Mathematics Asked by Darvid on November 29, 2021
In page 10 of Mathematical Logic, Tourlakis says that "Readers who have done some elementary course in logic, or in the context of a programming course, may have learned that ¬, ∨ are the only connectives one really needs since the rest can be expressed in terms of these two."
How can we express the other connectives (→, ∧, ≡) using only ¬ and ∨?
The following logical equivalences (or equations in Boolean algebra) can be checked in a variety of ways: begin{align} P wedge Q & = neg (neg P vee neg Q) \ P to Q & = neg P vee Q \ P leftrightarrow Q & = (P to Q) wedge (Q to P) \ & = (neg P vee Q) wedge (neg Q vee P) \ & = negbigl( neg (neg P vee Q) vee neg (neg Q to P)bigr) end{align} The first, for example, can be considered as using De Morgan's Law, but could also be verified using truth tables.
Answered by Hayden on November 29, 2021
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