Critical Terminology for Theory of Knowledge
... Typically, what is meant by necessary and sufficient conditions is something stronger: that the conditions are logically necessary or logically sufficient. S is logically sufficient for N if and only if, necessarily, if S, then N; N is logically necessary for S under the same condition. States of a ...
... Typically, what is meant by necessary and sufficient conditions is something stronger: that the conditions are logically necessary or logically sufficient. S is logically sufficient for N if and only if, necessarily, if S, then N; N is logically necessary for S under the same condition. States of a ...
Math 3000 Section 003 Intro to Abstract Math Homework 2
... plane are perpendicular if and only if they intersect at an angle of 90 degrees (you can say a “right angle” if you define (or assume the reader knows) that a right angle is an angle that measures 90 degrees, or π/2 radians). (ii) Two lines in the plane are perpendicular if and only if they have opp ...
... plane are perpendicular if and only if they intersect at an angle of 90 degrees (you can say a “right angle” if you define (or assume the reader knows) that a right angle is an angle that measures 90 degrees, or π/2 radians). (ii) Two lines in the plane are perpendicular if and only if they have opp ...
Programming and Problem Solving with Java: Chapter 14
... If a statement A is contingent then we say that A is possibly true, which is written: ◊A If A is non-contingent, then it is necessarily true, which is written: A ...
... If a statement A is contingent then we say that A is possibly true, which is written: ◊A If A is non-contingent, then it is necessarily true, which is written: A ...
Section 6.1 How Do We Reason? We make arguments, where an
... The hope is that we make valid arguments, where an argument is valid if the truth of the premises implies the truth of the conclusion. We can use rules of logic to make valid arguments. The most common rule of logic is modus ponens (mode that affirms). If A and B be are statements and “if A then B” ...
... The hope is that we make valid arguments, where an argument is valid if the truth of the premises implies the truth of the conclusion. We can use rules of logic to make valid arguments. The most common rule of logic is modus ponens (mode that affirms). If A and B be are statements and “if A then B” ...
slides - Computer and Information Science
... • No — you usually need to know the truth values of the component atomic propositions in order to be able to tell whether a formula is true. • Definition: A valuation is a function which assigns a truth value to each primitive proposition. • In C, we might write: short Val( AtomicProp *p ) { if ( *p ...
... • No — you usually need to know the truth values of the component atomic propositions in order to be able to tell whether a formula is true. • Definition: A valuation is a function which assigns a truth value to each primitive proposition. • In C, we might write: short Val( AtomicProp *p ) { if ( *p ...
Empiricist Criteria of Cognitive Significance
... have purely logical meaning or significance — or else (2) it is capable, at least potentially, of test by experiential evidence — in which case it is said to have empirical meaning or significance. ◦ The testability criterion (clause (2) above) is in the spirit of operationalism and pragmatism. It h ...
... have purely logical meaning or significance — or else (2) it is capable, at least potentially, of test by experiential evidence — in which case it is said to have empirical meaning or significance. ◦ The testability criterion (clause (2) above) is in the spirit of operationalism and pragmatism. It h ...