The calculus constitutes a formal language. Yep, the language will be consistent if it is not possible to derive any contradictions. It will be complete if we can derive every tautology. — Banno
1. p (A) 2. q (A) 3. p & q (1,2,&I)
1. p & q. (A) 2. p (1, &E) 3. q (1, &E)
1. q. (A) 2. p v q (1, vI) 3. q v r (1, vI), just to show that it works on either side.
1. pvq (A) 2. p⊃r (A) 3. q⊃r (A) 4. r (1,2,3,vE)
1. p & p
Ergo
2. p — Agent Smith
⊢p⊃p 1. p (A) 2. p⊃p (1, CP)
⊢p⊃~~p 1. p (A) 2. ~~p ( 1,DN) 3. p⊃~~p (1,2,CP)
⊢ (p & q)⊃p 1. p&q (A) 2. p (1, &E) 3. (p&q)⊃p 1,2,CP
True, but no one would understand us.* And if we used Polish notation, then we wouldn't need parentheses at all. — TonesInDeepFreeze
existential quantifier and universal quantifier in predicate logic — TonesInDeepFreeze
My notes...
{<1 1>
<0 1>}
the constant function that maps any value to 'truth' — TonesInDeepFreeze
{<1 0>
<0 0>}
the constant function that maps any value to 'falsehood' — TonesInDeepFreeze
{<1 1>
<0 0>}
the identity function — TonesInDeepFreeze
{<1 0>
<0 1>}
negation — TonesInDeepFreeze
∃(x)Fx≡ Fm v Fn v Fo... and (x)Fx≡Fm&Fn&Fo...? — Banno
Too ugly. — Banno
Those who know don't speak, those who speak don't know. — Laozi
Silence. — Banno
अति सुंदर
(Ati sundar: Glorious/most beautiful).
Accounts of God having answered prayers is total hogwash! That however doesn't mean we stop praying. — Agent Smith
. I reasoned to myself there's something fundamentally wrong with statements like p & ~p. It's snowing AND it's not snowing is "wrong" for the reason that the the second conjunct denies/negates the first - they cancel each other out and its as if someone who utters/writes a contradiction says nothing at all (+y + -y = 0]. — Agent Smith
According to logicians, contradictions, and I quote, "trivialize the notion of truth". — Agent Smith
Following on from the previous posts, if any proposition follows from a contradiction, then if the contradiction is true, any proposition is true; that is, there is no longer a difference between a true and false propositions, and so every proposition is true: truth is trivial. — Banno
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