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01 Introduction Chapter01 Propositional Logic

This chapter introduces propositional logic and proofs in discrete mathematics. It defines logical operators like negation, conjunction, disjunction, implication and biconditional. Truth tables are used to determine the truth values of propositions. Logical equivalences between propositions are identified using rules like De Morgan's laws and absorption laws. Predicates and quantifiers are introduced to represent statements about objects. Universal and existential quantifiers are defined with notation like ∀ and ∃. Rules of inference are provided to construct valid logical arguments using premises and conclusions.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
74 views

01 Introduction Chapter01 Propositional Logic

This chapter introduces propositional logic and proofs in discrete mathematics. It defines logical operators like negation, conjunction, disjunction, implication and biconditional. Truth tables are used to determine the truth values of propositions. Logical equivalences between propositions are identified using rules like De Morgan's laws and absorption laws. Predicates and quantifiers are introduced to represent statements about objects. Universal and existential quantifiers are defined with notation like ∀ and ∃. Rules of inference are provided to construct valid logical arguments using premises and conclusions.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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DISCRETE

MATHEMATICS
AND
ITS APPLICATIONS
Book: Discrete Mathematics and Its Applications
Author: Kenneth H. Rosen
Sixth Edition
McGraw-Hill International Edition
Chapter 1
The Foundations:
Logic and Proofs
Objectives
 Explain what makes up a correct
mathematical argument
 Introduce tools to construct arguments
Contents
1.1-Propositional Logic – Logic mệnh đề
1.2-Propositonal Equivalences
1.3-Predicates and Quantifiers (vị từ và lượng từ)
1.4-Nested Quantifiers
1.5-Rules of Inference – Các quy tắc suy diễn
1.1- Propositional Logic

1.1.1- Definitions and Truth Table


1.1.2- Precedence of Logical Operators
1.1.1- Definitions and Truth Table

 Proposition is a declarative sentence that is either


true or false but not both.
 Proposition is a sentence that declares a fact.
 Examples:
* I am a girl
* Ha Noi is not the capital of Vietnam OK
* 1+5 < 4
* What time is it?
* X+Y=Z
No OK
1.1.1- Definitions…

 Truth table
– I am a girl

p
True/ T / 1
False / F / 0
1.1.1- Definitions…
 Negation of propositions p is the statement “ It is
not case that p”.
 Notation: p (or p)
1.1.1- Definitions…
 Conjunction of propositions p and q is the
proposition “ p and q” and denoted by p^q

p q p^q
0 0 0
0 1 0
1 0 0
1 1 1
1.1.1- Definitions…

 Disjunction of propositions p and q is the proposition


“ p or q” and denoted by p v q

p q pq
0 0 0
0 1 1
1 0 1
1 1 1
1.1.1- Definitions…

 Exclusive-or (xor) of propositions p and q, denoted


by p  q

p q pq
0 0 0
0 1 1
1 0 1
1 1 0
q
1.1.1- Definitions…
 Implication: p → q (p implies q)
 p: hypothesis / antecedent / premise
 q: conclusion / consequence
 p → q can be expressed as:
- q if p
- If p, then q
- p is sufficient condition for q
- q is necessary condition for p
p q p→q
“If 1 + 1 = 3, then dogs can fly”
0 0 1  TRUE
(p  q)
0 1 1
p=0, q=0 ,
1 0 0 so (pq) is true.
1 1 1
1.1.1- Definitions…
 Biconditional statement p  q is the proposition “ p if and only
if q”
 p → q (p only if q) and pq (p if q)

p q p→q q→p (p→q) ^ (q→p) p↔q


0 0 1 1 1 1
0 1 1 0 0 0
1 0 0 1 0 0
1 1 1 1 1 1
1.1.2- Precedence of Logical Operators

(1) Parentheses from inner to outer


(2) ¬
(3) ^
(4) v
(5) →
(6) ↔
1.2- Propositional Equivalences

1.2.1- Tautology and Contradiction


1.2.2- Logical Equivalences
1.2.3- De Morgan’s Laws
1.2.1- Tautology and Contradiction
 Tautology is a proposition that is always true
 Contradiction is a proposition that is always false
 When p ↔ q is tautology, we say “p and q are called logically
equivalence”. Notation: p ≡ q
Example 3 p.23

 Show that p  q and ¬p v q are logically


equivalent.
1.2.2- Logical Equivalences…
Equivalence Name
p^T≡p pvF≡p Identity laws- Luật đồng nhất
pvT≡ T p^F ≡ F Domination Laws – Luật chi phối
pvp≡ p p^p ≡ p Idempotent Laws – Luật bất biến
¬(¬p) ≡ p Double Negation Laws – Luật đảo kép
pvq≡qvp p^q ≡q^p Commutative Laws – Luật giao hoán
(p v q) v r ≡ p v (q v r) Associative Laws – Luật kết hợp
(p ^ q) ^ r ≡p^(q^r)
pv (q^r) ≡ (pvq) ^ (pvr) Distributive Laws – Luật phân phối
p^ (qvr) ≡ (p^q) v (p^r)
¬ (p^q) ≡ ¬pv¬q ¬(pvq) ≡ ¬p^¬q De Morgan Laws
pv (p^q)≡ p p^(pvq)≡ p Absorption Laws – Luật hấp thụ
pv¬p ≡ T p^¬p≡ F Negation Laws - Luật nghịch đảo
1.2.2- Logical Equivalences…
Equivalences Equivalences
p→q ≡ ¬pvq p↔q ≡ (p→q) ^ (q→p)
p→q ≡ ¬q → ¬p p↔q ≡ ¬p ↔ ¬q
pvq ≡ ¬ p → q p↔q ≡ (p ^ q) v (¬p ^ ¬q)
p^q ≡ ¬ (p → ¬q) ¬ (p↔q) ≡ p↔ ¬q
¬(p→q) ≡ p^¬q
(p→q) ^(p→r) ≡ p → (q^r)
(p→r) ^ (q→r) ≡ (pvq) → r
(p→q) v (p→r) ≡ p→ (qvr)
(p→r) v (q→r) ≡ (p^q) → r
1.3- Predicates and Quantifiers

 Introduction
 Predicates
 Quantifiers
1.3.1- Introduction

 A type of logic used to express the meaning of a wide


range of statements in mathematics and computer
science in ways that permit us to reason and
explore relationships between objects.
1.3.2- Predicates – vị từ

 X>0
 P(X)=“X is a prime number” , called
propositional function at X.
 P(2)=”2 is a prime number” ≡True
 P(4)=“4 is a prime number” ≡False
1.3.2- Predicates – vị từ
 Q(X1,X2,…,Xn) , n-place/ n-ary predicate
 Example: “x=y+3”  Q(x,y)
Q(1,2) ≡ “1=2+3” ≡ false
Q(5,2) ≡ “5=2+3” ≡ true
1.3.2- Predicates…
 Predicates are pre-conditions and post-
conditions of a program.
Pre-condition (P(…)) : condition describes
 If x>0 then x:=x+1 valid input.
Post-condition (Q(…)) : condition
– Predicate: “x>0”  P(x) describe valid output of the codes.
– Pre-condition: P(x) Show the verification that a program
always produces the desired output:
– Post-condition: P(x) P(…) is true
Executing Step 1.
 T:=X; Executing Step 2.
X:=Y; …..
Q(…) is true
Y:=T;
- Pre-condition: “x=a and y=b”  P(x, y)
- Post-condition: “x=b and y=a”  Q(x, y)
1.3.3- Quantifiers – Lượng từ
 The words in natural language: all, some, many, none, few,
….are used in quantifications.
 Predicate Calculus : area of logic that deals with predicates
and quantifiers.
 The universal quantification (lượng từ phổ dụng) of P(x)
is the statement “P(x) for all values of x in the domain”.
Notation : xP(x)
 The existential quantification (lượng từ tồn tại) of P(x) is
the statement “There exists an element x in the domain
such that P(x)”. Notation : xP(x)
 Uniqueness quantifier: !x P(x) or 1xP(x)
 xP(x) v Q(y) :
 x is a bound variable
 y is a free variable
1.3.4- Quantifiers and Restricted
Domains
x<0(x2 > 0), y  0(y3  0), z>0(z2 =2)

x(X<0 ^x2 > 0), y(y  0 ^y3  0), z(z>0 ^ z2 =2)

Restricted domains
1.3.5- Precedence of Quantifiers

 Quantifier have higher precedence than all logical


operators from propositional calculus.
 xP(x) v Q(x)  (xP(x)) v Q(x)
  has higher precedence. So,  affects on P(x) only.
1.3.6- Logical Equivalences
Involving Quantifiers
Statements involving predicates and quantifiers are
logically equivalent if and only if they have the same
truth value no matter which predicates are substituted
into the statements and which domain of discourse is
used for the variables in these propositional functions.
 x (P(x) ^ Q(x)) ≡ xP(x) ^ xQ(x)
– Proof: page 39

Expression Equivalence Expression Negation


¬xP(x) x ¬P(x) xP(x) x ¬P(x)
¬ xP(x) x ¬P(x) xP(x) x ¬P(x)
1.3.7- Translating

 For every student in the class has studied calculus


 For every student in the class, that student has studied
calculus
 For every student x in the class, x has studied calculus
 x (S(x) → C(x))
Negating nested quantifiers

¬ xy(xy=1) ≡ x ¬y (xy=1) // De Morgan laws


≡ (x) (y) ¬(xy=1)
≡ (x) (y) (xy  1)
1.5- Rules of Inference – Quy tắc
diễn dịch

 Definitions
 Rules of Inferences
1.5.1- Definitions

 Proposition 1 // Hypothesis – giả thiết


 Proposition 2
 Proposition 3 Arguments 2,3,4 are
 Proposition 4 premises (tiên đề) of
argument 5
 Proposition 5
 ……… Argument s– suy luận
 Conclusion Propositional
Equivalences
1.5.2- Rules Inferences
Rule Tautology Name
p [p^ (p→q)] → q Modus ponen
p →q You work hard If Socrates is human, then Socrates is mortal.
q If you work hard then you will pass Socrates
the examination
is human.
you will pass the examination  Socrates is mortal.
¬q [¬q ^(p → q)] → ¬p Modus tollen
p→q She did not get a prize
¬p If she is good at learning she will get a prize
She is not good at learning
p →q [(p →q) ^(q →r)] →(p→r) Hypothetical
q →r If the prime interest rate goes up then the stock prices go syllolism – Tam
p →r down. đoạn luận giả
If the stock prices go down then most people are thiết,
unhappy. Quy tắc bắc cầu
If the prime interest rate goes up then most people are
unhappy. Một ngôi nhà rẻ thì hiếm
Cái gì hiếm thì đắt
 Một ngôi nhà rẻ thì đắt.
Rules Inferences…
Rule Tautology Name
pvq [(pvq) ^¬p] → q Disjunctive syllogism
¬p Power puts off or the lamp is malfunctional
q Power doesn’t put off
the lamp is malfunctional
p p →(pvq) Addition
pvq It is below freezing now
It is below freezing now or raining now
p^q (p^q) →p Simplication
p It is below freezing now and raining now
It is below freezing now
p [(p) ^(q)) → (p^q) Conjunction
q
p^q
pvq [(pvq) ^(¬pvr)] →(qvr) Resolution
¬pvr Jasmin is skiing OR it is not snowing
qvr It is snowing OR Bart is playing hockey
Jasmin is skiing OR Bart is playing hockey
1.5.3- Fallacies – ngụy biện – sai logic
 If you do every problem in this book then you will learn discrete
mathematic
You learned mathematic
(p → q) ^q
=(¬ p v q) ^ q
(absorption law)
=q
 No information for p
p can be true or false  You may learn discrete mathematic but you
might do some problems only.
Fallacies…
 (p → q)^q  p is not a tautology
( it is false when p = 0, q = 1)
 (p  q)^¬p  ¬q is not a tautology
(it is false when p = 0, q = 1)

Hắn chửi như những người say rượu hát. Giá hắn biết hát
thì hắn có lẽ hắn không cần chửi. Khổ cho hắn và khổ cho
người, hắn lại không biết hát. Thì hắn chửi, cũng như
chiều nay hắn chửi….. (Nam Cao, Chí Phèo, trang 78)
p→¬q
¬p
 ¬(¬q) = q là không hợp logic
1.5.4- Rules of Inference for
Quantified Statements
Rule Name
xP(x) Universal Instantiation
P(c) Cụ thể hóa lượng từ phổ dụng
P(c) for arbitrary c Universal generalization
xP(x) Tổng quát hóa bằng lượng từ phổ dụng
xP(x) Existential instantiation
P(c) for some element c Chuyên biệt hóa
P(c) for some element c Existential generalization
xP(x) Khái quát hóa bằng lượng từ tồn tại
Rules of Inference for Quantified Statements…

 “All student are in this class had taken the


course PFC”
 “HB is in this class”
 “Had HB taken PFC?”
 x(P(x) → Q(x)) Premise

 P(HB) → Q(HB) Universal Instantiation

 P(HB) Modus ponens

 Q(HB) // conclusion
Summary
 Propositional Logic – Luận lý mệnh đề
 Propositional Equivalences
 Predicates and Quantifiers
 Nested Quantifiers
 Rules and Inference – Quy tắc và diễn
dịch
THANK YOU

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