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Philosophy/PS1

437 bytes added, 05:35, 6 February 2009
10b
10.
(a) No. Say p = "God exists", but there is actually no God. Many people believe God exists is true. Say p = "oceans are blue", which they are. Many people believe oceans are blue is true. Thus the truth value of the statement depends on more than just the truth-value of its single component.
(b)No. Say p = "the sun's gravitational field exerts an attractive force on all objects", q = "some frogs are green"; then the whole statement is false. However, say p remains the same and q = "the planets orbit around the sun"; then, the whole statement is true. Thus the whole statement can be both true and false if p & q are both true, and it is not truth-functional as the truth-values of p & q alone do not determine its truth value.
(c) Yes; this is simply the "not" connective, whose output depends solely on the truth value of the input.
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