Commutativity of conjunction

In propositional logic, the commutativity of conjunction is a valid argument form and truth-functional tautology. It is considered to be a law of classical logic. It is the principle that the conjuncts of a logical conjunction may switch places with each other, while preserving the truth-value of the resulting proposition.[1]

Formal notation

Commutativity of conjunction can be expressed in sequent notation as:

and

where is a metalogical symbol meaning that is a syntactic consequence of , in the one case, and is a syntactic consequence of in the other, in some logical system;

or in rule form:

and

where the rule is that wherever an instance of "" appears on a line of a proof, it can be replaced with "" and wherever an instance of "" appears on a line of a proof, it can be replaced with "";

or as the statement of a truth-functional tautology or theorem of propositional logic:

and

where and are propositions expressed in some formal system.

Generalized principle

For any propositions H1, H2, ... Hn, and permutation σ(n) of the numbers 1 through n, it is the case that:

H1 H2 ... Hn

is equivalent to

Hσ(1) Hσ(2) Hσ(n).

For example, if H1 is

It is raining

H2 is

Socrates is mortal

and H3 is

2+2=4

then

It is raining and Socrates is mortal and 2+2=4

is equivalent to

Socrates is mortal and 2+2=4 and it is raining

and the other orderings of the predicates.

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gollark: On SwitchCraft many things are basically free, such as land, housing (if you don't care about location) and cobblestone, some things are probably not that scarce (iron, advanced computers), and some things are pretty scarce and thus valuable, such as high-end enchanted books and shulker boxes.
gollark: Also, some stuff like enchanted books are fairly scarce.
gollark: Opus has a good one, apparently, but managing turtles is still annoying.
gollark: Automining isn't *that* great yet.

References

  1. Elliott Mendelson (1997). Introduction to Mathematical Logic. CRC Press. ISBN 0-412-80830-7.
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