hobz Posted May 10, 2010 Posted May 10, 2010 What is the difference between a statement and a hypothesis?
ajb Posted May 10, 2010 Posted May 10, 2010 In mathematics, really logic a hypothesis is "If P then Q". A statement is a sentence that is declared true or false.
hobz Posted May 10, 2010 Author Posted May 10, 2010 (edited) I see. I had the impression that a hypothesis was more like "P" and a theorem was "If P then Q". What is a theorem? A side note. A statement is sort of a binary axiom? Edited May 10, 2010 by hobz
Mr Skeptic Posted May 10, 2010 Posted May 10, 2010 In logic, a statement is something that has a truth value (True or False). Statements can be put together to make other statements. In science, a hypothesis is a claim that, if assumed to be true, can be used to make specific predictions about the real world. In math, a theorem is something that has been proven true (granted certain axioms).
hobz Posted May 10, 2010 Author Posted May 10, 2010 Excellent! Is there a different meaning to hypothesis in maths? Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedWikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theorem equates a theorem to a statement proven true and says that the theorem consists of hypotheses and a conclusion which is a necessary consequence of the hypothesis. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedSuggesting that the definitions are different depending on which topic they are used in.
cosine Posted May 10, 2010 Posted May 10, 2010 Yeah, there's another meaning of Hypothesis when you are doing statistics.
ajb Posted May 10, 2010 Posted May 10, 2010 A theorem is a statement that has been proven to be true. A proof is a series of logical, irrefutable steps/arguments from one collection of statements to another. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedSuggesting that the definitions are different depending on which topic they are used in. This is often true of many things, even within different branches of the same science.
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