Conjunction introduction
Conjunction introduction (often abbreviated simply as conjunction[1]) is a valid rule of inference of propositional logic. The rule makes it possible to introduce a conjunction into a logical proof. It is the inference that if the proposition p is true, and proposition q is true, then the logical conjunction of the two propositions p and q is true. For example, if it's true that it's raining, and it's true that I'm inside, then it's true that "it's raining and I'm inside".
The rule is that :
Where "" is a metalogical symbol which means "allows you to write the following on a line of a proof:"
Formal notation
The conjunction introduction rule may be written in sequent notation:
where is a metalogical symbol meaning that is a syntactic consequence if and are each on lines of a proof in some logical system; or in rule form:
where the rule is that wherever an instance of "" and "" appear on lines of a proof, a "" can be placed on a subsequent line;
or as the statement of a truth-functional tautology or theorem of propositional logic:
where and are proposition expressed in some logical system.
Proof
Proposition | Derivation |
---|---|
Given | |
Given | |
Addition | |
Material implication | |
Absorption | |
Modus ponens |