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Sentences in mathematical logic are actually something else again; also not all English-language conditionals are indicative |
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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'' and ''q'' are placeholders for which the antecedent and consequent are substituted, (also known as the condition and consequence or hypothesis and 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]]
{{quotation|The truth-functional theory of the conditional was integral to [[Gottlob Frege|Frege]]'s new logic (1879). It was taken up enthusiastically by [[Bertrand Russell|Russell]] (who called it "[[material implication]]"), [[Ludwig Wittgenstein|Wittgenstein]] in the ''[[Tractatus]]'', and the [[logical positivist]]s, and it is now found in every logic text. It is the first theory of conditionals which students encounter. Typically, it does not strike students as ''obviously'' correct. It is logic's first surprise. Yet, as the textbooks testify, it does a creditable job in many circumstances. And it has many defenders. It is a strikingly simple theory: "If ''A'', ''B''" is false when ''A'' is true and ''B'' is false. In all other cases, "If ''A'', ''B''" is true. It is thus equivalent to "~(''A''&~''B'')" and to "~''A'' or ''B''". "''A'' ⊃ ''B''" has, by stipulation, these truth conditions.|[[Dorothy Edgington]]|The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy|“Conditionals”<ref name="sep-conditionals"/>}}
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