Symbolic Logic

A proposition is a statement which can be classified as true or false. Washington, D.C. is the capital of the United States of America.

Overview

Added

March 18, 2026

Subject & domain

math · discrete-mathematics

Grade range

Grade 9 (Freshman)–Grade 12 (Senior)

Page kind

Article

Keywords

math maths mathematics school homework education

Introduction

Fundamentals of Symbolic Logic

  • Proposition: A statement that can be classified as either true (T) or false (F). Commands, questions, and algebraic expressions with unknown variables are not propositions.
  • Logical Operations:
    • Conjunction (p ∧ q): True only if both p and q are true.
    • Disjunction (p ∨ q): An inclusive "or"; true if p is true, q is true, or both are true. False only if both are false.
    • Negation (~p): The opposite truth value of p.
    • Conditional (p → q): "If p, then q." False only when p is true and q is false. p is the hypothesis; q is the conclusion.
    • Biconditional (p ↔ q): "p if and only if q." True only when p and q have the same truth value.
  • Conditional Variations:
    • Converse (q → p): Switches the hypothesis and conclusion.
    • Inverse (~p → ~q): Negates both the hypothesis and conclusion.
    • Contrapositive (~q → ~p): Switches and negates both. It is logically equivalent to the original conditional statement.
  • Truth Classifications:
    • Tautology: A statement that is always true regardless of the circumstances.
    • Contradiction: A statement that is always false.
    • Contingency: A statement whose truth value depends on the situation.

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