Logical equivalence
In logic and mathematics, statements and are said to be logically equivalent if they have the same truth value in every model. The logical equivalence of and is sometimes expressed as,,, or, depending on the notation being used.
However, these symbols are also used for material equivalence, so proper interpretation would depend on the context. Logical equivalence is different from material equivalence, although the two concepts are intrinsically related.
Logical equivalences
In logic, many common logical equivalences exist and are often listed as laws or properties. The following tables illustrate some of these.Logical equivalences involving biconditionals
Where represents XOR.Examples
In logic
The following statements are logically equivalent:Syntactically, and are derivable from each other via the rules of contraposition and double negation. Semantically, and are true in exactly the same models ; namely, those in which either Lisa is in Denmark is false or Lisa is in Europe is true.
and
Relation to material equivalence
Logical equivalence is different from material equivalence. Formulas and are logically equivalent if and only if the statement of their material equivalence is a tautology.The material equivalence of and is itself another statement in the same object language as and. This statement expresses the idea "' if and only if '". In particular, the truth value of can change from one model to another.
On the other hand, the claim that two formulas are logically equivalent is a statement in metalanguage, which expresses a relationship between two statements and. The statements are logically equivalent if, in every model, they have the same truth value.