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  2. Tautology (logic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tautology_(logic)

    The method of truth tables illustrated above is provably correct – the truth table for a tautology will end in a column with only T, while the truth table for a sentence that is not a tautology will contain a row whose final column is F, and the valuation corresponding to that row is a valuation that does not satisfy the sentence being tested.

  3. Tautology (rule of inference) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tautology_(rule_of_inference)

    In propositional logic, tautology is either of two commonly used rules of replacement. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The rules are used to eliminate redundancy in disjunctions and conjunctions when they occur in logical proofs .

  4. Tautological consequence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tautological_consequence

    Tautological consequence can also be defined as ∧ ∧ ... ∧ → is a substitution instance of a tautology, with the same effect. [2]It follows from the definition that if a proposition p is a contradiction then p tautologically implies every proposition, because there is no truth valuation that causes p to be true and so the definition of tautological implication is trivially satisfied.

  5. List of rules of inference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rules_of_inference

    15, true, Tautology. Each logic operator can be used in an assertion about variables and operations, showing a basic rule of inference. Examples: The column-14 operator (OR), shows Addition rule: when p=T (the hypothesis selects the first two lines of the table), we see (at column-14) that p∨q=T.

  6. Truth table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truth_table

    A truth table is a structured representation that presents all possible combinations of truth values for the input variables of a Boolean function and their corresponding output values. A function f from A to F is a special relation , a subset of A×F, which simply means that f can be listed as a list of input-output pairs.

  7. Propositional calculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propositional_calculus

    A truth table is a semantic proof method used to determine the truth value of a propositional logic expression in every possible scenario. [93] By exhaustively listing the truth values of its constituent atoms, a truth table can show whether a proposition is true, false, tautological, or contradictory. [94] See § Semantic proof via truth tables.

  8. Method of analytic tableaux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_of_analytic_tableaux

    A graphical representation of a partially built propositional tableau. In proof theory, the semantic tableau [1] (/ t æ ˈ b l oʊ, ˈ t æ b l oʊ /; plural: tableaux), also called an analytic tableau, [2] truth tree, [1] or simply tree, [2] is a decision procedure for sentential and related logics, and a proof procedure for formulae of first-order logic. [1]

  9. Tee (symbol) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tee_(symbol)

    The truth value of being true in logic, or a sentence (e.g., formula in propositional calculus) which is unconditionally true. [2] [3] [4] By definition, every tautology is logically equivalent to the verum. The top type in type theory. Mixed radix encoding in the APL programming language. A lowered phonic in the International Phonetic Alphabet ...