1 / 11

Thinking Mathematically

Thinking Mathematically. Logic 3.2 Compound Statements and Connectives. “Compound” Statements. Simple statements can be connected with “and”, “Either … or”, “If … then”, or “if and only if.” These more complicated statements are called “compound.”. Symbolic Logic. Symbolic Logic (cont.).

olesia
Download Presentation

Thinking Mathematically

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Thinking Mathematically Logic 3.2 Compound Statements and Connectives

  2. “Compound” Statements Simple statements can be connected with “and”, “Either … or”, “If … then”, or “if and only if.” These more complicated statements are called “compound.”

  3. Symbolic Logic

  4. Symbolic Logic (cont.)

  5. Examples Exercise Set 3.2 #3, #7 p: I’m leaving. q: You’re staying. You’re staying and I’m not leaving. p: I study q: I pass the course I study or I pass the course.

  6. Examples Exercise Set 3.2 #11, #23 p: This is an alligator. q: This is a reptile. If this is an alligator, then this is a reptile. p: You are human. q: You have feathers. Being human is sufficient for not having feathers.

  7. Examples Exercise Set 3.2 #35, #49 p: The heater is working q: The house is cold p \/ ~q p: Romeo loves Juliet. q: Juliet loves Romeo. ~(p /\ q)

  8. Dominance of Connectives • Negation (~) • Conjunction/Disjunction (/\, \/) • Conditional () • Biconditional () • The most dominant is applied last • Analogous to order of operations in algebra

  9. Examples Exercise Set 3.2 #59, #79 p: The temperature outside is freezing. q: The heater is working. r: The house is cold. The temperature outside is freezing and the heater is working, or the house is cold. p: The temperature is above 85o q: We finished studying r: We go to the beach. ~r  ~(p /\ q)

  10. Examples • Exercise Set 3.2 #85 I miss class if and only if it’s not true that both I like the teacher and the course is interesting.

  11. Thinking Mathematically Logic 3.2 Compound Statements and Connectives

More Related