31. Truth and Falsity in Compound Statements
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Lecture Notes
Main Topics #
The Nature of Contradiction (Review) #
- Contradictory statements require: (1) same subject and predicate, (2) one affirmative, one negative
- “Three is an odd number” and “Three is an even number” are NOT contradictories—both affirmative, different predicates
- True contradictory: “Three is an odd number” / “Three is not an odd number”
- The term “some” (particular quantifier) does not imply its own negation
- “Some women are beautiful” does NOT assert “Some women are not beautiful”
- These are subcontraries; both can be true
- Inference that some are not beautiful is a consequence, not what is said
Conditional Statements (If-Then) #
- Structure: Two simple statements joined by “if” and “then”
- Antecedent: The “if” part (what comes before)
- Consequent: The “then” part (what comes after)
- Example: “If this number is two, then this number is even”
Truth Conditions for Conditionals #
- Truth: The consequent follows necessarily from the antecedent
- Falsity: The consequent does not follow necessarily from the antecedent
- Crucially: Truth/falsity of a conditional is independent of the truth/falsity of its component statements
Key Examples #
True conditional with false components: “If Socrates is a mother, then Socrates is a woman”
- Both parts are false
- Yet the conditional is true because motherhood entails womanhood
- The consequent follows from the antecedent
False conditional with true components: “If Mary is a woman, then Mary is a mother”
- Both parts are true
- Yet the conditional is false because womanhood does not entail motherhood
- The consequent does not follow from the antecedent
True conditional (both true): “If Mary is a mother, then Mary is a woman”
- Both parts are true and the consequent follows
Reversibility and Logical Relationships #
- Reversing a conditional does not preserve truth value unless special relationships hold
- Convertible: “If this is two, then this is half of four” is true both ways (half of four is a property of two in the strictest sense—belongs only to two, to every two, and always)
- Non-convertible: “If this is two, then this is less than ten” is true, but reversed is false (less than ten is more universal than the property two)
- When definition and property coincide, reversal is valid
- When a term is more universal than another, reversal fails
Disjunctive Statements (Either-Or) #
- Structure: Two or more simple statements joined by “either…or”
- Examples: “A number is either odd or even” / “A triangle is either equilateral, isosceles, or scalene”
- Contraction: Often contracted to appear as single assertions (e.g., “A triangle is equilateral or isosceles”) when logically expressing multiple alternatives
Truth Conditions for Disjunctives #
- Truth: The statement exhausts all possibilities in the domain
- Falsity: The statement fails to exhaust all possibilities
- Depends on the logic of division: a proper division must empty out the whole without remainder
Examples #
- True: “A number is either odd or even” (exhaustive of all numbers)
- False: “A triangle is either equilateral or isosceles” (omits scalene)
- True: “A triangle is either equilateral, isosceles, or scalene” (exhaustive)
The Problem of Completeness in Division #
- Mathematical divisions are easier to verify as exhaustive (e.g., triangle types by angle and side)
- More abstract divisions require careful analysis (e.g., Porphyry’s five predicables: genus, species, difference, property, accident)
- Even in mathematics, one must sometimes reason to exclude apparent possibilities (e.g., no right-angled equilateral triangle exists because equilateral requires all angles equal, and if one is 90°, the others cannot also be 90°)
- Divisions can sometimes be probable rather than certain
Equivocity of Truth Across Statement Types #
- In simple statements: Truth = conformity of mind with things (what is the case)
- In conditionals: Truth = necessary consequence of antecedent to consequent (not what is the case, but what would follow if the antecedent were true)
- In disjunctives: Truth = exhaustion of all possibilities (completeness of division)
- These meanings are equivocal by reason—related but not identical; the word “true” does not mean the same thing in all contexts
The Role of Conditionals in Reasoning #
- A conditional alone does not tell us about reality; it expresses a logical connection
- To draw conclusions about reality, one must combine:
- An if-then statement (expresses necessity)
- A simple statement (asserts what is or is not the case)
- Conclusion: a simple statement (about reality)
- Example (from Euclid’s sixth theorem): If these sides were unequal, then you could cut off from the greater a line equal to the lesser, creating a contradiction. But this is impossible. Therefore, these sides must be equal.
- We cannot combine two conditionals and derive another conditional as a conclusion when we seek to know how things actually are
Key Arguments #
The Independence Argument (for Conditionals) #
- Truth in conditionals is independent of the truth-values of components
- One can have: (false antecedent + false consequent = true conditional), (true antecedent + true consequent = false conditional)
- Therefore, the truth of a conditional must be grounded in something other than the truth of its parts: namely, in the necessity of consequence
The Exhaustion Argument (for Disjunctives) #
- An either-or statement is true iff it completely divides the subject matter
- A proper division empties the whole; nothing remains outside
- This requires understanding the nature of the subject and recognizing all possible categories
- Mathematical examples make this clearer, but even abstract divisions (e.g., kinds of opposition in God) require careful reasoning
The Non-Equivocity of Truth Across Contexts #
- While truth means something different in simple, conditional, and disjunctive statements, these meanings are not purely equivocal
- There is a connection: every true conditional reflects how things are necessarily related; every true disjunctive reflects an actual division in reality
- But the connection is indirect and requires understanding the context
Important Definitions #
- Conditional statement (if-then statement): A compound statement joining two simple statements via “if” (antecedent) and “then” (consequent), such that truth depends on whether the consequent necessarily follows from the antecedent
- Antecedent: The conditional clause (“if” part); the condition
- Consequent: The resultant clause (“then” part); what is claimed to follow
- Disjunctive statement (either-or statement): A compound statement expressing alternatives, true only if all possibilities are exhausted
- Exhaustive division: A division that accounts for all members or possibilities within a domain, leaving nothing outside
- Equivocal by reason: A term whose meaning differs across contexts but whose uses are rationally connected rather than purely arbitrary
Examples & Illustrations #
Conditionals with Component Truth-Values #
- False antecedent, false consequent → true conditional: “If Socrates is a mother, then Socrates is a woman”
- True antecedent, true consequent → false conditional: “If Mary is a woman, then Mary is a mother”
- True antecedent, true consequent → true conditional: “If Mary is a mother, then Mary is a woman”
Reversible vs. Non-Reversible Conditionals #
- Reversible (strict property): “If this is two, then this is half of four” ↔ “If this is half of four, then this is two”
- Non-reversible (looser predicate): “If this is two, then this is less than ten” (true) but “If this is less than ten, then this is two” (false)
Classroom Example #
- Teacher says, “Some of you have passed,” after grading half the papers
- This does NOT assert “Some of you have failed”; it only asserts those who passed
- Inference that some failed is a consequence, not what is said
Disjunctive Examples #
- True: “A number is either odd or even”
- False: “A triangle is either equilateral or isosceles” (missing scalene)
- True: “A triangle is either equilateral, isosceles, or scalene”
- Requires reasoning: No right-angled equilateral triangle exists (requires knowledge that equilateral = all angles equal = 60° each)
- Can be probable: “A man is either white, or black, or brown, or red, or yellow” (probably exhaustive but not provably so)
From Euclid’s Sixth Theorem #
- If these sides (of a triangle) are unequal, then you can cut off from the greater a line equal to the lesser
- This creates a sub-triangle with two equal sides and angle equal to the original
- By the fifth theorem, the bases must be equal
- But the base of the smaller triangle is part of the original base
- Thus part would equal whole—contradiction
- Therefore, the sides cannot be unequal; they must be equal
- The if-then statement is true; the consequent follows from the antecedent
Questions Addressed #
Q: Can a conditional statement be true if both its components are false? A: Yes, if the consequent follows necessarily from the antecedent. Example: “If Socrates is a mother, then Socrates is a woman” is true even though both parts are false.
Q: Can a conditional statement be false if both its components are true? A: Yes, if the consequent does not follow from the antecedent. Example: “If Mary is a woman, then Mary is a mother” is false even though both parts are true.
Q: What makes an either-or statement true? A: It exhausts all possibilities in the domain. The division must be complete, accounting for everything without remainder.
Q: Does reversing a conditional preserve its truth value? A: Not necessarily. Reversal preserves truth only when the terms are convertible (as in strict properties). Otherwise, the less universal term may not entail the more universal.
Q: Is truth the same concept in simple statements and compound statements? A: No. Truth is equivocal by reason: it means conformity with things in simple statements, necessary consequence in conditionals, and exhaustion of possibilities in disjunctives. These are related but distinct meanings.