Zaxx81 Posted August 10, 2011 Share Posted August 10, 2011 I keep going in circles trying to figure out the answer. Please help! 2. makes the most sense to me, but I am not sure what to do with the part with the --> Which of the following are entailed by the sentence (A V B) Λ (¬C V ¬D V E)? (A V B) (A V B V C) Λ (B Λ C Λ D --> E) (A V B) Λ (¬D V E) ! Moderator Note Identical threads merged Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mathematic Posted August 10, 2011 Share Posted August 10, 2011 What is the precise definition of "entail" in this context? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DrRocket Posted August 10, 2011 Share Posted August 10, 2011 I keep going in circles trying to figure out the answer. Please help! 2. makes the most sense to me, but I am not sure what to do with the part with the --> Which of the following are entailed by the sentence (A V B) Λ (¬C V ¬D V E)? (A V B) (A V B V C) Λ (B Λ C Λ D --> E) (A V B) Λ (¬D V E) Show us your reasoning. You might start with why you have eliminated 1 and 3. Then think about what B Λ C Λ D --> E means and why that would result from the original sentence. It might help to think about this in terms of set theory and draw yourself a Venn diagram. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zaxx81 Posted August 10, 2011 Author Share Posted August 10, 2011 Show us your reasoning. You might start with why you have eliminated 1 and 3. Then think about what B Λ C Λ D --> E means and why that would result from the original sentence. It might help to think about this in terms of set theory and draw yourself a Venn diagram. My reasoning was simple. #2 was the only choice with variables A, B, C, D, and E and there is nothing as far as I can see that would cancel out a variable. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zaxx81 Posted August 10, 2011 Author Share Posted August 10, 2011 What is the precise definition of "entail" in this context? "can be logically inferred" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
khaled Posted August 11, 2011 Share Posted August 11, 2011 (edited) [math]KB \models \alpha[/math], where KB the Knowledge Base, and [math]\alpha[/math] is the statement that has a model with KB, So, "(A V B) Λ (¬C V ¬D V E)" ~ KB = { (A V B), (¬C V ¬D V E) } and since KB = TRUE, then (A V B) = TRUE, and (¬C V ¬D V E) = TRUE 1. TRUE, because (A V B) is TRUE in the KB 2. TRUE, because (A V B V C) = TRUE since (A V B) = TRUE in the KB, and (B Λ C Λ D --> E) = (¬B V ¬C V ¬D V E) = TRUE since (¬C V ¬D V E) = TRUE in the KB 3. Not sure, you have to revise Boolean Calculus, Wikipedia: Prepositional Calculus Edited August 11, 2011 by khaled Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marqq Posted August 11, 2011 Share Posted August 11, 2011 (edited) You might be over-analyzing... Check the definition of 'entailed'. (HINT: It doesn't mean a complete list of assertions) EDIT: Ok, I'll add one thing-- If your question(assertion) is true, which of the 3 answers will definitely also be true? Edited August 11, 2011 by Marqq Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zaxx81 Posted August 11, 2011 Author Share Posted August 11, 2011 You might be over-analyzing... Check the definition of 'entailed'. (HINT: It doesn't mean a complete list of assertions) EDIT: Ok, I'll add one thing-- If your question(assertion) is true, which of the 3 answers will definitely also be true? I kicked myself after thinking deeper about entailment. This whole time I've been trying to prove equivelancy between two equations when I really needed to just prove which one was always true when the first is true. I plugged all the equatinos into Excel and changed the values of A, B, C, D, and E and everytime the problem was true, #2 was also true. I did this a few days ago but got frustrated because I was thinking that when the first is false the others needed to be false also...which is not entailment. Thanks for all the help! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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