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Posted

In proving : [math] x+y\leq 2[/math] given that : [math]0\leq x\leq 1[/math] and y=1,the following proof is pursued:

 

Since [math]0\leq x\leq 1[/math] ,then (x>0 or x=0)and (x<1 or x=1) ,which according to logic is equivalent to:

 

(x>0 and x<1) or (x>0 and x=1) or (x=0 and x<1) or ( x=0 and x=1).

 

And in examining the three cases ( except the 4th one : x=0 and x=1) we end up with :

 

[math] x+y\leq 2[/math].

 

The question now is : how do we examine the 4th case so to end up with [math] x+y\leq 2[/math]??

Posted

It seems a rather convoluted way to go about it.

 

( (x>0) and (x<1) )

 

=>

 

(x < 1)

 

=>

 

(x < 1 ) or ( x = 1)

 

Only those two cases need to be looked at, neither of them being degenerate as in your example.

Posted

I didn't present a proof, I just presented the cases required, but conjunction elimination anyway. (apparently more commonly known as simplification, but I hate that term).

Posted

And if the problem asked ,instead of the statement :[math]x+y\leq 2[/math],the statement : [math]|x+y|\leq 2[/math] to be proved??

 

Would you use simplification again??

Posted

I'm tempted to say cast it aside as degenerate. More formally, demonstrate that the first three cases are the only ones that can actually exist.

Posted
. More formally, demonstrate that the first three cases are the only ones that can actually exist.

 

And just how do we do that??

Posted

Roughly:

 

Taking not(x=0 and x=1) as given,

 

( (x>0 and x=1) or ( x=0 and x=1) ) and not(x=0 and x=1)

=>

(x>0 and x=1)

 

by disjunctive syllogism.

Posted (edited)
Roughly:

 

Taking not(x=0 and x=1) as given,

 

( (x>0 and x=1) or ( x=0 and x=1) ) and not(x=0 and x=1)

=>

(x>0 and x=1)

 

by disjunctive syllogism.

 

On the other hand i could use disjunctive syllogism and end up with : 2>2

 

Since x=0 and x=1 => 0=1 => (0=1) or |x+y|>2 and not (0=1) => |x+y|>2.

 

But since [math]|x+y|\leq 2[/math] ,then : [math]2<|x+y|\leq 2[/math] .Which of course results in 2>2

Edited by triclino
correction
Posted

No you can't, triclino. x=0 and x=1 implies absolutely nothing. x=0 and x=1 is a contradiction. The only conclusion that can drawn from (1) P -> Q and (2) ~P is that P is false.

Posted (edited)
No you can't, triclino. x=0 and x=1 implies absolutely nothing. .

 

On the contrary D.H contradiction can imply everything.

 

Thru disjunction syllogism as Tree pointed out you can imply everything.

 

Learn disjunction syllogism.

 

The contradiction here is: (x=0 and x=1) and not( x=0 and x=1)

Edited by triclino
correction
Posted
The contradiction here is x=0 and x=1. Think about it.

 

 

Contradiction is: [math]q\wedge\neg q[/math]

 

q here is 1=0 and not q is [math]1\neq 0[/math]

 

You thing twice about it

 

[math]1\neq 0[/math] is a field axiom

 

(x=0 and x=1) is equivalent to 1=0 ,and not(x=0 and x=1) is equivalent to:[math]1\neq 0[/math]

Posted
Contradiction is: [math]q\wedge\neg q[/math]

No. While you are correct that [math]q\wedge\neg q[/math] is a contradiction, it is not the only thing that qualifies as a contradiction. A contradiction is any statement that is unsatisfiable.

 

x=0 and x=1 is unsatisfiable. It is a contradiction.

Posted
A contradiction is any statement that is unsatisfiable.

 

x=0 and x=1 is unsatisfiable. It is a contradiction.

 

 

You are entangling False with contradiction .

 

x=0 and x=1 is simply a false statement.

 

This is basic stuff in Symbolic Logic, you better learn about it .

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