1 / 20

2-3 Conditional Statements

You used logic and Venn diagrams to determine truth values of negations, conjunctions, and disjunctions. 2-3 Conditional Statements. Analyze statements in if-then form. Write the converse, inverse, and contrapositive of if-then statements. Conditional Statements.

leif
Télécharger la présentation

2-3 Conditional Statements

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. You used logic and Venn diagrams to determine truth values of negations, conjunctions, and disjunctions. 2-3 Conditional Statements • Analyze statements in if-then form. • Write the converse, inverse, and contrapositive of if-then statements.

  2. Conditional Statements • Her condition improved each day she exercised. • Mom said I could go to the mall on one condition. • If I taped my ankle each morning, then the condition of it would improve. In mathematics, statements in if-then form are called conditional statements.

  3. Parts of a Conditional Statement • I wrote my hypothesis for my Science Fair project. • The experiment proved myhypothesiswrong. • I had a good conclusion at the end of my English paper. • I came to the conclusion that I lost my notebook.

  4. Parts of a Conditional Statement Hypothesis—the if part of a conditional statement. Conclusion—the then part of a conditional statement.

  5. Write a Conditional Statement Hypothesis: You talk on the telephone more than one hour per night. Conclusion: Your grade will drop one letter. If you talk on the telephone more than one hour per night, then your grade will drop one letter.

  6. hypothesis conclusion Identify the Hypothesis and Conclusion A. Identify the hypothesis and conclusion of the following statement. If a polygon has 6 sides, then it is a hexagon. If a polygon has 6 sides, then it is a hexagon. Answer: Hypothesis: A polygon has 6 sides.Conclusion: It is a hexagon.

  7. Identify the Hypothesis and Conclusion B.Identify the hypothesis and conclusion of the following statement. Tamika will advance to the next level of play if she completes the maze in her computer game. Answer: Hypothesis: Tamika completes the maze in her computer game.Conclusion: She will advance to the next level of play.

  8. A. Which of the choices correctly identifies the hypothesis and conclusion of the given conditional?If you are a baby, then you will cry. A. Hypothesis: You will cry.Conclusion: You are a baby. B. Hypothesis: You are a baby.Conclusion: You will cry. C. Hypothesis: Babies cry.Conclusion: You are a baby. D. none of the above

  9. Conditional statements are not always in if-then form, but any statement can be rewritten in that form. It is easier to identify the hypothesis and conclusion when it is written in if-then form.

  10. Write a Conditional in If-Then Form A. Identify the hypothesis and conclusion of the following statement. Then write the statement in the if-then form. Measured distance is positive. Answer: Hypothesis: A distance is measured.Conclusion: It is positive.If a distance is measured, then it is positive.

  11. Write a Conditional in If-Then Form B. Identify the hypothesis and conclusion of the following statement. Then write the statement in the if-then form. A five-sided polygon is a pentagon. Answer: Hypothesis: A polygon has five sides.Conclusion: It is a pentagon.If a polygon has five sides, then it is a pentagon.

  12. Do Television commercials use Conditional Statements?

  13. True or False? For a conditional statement to be true, the conclusion must be true whenever the hypothesis is true. A conditional is false only if there is a case in which the hypothesis is true and the conclusion is false. If two numbers are both odd, then their sum is odd. The condition is false because the conclusion is false even though the hypothesis is true.

  14. Truth Values of Conditionals A. Determine the truth value of the conditional statement. If true, explain your reasoning. If false, give a counterexample. If you subtract a whole number from another whole number, the result is also a whole number. Counterexample: 2 – 7 = –5 2 and 7 are whole numbers, but –5 is an integer, not a whole number. The conclusion is false. Answer: Since you can find a counterexample, the conditional statement is false.

  15. Truth Values of Conditionals B. Determine the truth value of the conditional statement. If true, explain your reasoning. If false, give a counterexample. If last month was February, then this month is March. When the hypothesis is true, the conclusion is also true, since March is the month that follows February. Answer: So, the conditional statement is true.

  16. A.Determine the truth value of the conditional statement. If true, explain your reasoning. If false, give a counterexample.The product of whole numbers is greater than or equal to 0. A. True; when the hypothesis is true, the conclusion is also true. B. False; –3 ● 4 = –12

  17. B.Determine the truth value of the conditional statement. If true, explain your reasoning. If false, give a counterexample.If yesterday was Tuesday, then today is Monday. A. True; when the hypothesis is true, the conclusion is false. B. False; today is Wednesday.

  18. C.Determine the truth value of the conditional statement. If true, explain your reasoning. If false, give a counterexample.If a triangle has four right angles, then it is a rectangle. A. True; the hypothesis is false, and a conditional with a false hypothesis is always true. B. False; a right triangle has one right angle.

  19. 2-3 Assignment Page 111, 18-21, 26-31, 35-38

More Related