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Material nonimplication or abjunction (from Latin ab 'away' and junctio 'to join') is a term referring to a logic operation used in generic circuits and Boolean algebra.[1] It is the negation of material implication. That is to say that for any two propositions and , the material nonimplication from to is true if and only if the negation of the material implication from to is true. This is more naturally stated as that the material nonimplication from to is true only if is true and is false.

It may be written using logical notation as , , or "Lpq" (in Bocheński notation), and is logically equivalent to , and .

Definition

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Truth table

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FFF
FTF
TFT
TTF

Logical equivalences

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Material nonimplication may be defined as the negation of material implication.

    
    

In classical logic, it is also equivalent to the negation of the disjunction of and , and also the conjunction of and

         
         

Properties

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falsehood-preserving: The interpretation under which all variables are assigned a truth value of "false" produces a truth value of "false" as a result of material nonimplication.

Symbol

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The symbol for material nonimplication is simply a crossed-out material implication symbol. Its Unicode symbol is 219B16 (8603 decimal): ↛.

Natural language

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Grammatical

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"p minus q."

"p without q."

Rhetorical

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"p but not q."

"q is false, in spite of p."

Computer science

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Bitwise operation: A & ~B. This is usually called "bit clear" (BIC) or "and not" (ANDN).

Logical operation: A && !B.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Berco, Dan; Ang, Diing Shenp; Kalaga, Pranav Sairam (2020). "Programmable Photoelectric Memristor Gates for In Situ Image Compression". Advanced Intelligent Systems. 2 (9): 5. doi:10.1002/aisy.202000079.
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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

NIMPLY gate

The NIMPLY gate is a digital logic gate that implements a material nonimplication. A right-facing arrow with a line through it ( ↛ {\displaystyle \nrightarrow

Associative property

(A\backslash B)\backslash C\neq A\backslash (B\backslash C)} . (Compare material nonimplication in logic.) William Rowan Hamilton seems to have coined the term

Logical connective

implication " ← {\displaystyle \leftarrow } " is actually the same as material conditional with swapped arguments; thus, the symbol for converse implication

List of rules of inference

NOR, Logical NOR (Peirce's arrow); 2, Converse nonimplication; 3, ¬p, Negation; 4, Material nonimplication; 5, ¬q, Negation; 6, XOR, Exclusive disjunction;

Outline of logic

Converse nonimplication Exclusive or Logical NOR Logical biconditional Logical conjunction Logical disjunction Material implication Material nonimplication Negation

Material conditional

The material conditional (also known as material implication) is a binary operation commonly used in logic. When the conditional symbol → {\displaystyle

Truth table

matrix for negation is Russell's, alongside of which is the matrix for material implication in the hand of Ludwig Wittgenstein. It is shown that an unpublished

LPQ

Unix Lpq in Bocheński notation for the default formulation of material nonimplication laparoscopy-to-laparotomy quotient (LPQ); see Laparoscopy Search