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MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Tuesday April 30, 2024
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Since the expression "(p (q))(p (r))" involves just three variables, it may be worth the trouble to draw a venn diagram of the situation.  There are in fact a couple of different ways to execute the picture.
 
Since the expression "(p (q))(p (r))" involves just three variables, it may be worth the trouble to draw a venn diagram of the situation.  There are in fact a couple of different ways to execute the picture.
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Figure 1 indicates the points of the universe of discourse ''X'' for which the proposition ''f'' : ''X'' → '''B''' has the value 1 (= true).  In this "paint by numbers" style of picture, one simply paints over the cells of a generic template for the universe ''X'', going according to some previously adopted convention, for instance:  Let the cells that get the value 0 under ''f'' remain untinted, and let the cells that get the value 1 under ''f'' be painted or shaded.  In doing this, it may be good to remind ourselves that the value of the picture as a whole is not in the "paints", in other words, the 0, 1 in '''B''', but in the pattern of regions that they indicate.  NB.  In this Ascii version, I use background shadings of [       ] for 0 and [ ` ` ` ] for 1.
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Figure 1 indicates the points of the universe of discourse ''X'' for which the proposition ''f'' : ''X'' → '''B''' has the value 1 (= true).  In this "paint by numbers" style of picture, one simply paints over the cells of a generic template for the universe ''X'', going according to some previously adopted convention, for instance:  Let the cells that get the value 0 under ''f'' remain untinted, and let the cells that get the value 1 under ''f'' be painted or shaded.  In doing this, it may be good to remind ourselves that the value of the picture as a whole is not in the "paints", in other words, the 0, 1 in '''B''', but in the pattern of regions that they indicate.  NB.  In this Ascii version, I use background shadings of [       ] for 0 and [ ` ` ` ] for 1.
    
{| align="center" style="text-align:center; width:90%"
 
{| align="center" style="text-align:center; width:90%"
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There are a number of standard ways in mathematics and statistics for talking about "the subset ''W'' of the domain ''X'' that gets painted with the value ''z'' by the indicator function ''f'' : ''X'' &rarr; '''B'''".  The subset ''W'' &sube; ''X'' is called the "antecedent", the "fiber", the "inverse image", the "level set", or the "pre-image" in ''X'' of ''z'' under ''f'', and is defined as ''W'' = ''f''<sup>–1</sup>(''z'').  Here, ''f''<sup>–1</sup> is called the "converse relation" or the "inverse relation" it is not in general an inverse function corresponding to the function ''f''.  Whenever possible in simple examples, I will use lower case letters for functions ''f'' : ''X'' &rarr; '''B''', and I will try to employ capital letters for subsets of ''X'', if possible, in such a way that ''F'' will be the fiber of 1 under ''f'', in other words, ''F'' = ''f''<sup>–1</sup>(1).
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There are a number of standard ways in mathematics and statistics for talking about "the subset ''W'' of the domain ''X'' that gets painted with the value ''z'' by the indicator function ''f'' : ''X'' &rarr; '''B'''".  The subset ''W'' &sube; ''X'' is called the "antecedent", the "fiber", the "inverse image", the "level set", or the "pre-image" in ''X'' of ''z'' under ''f'', and is defined as ''W'' = ''f''<sup>–1</sup>(''z'').  Here, ''f''<sup>–1</sup> is called the "converse relation" or the "inverse relation" &mdash; it is not in general an inverse function &mdash; corresponding to the function ''f''.  Whenever possible in simple examples, I will use lower case letters for functions ''f'' : ''X'' &rarr; '''B''', and I will try to employ capital letters for subsets of ''X'', if possible, in such a way that ''F'' will be the fiber of 1 under ''f'', in other words, ''F'' = ''f''<sup>–1</sup>(1).
    
The easiest way to see the sense of the venn diagram is to notice that the expression "(p (q))", read as "p &rArr; q", can also be read as "not p without q".  Its assertion effectively excludes any tincture of truth from the region of ''P'' that lies outside the rule of ''Q''.
 
The easiest way to see the sense of the venn diagram is to notice that the expression "(p (q))", read as "p &rArr; q", can also be read as "not p without q".  Its assertion effectively excludes any tincture of truth from the region of ''P'' that lies outside the rule of ''Q''.
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Likewise for the expression "(p (r))", read as "p &rArr; r", and also readable as "not p without r".  Asserting it effectively excludes any tincture of truth from the region of ''P'' that lies outside the rule of ''R''.
 
Likewise for the expression "(p (r))", read as "p &rArr; r", and also readable as "not p without r".  Asserting it effectively excludes any tincture of truth from the region of ''P'' that lies outside the rule of ''R''.
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Figure 2 shows the other standard way of drawing a venn diagram for such a proposition.  In this "punctured soap film" style of picture others may elect to give it the more dignified title of a "logical quotient topology" or some such thing one goes on from the previous picture to collapse the fiber of 0 under ''X'' down to the point of vanishing utterly from the realm of active contemplation, thereby arriving at a degenre of picture like so:
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Figure&nbsp;2 shows the other standard way of drawing a venn diagram for such a proposition.  In this "punctured soap film" style of picture &mdash; others may elect to give it the more dignified title of a "logical quotient topology" or some such thing &mdash; one goes on from the previous picture to collapse the fiber of 0 under ''X'' down to the point of vanishing utterly from the realm of active contemplation, thereby arriving at a degenre of picture like so:
    
{| align="center" style="text-align:center; width:90%"
 
{| align="center" style="text-align:center; width:90%"
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