Classifying Propositions

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Table of Contents

We can classify propositions in terms of their truth values:

  • Tautology
  • Contradiction
  • Contingency

Tautology

These are propositions whose truth value is always true. For example, the compound proposition, $(p\land q)\implies q$ is a tautology:

$p$ $q$ $p\land q$ $(p\land q)\implies q$
T T T T
T F F T
F T F T
F F F T

Contradiction

These are propositions whose truth value is always false. An example is $(p\lor q) \land (\neg p\land \neg q)$:

$p$ $q$ $\neg p$ $\neg q$ $p\lor q$ $\neg p\land \neg q$ $(p\lor q) \land (\neg p\land \neg q)$
T T F F T F F
T F F T T F F
F T T F T F F
F F T T F T F

Contingency

These are propositions whose truth values are a mixture of true and false. An example is the implication, $p\implies q$:

$p$ $q$ $p\implies q$
T T T
T F F
F T T
T T T

Logical equivalence

Two propositions are logically equivalent when all of their corresponding truth values are the same.

Example: implication

The implication $p\implies q$ is logically equivalent to $\neg p \lor q$:

$p$ $q$ $\neg p$ $\neg p \lor q$ $p\implies q$
T T F T T
T F F F F
F T T T T
F F T T T

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