Bridge to Abstract Mathematics: Mathematical Proof and Structures

(Dana P.) #1
74 LOGIC, PART I: THE PROPOSITIONAL CALCULUS Chapter 2


  1. Let p, q, and r represent statements defined as follows:
    p: lines x and y lie in the same plane.
    q: lines x and y are parallel.
    r: lines x and y have no points in common.
    Express symbolically as compound statement forms in the letters p, q, and r.
    If x and y are parallel, then they have no points in common.
    Lines x and y intersect unless they are parallel.
    Lines x and y have no points in common, but they are not parallel.
    The statement "lines x and y are parallel" is stronger than the statement
    "lines x and y have no points in common."
    In order for x and y having no points in common to imply that x and y are
    parallel, it is necessary that x and y lie in the same plane.
    Whenever x and y are parallel, then x and y lie in the same plane.
    Lines x and y intersect unless they are parallel or don't lie in the same plane.
    Either x and y are parallel or x and y have points in common, but not both.

  2. According to (v) of Theorem 1, two statement forms are equivalent if and only
    if their negations are equivalent. Use this fact, together with the other parts of
    Theorem 1 [except (q) and (u)] to argue the equivalence of the statement forms:
    (a) (p v q) + r and (p + r) A (q -.+ r) [(q) of Theorem^11
    (b) (PA q) + r and P + (q + [(u) of Theorem 11

  3. (a) Give three examples of well-known corollaries to the mean value theorem
    of elementary calculus.
    (b) In each of parts (a') through (g'), one of the given compound statements p or
    q is formally stronger than the other; in fact, either p + q or q + p is an instance
    of a tautology.
    (i) Determine which of the two is stronger in each case.
    (ii) Based on your previous mathematical experience, label each of the follow-
    ing 14 statements as true or false [when each is preceded by the appropriate
    number of occurrences of the universal quantifier for every. For example,
    both sentences in (d') should be preceded by for every f and for every a].
    (iii) Check that your answers in (ii) are consistent with your conclusions in (i).


*(a1) p: If 0 < Ix - a1 < /?, then x # a and a - /? < x < a + /?.
q: If 0 < Ix - a1 < /?, then a - /? < x < a + /3.
(b') p: If a, b, and x are real numbers such that ax = bx, then a = b.
q: If a, b, and x are real numbers such that ax = bx and x # 0, then a = b.
(c') p: Iff has a relative maximum at a and f is differentiable at a, then f '(a) = 0.
q: Iff has relative maximum at a, then f'(a) = 0.
(d') p: Iff is differentiable at a, then f is continuous at a.
q: Iff is differentiable at a and f has a relative maximum at a, then f is
continuous at a.
(e') p: Iff is defined at a and lirn,,, f(x) exists and equals f(a), then f is con-
tinuous at a.
q: Iff is defined at a and lim,,, f(x) exists, then f is continuous at a.
(f') p: If a, b, and p are integers, if p is prime, and p divides the product ab of a
and b, then either p divides a or p divides b.

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