FACTOID # 158: 84% of people in Finland feel that they are at a low risk of experiencing a burglary - but just look at how many burglaries they have!
 
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Encyclopedia > Biconditional elimination

Biconditional elimination allows one to infer a conditional from a biconditional: if ( A B ) is true, then one may infer one direction of the biconditional, either ( A B ) or ( B A ).


For example, if it's true that I'm breathing if and only if I'm alive, then it's true that if I'm breathing, I'm alive; likewise, it's true that if I'm alive, I'm breathing.


Formally:

 ( A ↔ B )  ∴ ( A → B ) 

also

 ( A ↔ B )  ∴ ( B → A ) 


 

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