Lecture 2 - Notes From Slides
Lecture 2 - Notes From Slides
Truth Tables
Readings for this chapter are 5-6 of Part 2, and Chapter 9 of Part 3
Symbolisation
Symbolizing Arguments:
a) Using letters (capital, italic) to stand for whole sentences.
Ex (1)
a) S or H Connective Symbols
b) (S H)
a) Not-H
b) S
a) S
b) S
After doing this, we could move onto form (I.e., Disjunctive syllogism)
Symbolisation Key
- Pairs sentence letters with the basic English sentences they represent.
Paraphrasing Pronouns
- Must keep track of pronouns and their references when making a symbolization key.
Ex
- This case is ambiguous if you have not read the Brothers Karamazov.
Ex (2)
Ex (3)
4. [Mandy ate the whole pizza] and [Sanjiv ate the whole pizza.]
Sentences 3 + 4 do not work, since strictly speaking these two situations cannot
simultaneously occur; they are jointly impossible
This means that sentence 3 is a complex sentence.
Paraphrasing Verbs
Ex.
Ex (2)
2. If [ Sanjiv enjoys skiing] and [ Sanjiv enjoys hiking], [ then] [Sanjiv is from
Calgary].
‘Englishese’
- Understand concepts and logical connections between words and in statements, but do
not look to the ‘real world idea’ of what these statements imply.
- We use TFL to rid ourselves of associations that will cloud our judgements.
Paraphrasing Connectives
Negation
- Idea of ‘not’
- Paraphrase of grammatical negation = It is not the case that
- A becomes A
Conjunction
- Paraphrase sentences containing ‘and’ ‘but’, ‘even though’ and ‘although’ using ‘Both A
and B or just A and B’
- A and B becomes (A B)
Disjunction
- A or B becomes (A B)
((A ∨ B) ∧ ¬ (A ∧ B))
Conditional
If A then B,
If A, B,
A only if B,
B if A,
B provided A.
Biconditional
Paraphrase ‘If and only if’ or ‘ just in case’ with A if and only if B
Ex.
2. If [ Sanjiv is from Calgary of Edmonton] then [it is not the case that Mandy enjoys
skiing].
All other connectives are binary connectives and must always connect exactly two
sentences (atomic or complex)
- The symbolization key (A, B, C) is the placeholder for a sentence. (Object Language)
This is when we are outside the language (talking about properties of the language)
Then assume that the connectives not only generate new sentences
but also generate truth-values.
- Since negation only connects one sentence, it has only two cases.
A A
T F
F T
Conjunction
A B (A B)
T T T
T F F
F T F
F F T
Disjunction
(A B) is true if and only if A is true or B is true (or both) and false otherwise.
A B (AB)
T T T
T F T
F T T
F F F
Conditional
The Bi-Conditional
(A B) is true if and only if A, B are both true or both false, false otherwise.
- Because this one can act like the idea of ‘both’ and create exclusive or
A B (AB)
T T T
T F F
F T F
F F T
Double Negation
However.
Remember: Any combination of two truth values as an input will gives us a truth value as
an output.