1.1 KiB
1.1 KiB
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Two sentences, P and Q, are truth-functionally equivalent if and only if there is no truth assignment in which P is true and Q is false
Informal expression
P: If it is raining then the pavement will be wet.
Q: The pavement is not wet unless it is raining.
Formal expression
P \supset Q \equiv \sim P \lor Q
Truth-tables
P Q P ⊃ Q
T T T
T F F
F T T
F F T
P Q ~ P ∨ Q
T T T
T F F
F T T
F F T
Derivation
Propositions
P
andQ
are equivalent in a system of derivation for propositional logic ifQ
is derivable fromP
andP
is derivable fromQ
.
Note that the property of equivalence stated in terms of derivablity above is identical to the derivation rule for the material biconditional:
//TODO: Add demonstration of this by deriving two equivalents from one of DeMorgan's Laws