Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Truth Tables for Conditional and Biconditional Statements

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Truth Tables for Conditional and Biconditional Statements"— Presentation transcript:

1 Truth Tables for Conditional and Biconditional Statements
Section 2.4 Truth Tables for Conditional and Biconditional Statements

2 Objectives Understand the logic behind the definition of the conditional and the biconditional. Construct truth tables for conditional and biconditional statements. Determine the truth value of a compound statement for a specific case.

3 Conditional, , if…then Suppose your teacher promises you the following: If you pass the final, then you pass the course. Break the compound statement down into its two component statements. p: You pass the final. q: You pass the course. Two simple statements – 4 possible cases.

4 Conditional, , if…then p: You pass the final. q: You pass the course.
p  q T F NOTE: A conditional is false only when the antecedent is T and the consequent is F.

5 Example 1: Construct truth table. ~p  q

6 Example 2: Construct truth table. (p q)  (p q)

7 Example 3: Construct truth table. r  (p q)

8 Biconditional, , if and only if
Suppose your teacher says the following: You will pass the course, iff you pass the final. Break the compound statement down into its two component statements. p: You will pass the course. q: You pass the final. Two simple statements – 4 possible cases.

9 Biconditional, , iff p: You will pass the course. q: You pass the course. p q p  q T F NOTE: A biconditional is T only when the component statements have the same value.

10 Example 4: Construct a truth table. (p  q)  q

11 Example 5: Construct truth table. (p  ~q)  (q  ~p)

12 Example 6: Construct a truth table. (p r)  ~(q r)

13 Key Terms Tautology: a compound statement that is true in all cases these statements are also called “implications”. Self-contradiction: a compound statement that is false in all cases.

14 Example 7: Determine if the statement is a tautology, self- contradiction, or neither. [(p  q) p]  q

15 Example 8: Determine if the statement is a tautology, self- contradiction, or neither. [(p  q) ~p]  ~q

16 Example 9: Determine if the statement is a tautology, self- contradiction, or neither. (p q) →(~p ~q)

17 Example 10: TB pg. 107/7

18 Section 2.4 Assignment Classwork: TB pg. 107/2 – 20 Even
Must write problem and show ALL work to receive credit for the assignment. NOTE: If your truth table is not complete, then your problem is wrong.


Download ppt "Truth Tables for Conditional and Biconditional Statements"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google