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{{Expert-subject|Mathematics|date=January 2012}}
{{Wikify|date=January 2012}}
In [[philosophy]], [[logic]], and [[mathematics]], a '''conditional statement''' is a [[proposition]] that can be written in the form "If ''p'', then ''q''," where ''p'' and ''q'' are propositions. The proposition immediately following the word "if" is called the hypothesis (also called antecedent). The proposition immediately following the word "then" is called the conclusion (also called consequence). In the aforementioned form for conditional statements, ''p'' is the hypothesis and ''q'' is the conclusion. A conditional statement is sometimes called simply a '''conditional''' (also called an '''implication'''). Outside of mathematics, it is a matter of some controversy as to whether the truth function for [[material implication]] provides an adequate treatment of conditional statements in English (a sentence in the [[indicative mood]] with a conditional clause attached, i.e., an [[indicative conditional]]).<ref name="sep-conditionals"/><ref>Barwise and Etchemendy 1999, p. 178-179</ref> That is to say, critics argue that in some non-mathematical cases, the truth value of a compound statement, "If ''p'', then ''q''," is not adequately determined by the truth values of "''p''," and "''
* <math>p \rightarrow q</math>
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