Need help formalising simple propositional logic sentences












3












$begingroup$


I'm a beginner learning about propositional logic and how to formalise sentences.



I'm currently working through the following sentences and translating them into logical statements.






  • $p$ means “Emily is happy”


  • $q$ means “Emily paints a picture”


  • $r$ means “David is happy”


1. If Emily is happy then Emily paints a picture.



This is $p implies q$.



2. If Emily is happy and paints a picture then David is not happy.



This is $[p ∧ q] implies ¬r$.



3. David and Emily cannot both be happy.




I'm stuck on this last one.



I'm finding it difficult to understand how to go about formalising the last sentence. I was thinking it may include negating both $p$ and $r$ but the word "cannot" kinda throws me a bit. Any suggestions? Sorry if it's really obvious but I really am just starting out!










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    3












    $begingroup$


    I'm a beginner learning about propositional logic and how to formalise sentences.



    I'm currently working through the following sentences and translating them into logical statements.






    • $p$ means “Emily is happy”


    • $q$ means “Emily paints a picture”


    • $r$ means “David is happy”


    1. If Emily is happy then Emily paints a picture.



    This is $p implies q$.



    2. If Emily is happy and paints a picture then David is not happy.



    This is $[p ∧ q] implies ¬r$.



    3. David and Emily cannot both be happy.




    I'm stuck on this last one.



    I'm finding it difficult to understand how to go about formalising the last sentence. I was thinking it may include negating both $p$ and $r$ but the word "cannot" kinda throws me a bit. Any suggestions? Sorry if it's really obvious but I really am just starting out!










    share|cite|improve this question









    New contributor




    new2Logic is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.







    $endgroup$















      3












      3








      3





      $begingroup$


      I'm a beginner learning about propositional logic and how to formalise sentences.



      I'm currently working through the following sentences and translating them into logical statements.






      • $p$ means “Emily is happy”


      • $q$ means “Emily paints a picture”


      • $r$ means “David is happy”


      1. If Emily is happy then Emily paints a picture.



      This is $p implies q$.



      2. If Emily is happy and paints a picture then David is not happy.



      This is $[p ∧ q] implies ¬r$.



      3. David and Emily cannot both be happy.




      I'm stuck on this last one.



      I'm finding it difficult to understand how to go about formalising the last sentence. I was thinking it may include negating both $p$ and $r$ but the word "cannot" kinda throws me a bit. Any suggestions? Sorry if it's really obvious but I really am just starting out!










      share|cite|improve this question









      New contributor




      new2Logic is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.







      $endgroup$




      I'm a beginner learning about propositional logic and how to formalise sentences.



      I'm currently working through the following sentences and translating them into logical statements.






      • $p$ means “Emily is happy”


      • $q$ means “Emily paints a picture”


      • $r$ means “David is happy”


      1. If Emily is happy then Emily paints a picture.



      This is $p implies q$.



      2. If Emily is happy and paints a picture then David is not happy.



      This is $[p ∧ q] implies ¬r$.



      3. David and Emily cannot both be happy.




      I'm stuck on this last one.



      I'm finding it difficult to understand how to go about formalising the last sentence. I was thinking it may include negating both $p$ and $r$ but the word "cannot" kinda throws me a bit. Any suggestions? Sorry if it's really obvious but I really am just starting out!







      logic propositional-calculus






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      New contributor




      new2Logic is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|cite|improve this question









      New contributor




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      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|cite|improve this question




      share|cite|improve this question








      edited 1 hour ago









      Eevee Trainer

      6,0631936




      6,0631936






      New contributor




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      asked 1 hour ago









      new2Logicnew2Logic

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      New contributor





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          3 Answers
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          $begingroup$

          The last sentence means that the statement "David is happy and Emily is happy" is false. Thus, it is equivalent to $overline{p wedge r}$, or $bar p vee bar r$.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$





















            1












            $begingroup$

            If David and Emily cannot both be happy, then this would be one of the following means of writing it.



            $$neg [p land r]$$



            i.e. the negation of both David and Emily being happy. Since they cannot be happy, then the statement they're both happy is false, and thus we use the negation.



            You could hypothetically use each of the possible cases in a sort of list separated by "or" operators. If David and Emily cannot both be happy, then either Emily is happy but David isn't, David is happy but Emily isn't, or neither are. In which case this could be listed as



            $$[neg p land r] lor [p land neg r] lor [neg p land neg r]$$



            A third way to write it: since Emily or David cannot be both happy, it means at least one is unhappy. That is, either David is unhappy, or Emily is unhappy, or possibly both (but we need not account for this in this way of writing it). Thus another take on this is



            $$neg p lor neg r$$



            I imagine the first and third would be the "intended" answers for an exercise of this sort since they're the most compact. They also show a nice equality worth keeping in mind:



            $$neg [p land r] = neg p lor neg r$$





            (Footnote: throughout this post, $neg$ is used as the "negation" operator, since I've seen a few different notations for it.)






            share|cite|improve this answer











            $endgroup$









            • 1




              $begingroup$
              You should change $q$ to $r$.
              $endgroup$
              – Haris Gusic
              1 hour ago










            • $begingroup$
              Yeah I noticed that a minute ago, already fixed it. xD
              $endgroup$
              – Eevee Trainer
              1 hour ago



















            0












            $begingroup$

            I can understand that the use of 'cannot' is a bit confusing ... it seems to be stronger than just saying that David and Emily are both not happy.



            In fact, in modal logic you can express these kinds of stronger claims, where:



            $square P$ means "It is necessary that P is true"



            $Diamond P$ means "It is possible that P is true"



            Using those symbols, translating "David and Emily cannot both be happy" can be done as:



            $neg Diamond (r land p)$



            or, equivalently:



            $square neg (r land p)$



            But, I assume you are currently not doing any model logic at all, since you are just starting with propositional logic. As such, you should really just treat the sentence as "David and Emily are not both happy"



            Good for you for noticing that those two sentences are not quite the same thing though!!






            share|cite|improve this answer









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              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes








              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

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              active

              oldest

              votes









              2












              $begingroup$

              The last sentence means that the statement "David is happy and Emily is happy" is false. Thus, it is equivalent to $overline{p wedge r}$, or $bar p vee bar r$.






              share|cite|improve this answer









              $endgroup$


















                2












                $begingroup$

                The last sentence means that the statement "David is happy and Emily is happy" is false. Thus, it is equivalent to $overline{p wedge r}$, or $bar p vee bar r$.






                share|cite|improve this answer









                $endgroup$
















                  2












                  2








                  2





                  $begingroup$

                  The last sentence means that the statement "David is happy and Emily is happy" is false. Thus, it is equivalent to $overline{p wedge r}$, or $bar p vee bar r$.






                  share|cite|improve this answer









                  $endgroup$



                  The last sentence means that the statement "David is happy and Emily is happy" is false. Thus, it is equivalent to $overline{p wedge r}$, or $bar p vee bar r$.







                  share|cite|improve this answer












                  share|cite|improve this answer



                  share|cite|improve this answer










                  answered 1 hour ago









                  Haris GusicHaris Gusic

                  946




                  946























                      1












                      $begingroup$

                      If David and Emily cannot both be happy, then this would be one of the following means of writing it.



                      $$neg [p land r]$$



                      i.e. the negation of both David and Emily being happy. Since they cannot be happy, then the statement they're both happy is false, and thus we use the negation.



                      You could hypothetically use each of the possible cases in a sort of list separated by "or" operators. If David and Emily cannot both be happy, then either Emily is happy but David isn't, David is happy but Emily isn't, or neither are. In which case this could be listed as



                      $$[neg p land r] lor [p land neg r] lor [neg p land neg r]$$



                      A third way to write it: since Emily or David cannot be both happy, it means at least one is unhappy. That is, either David is unhappy, or Emily is unhappy, or possibly both (but we need not account for this in this way of writing it). Thus another take on this is



                      $$neg p lor neg r$$



                      I imagine the first and third would be the "intended" answers for an exercise of this sort since they're the most compact. They also show a nice equality worth keeping in mind:



                      $$neg [p land r] = neg p lor neg r$$





                      (Footnote: throughout this post, $neg$ is used as the "negation" operator, since I've seen a few different notations for it.)






                      share|cite|improve this answer











                      $endgroup$









                      • 1




                        $begingroup$
                        You should change $q$ to $r$.
                        $endgroup$
                        – Haris Gusic
                        1 hour ago










                      • $begingroup$
                        Yeah I noticed that a minute ago, already fixed it. xD
                        $endgroup$
                        – Eevee Trainer
                        1 hour ago
















                      1












                      $begingroup$

                      If David and Emily cannot both be happy, then this would be one of the following means of writing it.



                      $$neg [p land r]$$



                      i.e. the negation of both David and Emily being happy. Since they cannot be happy, then the statement they're both happy is false, and thus we use the negation.



                      You could hypothetically use each of the possible cases in a sort of list separated by "or" operators. If David and Emily cannot both be happy, then either Emily is happy but David isn't, David is happy but Emily isn't, or neither are. In which case this could be listed as



                      $$[neg p land r] lor [p land neg r] lor [neg p land neg r]$$



                      A third way to write it: since Emily or David cannot be both happy, it means at least one is unhappy. That is, either David is unhappy, or Emily is unhappy, or possibly both (but we need not account for this in this way of writing it). Thus another take on this is



                      $$neg p lor neg r$$



                      I imagine the first and third would be the "intended" answers for an exercise of this sort since they're the most compact. They also show a nice equality worth keeping in mind:



                      $$neg [p land r] = neg p lor neg r$$





                      (Footnote: throughout this post, $neg$ is used as the "negation" operator, since I've seen a few different notations for it.)






                      share|cite|improve this answer











                      $endgroup$









                      • 1




                        $begingroup$
                        You should change $q$ to $r$.
                        $endgroup$
                        – Haris Gusic
                        1 hour ago










                      • $begingroup$
                        Yeah I noticed that a minute ago, already fixed it. xD
                        $endgroup$
                        – Eevee Trainer
                        1 hour ago














                      1












                      1








                      1





                      $begingroup$

                      If David and Emily cannot both be happy, then this would be one of the following means of writing it.



                      $$neg [p land r]$$



                      i.e. the negation of both David and Emily being happy. Since they cannot be happy, then the statement they're both happy is false, and thus we use the negation.



                      You could hypothetically use each of the possible cases in a sort of list separated by "or" operators. If David and Emily cannot both be happy, then either Emily is happy but David isn't, David is happy but Emily isn't, or neither are. In which case this could be listed as



                      $$[neg p land r] lor [p land neg r] lor [neg p land neg r]$$



                      A third way to write it: since Emily or David cannot be both happy, it means at least one is unhappy. That is, either David is unhappy, or Emily is unhappy, or possibly both (but we need not account for this in this way of writing it). Thus another take on this is



                      $$neg p lor neg r$$



                      I imagine the first and third would be the "intended" answers for an exercise of this sort since they're the most compact. They also show a nice equality worth keeping in mind:



                      $$neg [p land r] = neg p lor neg r$$





                      (Footnote: throughout this post, $neg$ is used as the "negation" operator, since I've seen a few different notations for it.)






                      share|cite|improve this answer











                      $endgroup$



                      If David and Emily cannot both be happy, then this would be one of the following means of writing it.



                      $$neg [p land r]$$



                      i.e. the negation of both David and Emily being happy. Since they cannot be happy, then the statement they're both happy is false, and thus we use the negation.



                      You could hypothetically use each of the possible cases in a sort of list separated by "or" operators. If David and Emily cannot both be happy, then either Emily is happy but David isn't, David is happy but Emily isn't, or neither are. In which case this could be listed as



                      $$[neg p land r] lor [p land neg r] lor [neg p land neg r]$$



                      A third way to write it: since Emily or David cannot be both happy, it means at least one is unhappy. That is, either David is unhappy, or Emily is unhappy, or possibly both (but we need not account for this in this way of writing it). Thus another take on this is



                      $$neg p lor neg r$$



                      I imagine the first and third would be the "intended" answers for an exercise of this sort since they're the most compact. They also show a nice equality worth keeping in mind:



                      $$neg [p land r] = neg p lor neg r$$





                      (Footnote: throughout this post, $neg$ is used as the "negation" operator, since I've seen a few different notations for it.)







                      share|cite|improve this answer














                      share|cite|improve this answer



                      share|cite|improve this answer








                      edited 1 hour ago

























                      answered 1 hour ago









                      Eevee TrainerEevee Trainer

                      6,0631936




                      6,0631936








                      • 1




                        $begingroup$
                        You should change $q$ to $r$.
                        $endgroup$
                        – Haris Gusic
                        1 hour ago










                      • $begingroup$
                        Yeah I noticed that a minute ago, already fixed it. xD
                        $endgroup$
                        – Eevee Trainer
                        1 hour ago














                      • 1




                        $begingroup$
                        You should change $q$ to $r$.
                        $endgroup$
                        – Haris Gusic
                        1 hour ago










                      • $begingroup$
                        Yeah I noticed that a minute ago, already fixed it. xD
                        $endgroup$
                        – Eevee Trainer
                        1 hour ago








                      1




                      1




                      $begingroup$
                      You should change $q$ to $r$.
                      $endgroup$
                      – Haris Gusic
                      1 hour ago




                      $begingroup$
                      You should change $q$ to $r$.
                      $endgroup$
                      – Haris Gusic
                      1 hour ago












                      $begingroup$
                      Yeah I noticed that a minute ago, already fixed it. xD
                      $endgroup$
                      – Eevee Trainer
                      1 hour ago




                      $begingroup$
                      Yeah I noticed that a minute ago, already fixed it. xD
                      $endgroup$
                      – Eevee Trainer
                      1 hour ago











                      0












                      $begingroup$

                      I can understand that the use of 'cannot' is a bit confusing ... it seems to be stronger than just saying that David and Emily are both not happy.



                      In fact, in modal logic you can express these kinds of stronger claims, where:



                      $square P$ means "It is necessary that P is true"



                      $Diamond P$ means "It is possible that P is true"



                      Using those symbols, translating "David and Emily cannot both be happy" can be done as:



                      $neg Diamond (r land p)$



                      or, equivalently:



                      $square neg (r land p)$



                      But, I assume you are currently not doing any model logic at all, since you are just starting with propositional logic. As such, you should really just treat the sentence as "David and Emily are not both happy"



                      Good for you for noticing that those two sentences are not quite the same thing though!!






                      share|cite|improve this answer









                      $endgroup$


















                        0












                        $begingroup$

                        I can understand that the use of 'cannot' is a bit confusing ... it seems to be stronger than just saying that David and Emily are both not happy.



                        In fact, in modal logic you can express these kinds of stronger claims, where:



                        $square P$ means "It is necessary that P is true"



                        $Diamond P$ means "It is possible that P is true"



                        Using those symbols, translating "David and Emily cannot both be happy" can be done as:



                        $neg Diamond (r land p)$



                        or, equivalently:



                        $square neg (r land p)$



                        But, I assume you are currently not doing any model logic at all, since you are just starting with propositional logic. As such, you should really just treat the sentence as "David and Emily are not both happy"



                        Good for you for noticing that those two sentences are not quite the same thing though!!






                        share|cite|improve this answer









                        $endgroup$
















                          0












                          0








                          0





                          $begingroup$

                          I can understand that the use of 'cannot' is a bit confusing ... it seems to be stronger than just saying that David and Emily are both not happy.



                          In fact, in modal logic you can express these kinds of stronger claims, where:



                          $square P$ means "It is necessary that P is true"



                          $Diamond P$ means "It is possible that P is true"



                          Using those symbols, translating "David and Emily cannot both be happy" can be done as:



                          $neg Diamond (r land p)$



                          or, equivalently:



                          $square neg (r land p)$



                          But, I assume you are currently not doing any model logic at all, since you are just starting with propositional logic. As such, you should really just treat the sentence as "David and Emily are not both happy"



                          Good for you for noticing that those two sentences are not quite the same thing though!!






                          share|cite|improve this answer









                          $endgroup$



                          I can understand that the use of 'cannot' is a bit confusing ... it seems to be stronger than just saying that David and Emily are both not happy.



                          In fact, in modal logic you can express these kinds of stronger claims, where:



                          $square P$ means "It is necessary that P is true"



                          $Diamond P$ means "It is possible that P is true"



                          Using those symbols, translating "David and Emily cannot both be happy" can be done as:



                          $neg Diamond (r land p)$



                          or, equivalently:



                          $square neg (r land p)$



                          But, I assume you are currently not doing any model logic at all, since you are just starting with propositional logic. As such, you should really just treat the sentence as "David and Emily are not both happy"



                          Good for you for noticing that those two sentences are not quite the same thing though!!







                          share|cite|improve this answer












                          share|cite|improve this answer



                          share|cite|improve this answer










                          answered 1 hour ago









                          Bram28Bram28

                          62.7k44793




                          62.7k44793






















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