1 / 36

Looking Ahead

Looking Ahead. Monday: Starting Logic Tuesday: Continuing Logic Wednesday: 15 week Exam, Projects Returned Thursday: Activity Friday: Finish Logic. Warm Up. Logic. SWBAT: Identify Propositions, use the negations of propositions, and use compound propositions. History.

alvaro
Télécharger la présentation

Looking Ahead

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Looking Ahead Monday: Starting Logic Tuesday: Continuing Logic Wednesday: 15 week Exam, Projects Returned Thursday: Activity Friday: Finish Logic

  2. Warm Up

  3. Logic SWBAT: Identify Propositions, use the negations of propositions, and use compound propositions

  4. History In the fourth century, Aristotle formalized a system of logical analysis in which a complicated argument was reduced to simpler statements. Leibniz is credited as the first to turn this logical analysis into symbolic logic.

  5. We use P to represent the first statement and Q to represent the second statement. Example: P: It is raining Q: It is sunny. If P, then Q: If it is raining, then it is sunny. P and Q: It is raining and it is sunny.

  6. Example P: I will do well on the tests tomorrow Q: I will study tonight. Replace P and Q for the appropriate propositions below • If I will study tonight then I will do well on the tests tomorrow. • I will study tonight and I will do well on the tests tomorrow. • I will not study tonight.

  7. Propositions: statements that can either be true or false. Examples: The cow is green. I went to the movie. She will travel to Thailand. 2x + 3 < 4.

  8. Symbols Implication: If… then… Equivalence: … if and only if … Negation: not Conjunction: and Disjunction: v or Exclusive Disjunction: v or, but not both`

  9. Implication When proposition P being true means that Q must be true as well. The first proposition, P, is called the antecedent. The second proposition, Q, is called the consequent. An implication is false when the antecedent is true but the consequence is false.

  10. More examples.. P: I love to shop. Q: I went to the mall. PQ: If I love to shop, then I went to the mall. T I do not love to shop, I did not go to the mall. T I do not love to shop, I went to the mall. F I love to shop, I did not go to the mall. T I love to shop, I went to the mall.

  11. Determine the truth of P Q given: • P is true, Q is true. • P is true, Q is false. • P is false, Q is true • P is false, Q is false.

  12. Equivalence Each statement implies the other. If P is true, Q is true. Similarly if P is false, Q must be false. If one is true and the other is false, then the overall equivalence statement is false.

  13. More examples.. P: I love to shop. Q: I went to the mall. PQ: I love to shop if and only if I went to the mall. T I do not love to shop, I did not go to the mall. F I do not love to shop, I went to the mall. F I love to shop, I did not go to the mall. T I love to shop, I went to the mall.

  14. Determine the truth of P Q given • P is true Q is true • P is true, Q is false • P is false, Q is true • P is false, Q is true

  15. Given P Q: Converse: Q P Inverse: P Q Contrapositive: Q P Way to remember?

  16. Example: P: I have a dog Q : My name is Bob. In words… • Find the implication. • Find the converse • Find the inverse • Find the contrapositive

  17. Write each of the following in symbolic logic form: • If the wind is strong then the waves will be large. • If and only if the wing is strong then the waves will be large. • If the waves are large then the wind is strong • If and only if the waves are large then the wind is strong.

  18. Negation Makes the proposition false. Example: P: It is raining. P: It is not raining.

  19. More examples.. P: 2x + 3 = 5 P: 2x + 3 5 P: 2x < 10 P: 2x ≥ 10 P: I love chocolate. P: I do not love chocolate.

  20. Practice Write down the negation of the following statements: • It is sunny. • 2(x+3) > 6 • The sun is not a star • Q

  21. Conjunction ^ When both propositions are combined.. This is the symbol for and. These statements are true only if each proposition is true. BOTH must be true.

  22. More examples P: I ate a banana. Q: I have $4. P ^ Q: I ate a banana and I have $4.

  23. Combining them all… Given: P: The apples are ripe. Q: The harvest season is started. R: The current month is July Translate (P^Q) R into words

  24. Practice… P: It is sunny Q: It is warm. Write each of the following logical statements in symbolic form • It is sunny and it is warm. • It is not sunny • It is not warm and it is not sunny. • If it is not warm and it is sunny then it is not warm.

  25. Disjunction v A statement created by forming two propositions together, such that the compound statement formed is true whenever either or both sub statements are true but false when both are false. “or” statement

  26. Example… P: It is snowing Q: It is cold • Write P V Q in words. • Determine the truth of P V Q if P is true and Q is false.

  27. Exclusive Disjunction Disjunction where not both of the sub propositions can be true at once. NOT BOTH.

  28. Example… P: The sky is blue Q: Grass is green. • Write P V Q in words. • Determine the truth of P V Q in the following circumstances. • P is true, Q is true • P is true, Q is false • P is false, Q is true • P is false, Q is true

  29. Practice Problems Determine the truth value of each of the following statements, given that P is false, and Q is false. • P V Q • P V Q • P V Q • P V Q

  30. Recap… Implication: Equivalence: Negation: Conjunction: Disjunction: v Exclusive Disjunction: v

  31. Truth Tables A truth table is a way of organizing the possible combinations of truth values of two or more propositions.

  32. Basic Truth Table

  33. Create a table for (PQ) P

  34. Create a truth table for (PQ) (PR)

  35. Complete the Truth Table

  36. Review for 15th Week Exam • Basic Probability • Dependent and independent probability • Mean, median, mode, quartiles, ranges • Correlation- formulas and interpretation • Percent Error • Scientific Notation, Rounding, Sig Figs • Currency Conversions • Solving quadratics • Evaluating Functions • Venn Diagrams

More Related