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Encyclopedia > De Morgan dual

In logic, De Morgan's laws (or De Morgan's theorem), named for nineteenth century logician and mathematician Augustus De Morgan, are the two rules of propositional logic, boolean algebra and set theory

not (P and Q) = (not P) or (not Q)
not (P or Q) = (not P) and (not Q)

which allow us to move a negation over a conjunction or a disjunction. In formal logic the laws are usually written

and in set theory

Common uses of De Morgan's rules are in digital circuit design, where it is used to manipulate the types of logic gates, and in formal logic, where it is one of the rules used to transform logical formulae into negation normal form, a prerequisite for conjunctive or disjunctive normal form. Computer programmers use them to change a complicated statement like IF ... AND (... OR ...) THEN ... into its opposite. They are also often useful in computations in elementary probability theory.


Each propositional expression P(p, q, ...) depending on elementary propositions p, q, ... has a De Morgan dual in which each elementary proposition is replaced by its negation and conjunction and disjunction are interchanged. It can be written as

This idea can be generalised to include the universal and existential quantifiers in classical logic as De Morgan duals, as follows:

To relate these quantifier dualities to the De Morgan laws, set up a model with some small number of elements in its domain D, such as

D = {a, b, c}.

Then

and

.

But, using De Morgan's laws,

and

verifying the quantifier dualities in the model.


Then, the quantifier dualities can be extended further to modal logic, relating the necessity and possibility operators:

,
.

The relationship of these modal operators to the quantification can be understood by setting up models using Kripke semantics.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Science Fair Projects - Duality (mathematics) (416 words)
The prototypical example here is the duality in projective geometry: given any theorem in plane projective geometry, exchanging the terms "point" and "line" everywhere results in a new, equally valid theorem.
In another group of dualities, the objects of one theory are translated into objects of another theory and the morphisms between objects in the first theory are translated into morphisms in the second theory, but with direction reversed.
Using a duality of this type, every statement in the first theory can be translated into a "dual" statement in the second theory, where the direction of all arrows has to be reversed.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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