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  2. Implicational propositional calculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implicational...

    Implication alone is not functionally complete as a logical operator because one cannot form all other two-valued truth functions from it.. For example, the two-place truth function that always returns false is not definable from → and arbitrary propositional variables: any formula constructed from → and propositional variables must receive the value true when all of its variables are ...

  3. Material implication (rule of inference) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Material_implication_(rule...

    In propositional logic, material implication [1] [2] is a valid rule of replacement that allows a conditional statement to be replaced by a disjunction in which the antecedent is negated. The rule states that P implies Q is logically equivalent to not- P {\displaystyle P} or Q {\displaystyle Q} and that either form can replace the other in ...

  4. Ramification (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramification_(mathematics)

    In geometric terms, ramification is something that happens in codimension two (like knot theory, and monodromy); since real codimension two is complex codimension one, the local complex example sets the pattern for higher-dimensional complex manifolds. In complex analysis, sheets can't simply fold over along a line (one variable), or ...

  5. Ramification problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramification_problem

    In philosophy and artificial intelligence (especially, knowledge based systems), the ramification problem is concerned with the indirect consequences of an action. It might also be posed as how to represent what happens implicitly due to an action or how to control the secondary and tertiary effects of an action.

  6. Necessity and sufficiency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necessity_and_sufficiency

    For example, carrying on from the previous example, one can say that knowing that someone is called Socrates is sufficient to know that someone has a Name. A necessary and sufficient condition requires that both of the implications S ⇒ N {\displaystyle S\Rightarrow N} and N ⇒ S {\displaystyle N\Rightarrow S} (the latter of which can also be ...

  7. Logical consequence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logical_consequence

    Logical consequence is necessary and formal, by way of examples that explain with formal proof and models of interpretation. [1] A sentence is said to be a logical consequence of a set of sentences, for a given language , if and only if , using only logic (i.e., without regard to any personal interpretations of the sentences) the sentence must ...

  8. Strict conditional - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strict_conditional

    The strict conditionals may avoid paradoxes of material implication. The following statement, for example, is not correctly formalized by material implication: If Bill Gates graduated in medicine, then Elvis never died. This condition should clearly be false: the degree of Bill Gates has nothing to do with whether Elvis is still alive.

  9. Propositional calculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propositional_calculus

    A well-formed formula is any atomic formula, or any formula that can be built up from atomic formulas by means of operator symbols according to the rules of the grammar. The language L {\displaystyle {\mathcal {L}}} , then, is defined either as being identical to its set of well-formed formulas, [ 48 ] or as containing that set (together with ...