordered. As a consequence, we shall have formulas involving not only partially ordered quantifiers, but also partially ordered connectives. The resulting language, called the language of informational independence will be given an interpretation in terms of games of imperfect information. The II-logic will be seen to have some interesting properties: It is very natural to define in this logic two negations, weak negation as failure to verify a sentence, and strong negation as the existence of a falsifying strategy: One can express in this logic complete problems of finite structures, like the non-connectedness and 3-colorability of finite graphs, the satisfiability problem for Boolean circuits built up from NAND-gates, etc