eolas/neuron/77a73718-e886-48cc-8cdf-d7b948def2d1/Logical_equivalence.md
2024-11-14 13:10:51 +00:00

1.2 KiB

tags
propositional-logic
logic

Logical equivalence

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 \rightarrow Q) \longleftrightarrow (\lnot P \lor Q)

Truth-tables

P Q P \rightarrow Q \lnot P \lor Q
T T T T
T F T F
F T T T
F F F T

Derivation

Propositions P and Q are equivalent in a system of derivation for propositional logic if Q is derivable from P and P is derivable from Q.

Note that the property of equivalence stated in terms of derivablity above is identical to the derivation rule for the material biconditional:

bi-intro.png