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{{Expert-subject|Mathematics|date=January 2012}}
{{Wikify|date=January 2012}}
In [[logic|philosophical]] and [[mathematical logic|mathematical]] logic, a '''conditional statement''' is a compound [[statement (logic)|statement]], composed of [[declarative sentence]]s or [[proposition]]s ''p'' and ''q'', that can be written in the form "if ''p'' then ''q''". In this form, ''p'', the term immediately following the word "if", is called the antecedent, hypothesis, or condition and ''q'', the term following the word "then", is called the consequent, consequence or conclusion. A conditional statement is sometimes simply called a '''conditional''' or 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]]; for a more technical treatment, see [[sentence (mathematical logic)|
* <math>p \rightarrow q</math>
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