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Exclusive or and Paradoxes of material implication

Shortcuts: Differences, Similarities, Jaccard Similarity Coefficient, References.

Difference between Exclusive or and Paradoxes of material implication

Exclusive or vs. Paradoxes of material implication

Exclusive or or exclusive disjunction is a logical operation that outputs true only when inputs differ (one is true, the other is false). The paradoxes of material implication are a group of formulae that are truths of classical logic but are intuitively problematic.

Similarities between Exclusive or and Paradoxes of material implication

Exclusive or and Paradoxes of material implication have 5 things in common (in Unionpedia): Antecedent (logic), If and only if, Logical disjunction, Material conditional, Negation.

Antecedent (logic)

An antecedent is the first half of a hypothetical proposition, whenever the if-clause precedes the then-clause.

Antecedent (logic) and Exclusive or · Antecedent (logic) and Paradoxes of material implication · See more »

If and only if

In logic and related fields such as mathematics and philosophy, if and only if (shortened iff) is a biconditional logical connective between statements.

Exclusive or and If and only if · If and only if and Paradoxes of material implication · See more »

Logical disjunction

In logic and mathematics, or is the truth-functional operator of (inclusive) disjunction, also known as alternation; the or of a set of operands is true if and only if one or more of its operands is true.

Exclusive or and Logical disjunction · Logical disjunction and Paradoxes of material implication · See more »

Material conditional

The material conditional (also known as material implication, material consequence, or simply implication, implies, or conditional) is a logical connective (or a binary operator) that is often symbolized by a forward arrow "→".

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Negation

In logic, negation, also called the logical complement, is an operation that takes a proposition P to another proposition "not P", written \neg P (¬P), which is interpreted intuitively as being true when P is false, and false when P is true.

Exclusive or and Negation · Negation and Paradoxes of material implication · See more »

The list above answers the following questions

Exclusive or and Paradoxes of material implication Comparison

Exclusive or has 90 relations, while Paradoxes of material implication has 33. As they have in common 5, the Jaccard index is 4.07% = 5 / (90 + 33).

References

This article shows the relationship between Exclusive or and Paradoxes of material implication. To access each article from which the information was extracted, please visit:

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