MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Thursday January 15, 2026
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, 02:36, 14 June 2009
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| − | The shift operator <math>\operatorname{E}</math> can be understood as enacting a ''substitution operation'' on the proposition that is given as its argument.
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| | The shift operator <math>\operatorname{E}</math> can be understood as enacting a substitution operation on the propositional form <math>f(p, q)\!</math> that is given as its argument. In our present focus on propositional forms that involve two variables, we have the following type specifications and definitions: | | The shift operator <math>\operatorname{E}</math> can be understood as enacting a substitution operation on the propositional form <math>f(p, q)\!</math> that is given as its argument. In our present focus on propositional forms that involve two variables, we have the following type specifications and definitions: |