Material nonimplication: Difference between revisions

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Venn diagram of PQ

Material nonimplication or abjunction (Latin ab = "away", junctio= "to join") is a term referring to a logic operation used in generic circuits and Boolean algebra.[1] It is the negation of material implication. That is to say that for any two propositions P and Q, the material nonimplication from P to Q is true if and only if the negation of the material implication from P to Q is true. This is more naturally stated as that the material nonimplication from P to Q is true only if P is true and Q is false.

It may be written using logical notation as PQ, P⊅Q, or "Lpq" (in Bocheński notation), and is logically equivalent to ¬(PQ), and P¬Q.

Definition

Truth table

Template:2-ary truth table

Logical Equivalences

Material nonimplication may be defined as the negation of material implication.

PQ      ¬(PQ)
     ¬

In classical logic, it is also equivalent to the negation of the disjunction of ¬P and Q, and also the conjunction of P and ¬Q

PQ      ¬( ¬P Q)      P ¬Q
     ¬( )     

Properties

falsehood-preserving: The interpretation under which all variables are assigned a truth value of "false" produces a truth value of "false" as a result of material nonimplication.

Symbol

The symbol for material nonimplication is simply a crossed-out material implication symbol. Its Unicode symbol is 219B16 (8603 decimal): ↛.

Natural language

Grammatical

"p minus q."

"p without q."

Rhetorical

"p but not q."

"q is false, in spite of p."

Computer science

Bitwise operation: A & ~B. This is usually called "bit clear" (BIC) or "and not" (ANDN).

Logical operation: A && !B.

See also

References

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