⇐ Contents | Proofs & English ⇒ |
Addition | Simplification | Conjunction | Modus Ponens | Modus Tollens |
---|---|---|---|---|
p ∴ p ∨ q |
p ∧ q ∴ p |
p q ∴ p ∧ q |
p ⇒ q p ∴ q |
p ⇒ q ¬q ∴ ¬p |
p = "The sky is blue", q = "I can fly"
If we know "The sky is blue" then we can conclude "The sky is blue or I can fly".
p = "The sky is blue", q = "The moon is full"
If we know "The sky is blue and the moon is full" then we can conclude "The sky is blue".
p = "The sky is blue", q = "The moon is full"
If we know "The sky is blue" and we know "The moon is full" then we can conclude "The sky is blue and the moon is full".
p = "It is raining", q = "it must be cloudy"
Suppose we know that "If it is raining then it must be cloudy" is a true statement and we also know that "it is raining" then we are allowed to conclude "it must be cloudy".
p = "It is raining", q = "it must be cloudy"
Suppose we know that "If it is raining then it must be cloudy" is a true statement and we also know that "it is not cloudy" then we are allowed to conclude "it is not raining".
Hypothetical Syllogism | Disjunctive Syllogism | Resolution |
---|---|---|
p ⇒ q q ⇒ r ∴ p ⇒ r |
p ∨ q ¬p ∴ q |
p ∨ q ¬p ∨ r ∴ q ∨ r |
p = "It is raining", q = "it must be cloudy", r = "the sky is grey"
Suppose we know that "If it is raining then it must be cloudy" is a true statement and we also know that "If it is cloudy then the sky is grey" is a true statement then we are allowed to conclude "If it is raining then the sky must be grey" is a true statement.
p = "The sky is blue", q = "The sky is grey"
Suppose we know that "The sky is blue or the sky is grey" and we also know that "The sky is not grey" then we can conclude that "the sky is blue".
p = "It is raining", q = "the sky is blue", r = "the sky is grey"
Suppose we know that "it is raining or the sky is blue" is a true statement and we also know that "it is not raining or the sky is grey" is a true statement then we are allowed to conclude "the sky is blue or the sky is grey".
Fallacy: Affirming the Consequent | Fallacy: Denying the Hypothesis |
---|---|
p ⇒ q q ∴ p |
p ⇒ q ¬p ∴ ¬q |
p = "It is raining", q = "it must be cloudy"
Suppose we know that "If it is raining then it must be cloudy" is a true statement and we also know that "it is cloudy". We are not allowed to conclude that "it is raining". We might have clouds and not rain.
p = "It is raining", q = "it must be cloudy"
Suppose we know that "If it is raining then it must be cloudy" is a true statement and we also know that "it is not raining". We are not allowed to conclude that "it is not cloudy". We might have no rain but have cloudy skies anyway.
⇐ Contents | Proofs & English ⇒ |