• @LafariOP
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    011 months ago

    Is “If B then A” equal to “B if and only if A”?

      • @LafariOP
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        311 months ago

        Thanks. Could you possibly elaborate? Why are they not equal?

        • @Boinkage
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          11 months ago

          Substitute common sense terms. If I say “if it is an apple, it is a fruit”, does it then follow that a thing is a fruit if and only if it is an apple? No. Lots of other things are fruit without being an apple.

          • Rhynoplaz
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            011 months ago

            Better read that one again.

            “If B then A” … “B if and only if A”?

            If Apple then fruit. Is Apple ONLY if it’s a fruit.

            This one actually checks out.

            • @Boinkage
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              11 months ago

              If and only if is a biconditional. “b if and only if a” means “if b then a” AND “b only if a”. B only if A here means “It is an apple only if is a fruit”, in other words, “if it is a fruit, it could only be an apple.” Which ain’t right.

              B -> A (if B, then A) (if apple, then fruit, correct)

              B <-> A (B if and only if A) (if apple, then fruit, AND if fruit, then apple, incorrect).

              • Rhynoplaz
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                311 months ago

                Gotcha. I was reading it aloud: “It’s an Apple if and only if it’s a fruit.” which isn’t wrong, but I guess the technical definition of “If and only if” assumes more than the words imply.

                • hornface
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                  311 months ago

                  “if and only if” is an unusual and sometimes confusing way to say it, but the words do directly imply the technical definition.

                  “it’s an apple if and only if it’s a fruit” literally means “it’s an apple if it’s a fruit” and “it’s an apple only if it’s a fruit”. You already seem to understand the 2nd part, so no need to explain that.

                  The first part is a bit confusing because the words are in the reverse order compared to how people normally talk. “it’s an apple if it’s a fruit” means the same thing as “if it’s a fruit, then it’s an apple”. Clearly “if it’s a fruit, then it’s an apple” is not a true statement, because there are plenty of other fruits apart from apples.

                • @Boinkage
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                  11 months ago

                  I agree, if and only if trips me up too and it doesn’t fit perfectly into this logic formula. A thing is only an apple if and only if it is a fruit makes sense if you read it in a common sense way.

    • @Thoth19
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      411 months ago

      No. They are effectively the same statement.

      (A <=> B ) = (A=>B AND B=> A)

      • Rhynoplaz
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        311 months ago

        Wait. If they are effectively the same statement, wouldn’t that mean they ARE equal?

        • @Casey_Masterpiece
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          211 months ago

          If B then A is the same as if X then Y is the same as if A then B. They are saying it’s the same as the OP. Changing the letters around doesn’t change the meaning since the letters are just placeholders.

          Now if you said If A then B AND If B then A as one it wouldn’t be the same because A and B would have to keep the same meaning.

          • Rhynoplaz
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            11 months ago

            But they switched the order in only the first half of the statement. I don’t know if everyone commenting caught that.

            Is “If B then A” equal to “B if and only if A”?

            This IS different from the original question.

        • @Thoth19
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          111 months ago

          I mean it is the definition of “if and only if”. And by commutativity we also know that A iff B is equal to B iff A

          • Rhynoplaz
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            211 months ago

            Oh yeah. I was very confused as to what that meant, but I learned something today.

            • @Thoth19
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              111 months ago

              Yeah if vs iff can be confusing at first. Trying to understand it with normal grammar doesn’t work right. It’s a lot more helpful to grok the symbols and so the truth tables by hand to see how they fit together