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Chapter Three

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Truth Table Test of Validity We can use truth tables to determine if any argument in sentential logic is valid ... All arguments with inconsistent premises are valid. 8. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter Three


1
Chapter Three
  • Truth Tables

2
1. Computing Truth-Values
  • We can use truth tables to determine the
    truth-value of any compound sentence containing
    one of the five truth-functional sentence
    connectives.
  • This method can also be used to determine the
    truth-value of more complicated sentences.
  • This procedure is called truth table analysis.

3
2. Logical Form
  • The assignment of a truth-value to a compound
    sentence from the truth-values of its atomic
    constituents is called a valuation.
  • Expressions that contain only sentence variables
    and sentence connectives are called sentence
    forms.
  • If we replace sentence variables with sentence
    constants we end up with a substitution instance
    of the original sentence form.
  • Logical form is not the same as logical
    equivalence.

4
3. Tautologies, Contradictions, and Contingent
Sentences
  • A sentence that is true in virtue of its logical
    form is a tautology.
  • Contradictions are sentences that cannot possibly
    be true.
  • The form of a contradiction is a contradictory
    sentence form.

5
Tautologies, Contradictions, and Contingent
Sentences, continued
  • A contingent statement is one whose form has at
    least one T and one F in its truth table.

6
4. Logical Equivalences
  • When two statements are logically equivalent, the
    truth-value of one determines the truth-value of
    the other. That is, each has the same truth-value
    under the same truth conditions.

7
5. Truth Table Test of Validity
  • We can use truth tables to determine if any
    argument in sentential logic is valid.
  • Recall An argument is valid if and only if it is
    not possible for its premises to all be true
    while its conclusion is false.
  • So, if an argument is valid there will be no line
    in a truth table in which all the premises are
    true and the conclusion false.

8
Truth Table Test of Validity, continued
  • We can test an argument for validity by
    conjoining the
  • premises into the antecedent of a conditional,
    putting the
  • conclusion as the consequent, and testing its
    form to see if
  • it is a tautological form. If it is, the
    argument is valid.

9
Truth Table Test of Validity, continued
  • If the corresponding conditional, or test
    statement form, of an argument is a tautology,
    then premises are said to logically imply or
    entail the conclusion of the argument.

10
Truth Table Test of Validity, continued
  • A logical implication is a tautology who main
    connective is a horseshoe.
  • A counterexample is an assignment of truth-values
    that will yield true premises and a false
    conclusion.

11
6. Truth Table Test of Consistency
  • We can use a truth table to check for consistency
    by constructing the truth table for the
    conjunction of the forms and looking for a line
    on which all the substitutions are true. The set
    is consistent if and only if there is such a line.

12
7. Validity and Consistency
  • The counterexample set of an argument consists of
    the premises of the argument together with the
    denial of the conclusion.
  • If the counterexample set is consistent then the
    argument is invalid.
  • All arguments with inconsistent premises are
    valid.

13
8. The Short Truth Table Test for Invalidity
  • All it takes to show that an argument is invalid
    is a single counterexamplea single line of a
    truth table on which the premises are all true
    and the conclusion false.
  • It is often possible to produce such a
    counterexample by assigning a truth-value to the
    entire sentence and then working to find the
    appropriate assignment of truth-values to the
    atomic constituents.

14
The Short Truth Table Test for Invalidity,
continued
  • We find the logical form of the argument, then
    assign an F to the conclusion and the try to
    assign a T to each premise.
  • If we can do this the argument is invalid.

15
9. The Short Truth Table Test for Consistency
  • All it takes to show that a set of sentences is
  • consistent is to produce a single line in a
    truth table
  • that makes them all true.

16
10. A Method of Justification for the Truth Tables
  • We can build the truth table for any connective
    given the following information
  • A set of intuitively valid and invalid arguments
  • In a valid argument, if the premises are true the
    conclusion must be true
  • In an invalid argument, there must be the
    possibility that the premises are true and the
    conclusion false

17
A Method of Justification for the Truth Tables,
continued
  • To justify a truth table, find valid and invalid
    argument forms, using the connective in question,
    that force the lines of the truth table.

18
Key Terms
  • Contingent statement
  • Contingent sentence form
  • Contradiction
  • Contradictory sentence form
  • Corresponding conditional of an argument
  • Counterexample of an argument
  • Counterexample set
  • Logical equivalence
  • Logically equivalent
  • Logical implication

19
Key Terms, continued
  • Logically implies
  • Sentence form
  • Substitution instance
  • Tautologous sentence form
  • Tautology
  • Test statement form
  • Truth table analysis
  • Valuation

20
Key Terms, continued
  • Truth-function
  • Truth-functional operator
  • Truth table
  • Truth-value
  • Wedge
  • Well-formed
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