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Encyclopedia > Logically equivalent

In logic, statements p and q are logically equivalent if they have the same logical content.


Syntactically, p and q are equivalent if each can be proved from the other. Semantically, p and q are equivalent if they have the same truth value in every model.


Logical equivalence is often confused with material equivalence. The former is a statement in the metalanguage, claiming something about statements p and q in the object language. But the material equivalence of p and q (often written "pq") is itself another statement in the object language. There is a relationship, however; p and q are syntactically equivalent if and only if pq is a theorem, while p and q are semantically equivalent if and only if pq is a tautology.


Logical equivalence is sometimes denoted pq or pq. However, the latter notation is also used for material equivalence.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Logical equivalence - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (289 words)
In logic, statements p and q are logically equivalent if they have the same logical content.
Logical equivalence is often confused with material equivalence.
The logical equivalence of p and q is sometimes expressed as p ≡ q or p ⇔ q.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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