Title: Conditional Statements, Biconditionals, and Deductive Reasoning
1Conditional Statements, Biconditionals, and
Deductive Reasoning
2Part 2
3Conditional Statements
- A conditional is an If then statement
- p ? q (read as if p then q or p implies q)
- The Hypothesis is the part p following if
- The Conclusion is the part q following then.
4Identifying the Hypothesis and Conclusion
- What is the hypothesis and conclusion of the
conditional? - If an animal is a robin, then the animal is a
bird - H An animal is a robin
- C The animal is a bird
- If an angle measures 130, then the angle is
obtuse - H An angle measures 130
- C The angle is obtuse
5Writing a Conditional
- Write the following statement as a conditional
- Vertical angles share a vertex
- Step 1 Identify the Hypothesis and Conclusion
- H Vertical Angles
- C Share a vertex
- Step 2 Write the Conditional
- If two angles are vertical, then they share a
common vertex - You Try How can you write Dolphins are mammals
as a conditional? - If an animal is a dolphin, then it is a mammal
6Truth Value
- The truth value of a conditional is either true
or false. - To show a conditional is true, show that every
time the hypothesis is true, the conclusion is
also true - To show a conditional is false find one counter
example for which the hypothesis is true and the
conclusion is false
7Finding the Truth Value of a Conditional
- Is this conditional true or false, if it is false
find a counter example. - If a women is Hungarian, then she is European.
- This is True!
- If a number is divisible by 3, then it is odd.
- This is false, the number 12 is divisible by
three and not odd. - If a month has 28 days than it is February
- This false, January has 28 days
- If two angles form a linear pair, then they are
supplementary - True!
8Negation
- The negation of a statement p is the opposite of
that statement, the symbol is p and is read not
p - Example
- The negations of the statement the sky is blue
is the sky is not blue - You use the negation to write statements related
to a condition
9Related Conditional Statements
Statement How To Write Example Symbol How to read
Conditional Use the given hypothesis and conclusion If mltA 15, then ltA is acute p ? q If p, then q
Converse Exchange the hypothesis and conclusion If ltA is acute, then mltA 15 q ? p If q, then p
Inverse Negate both the hypothesis and conclusion from the conditional If mltA ? 15, then ltA is not acute p ? q If not p, then not q
Contrapositive Negate both the hypothesis and conclusion from the converse If ltA is not acute, then mltA ? 15 q ? p If not q, then not p
10Truth Value
Statement Example Truth Value
Conditional If mltA 15, then ltA is acute True
Converse If ltA is acute, then mltA 15 False
Inverse If mltA ? 15, then ltA is not acute False
Contrapositive If ltA is not acute, then mltA ? 15 True
Equivalent Statements have the same truth value,
the conditional and contrapositive are
equivalent, and are the converse and inverse
statements.
11You Try
- Write the Converse, Inverse and Contrapositive
statements - IF a vegetable is a carrot, then it contains beta
carotene - Converse
- If a vegetable contains beta carotene then it is
a carrot - False (Spinach has Beta Carotene)
- Inverse
- If a vegetable is not a carrot then it does not
contain beta carotene - False
- Contrapositive
- If a vegetable does not contain beta carotene
then it is not a carrot - True!
12Part 3
13Biconditional
- A single true statement that combines a true
conditional and its true converse, you can write
a biconditional by joining the two parts of each
conditional with the phrase if and only if - Symbol
14Writing a Biconditional
- To write a biconditional first determine if the
what is the converse of the following true
conditional. If the converse is true then write a
biconditional statement - Conditional If the sum of the measure of two
angles is 180, then the two angles are
supplementary - Converse If two angles are supplementary, then
the sum of the measures of the two angles is 180 - Biconditional
- Two angles are supplementary if and only if the
sum of the measures of the two angles is 180
15You Try
- What is the converse of the following
conditional, if the converse is true write a
biconditional statement - If two angles have equal measures, then the
angles are congruent - Converse If angles are congruent, then they have
equal measures - Biconditional
- Two angles have equal measures if and only if
they are congruent
16Identifying the conditionals in a Biconditional
- What are the two statements that form a
biconditional - A ray is an angle bisector if and only if it
divides and angle into two congruent angles - Find p and q
- P A ray is an angle bisector
- Q A ray divides an angle into two congruent
angles - Conditional If a ray is an angle bisector, then
it divides the angle into two congruent angles - Converse If a ray divides and angle into two
congruent angles, then it is an angle bisector
17You Try!
- What are the two conditionals that form this
biconditional? - Two numbers are reciprocals if and only if their
product is one. - Conditional If two numbers are reciprocals, then
their product is one - Converse If two numbers product is one, then
they are reciprocals.
18Part 4
19Deductive Reasoning
- Also called logical reasoning, is the process of
reasoning logically from given statements or
facts to a conclusion
20Law of Detachment
- If the hypothesis of a true conditional is true,
then the conclusion is true - If p then q is true and p is true, then q is true
21Using the law of detachment
- What can you conclude from the given true
statements? - If a student gets an A on a final exam, then the
student will pass the course. Felicia got an A on
her history Final - Felicia will pass the course
- If a ray divided an angle into two congruent
angles, then the ray is an angle bisector. Ray RS
divides ltARB so that ltARS ? ltSRB - Ray RS is an angle bisector
22More Examples
- If two angles are adjacent, then they share a
common vertex. lt1 and lt2 share a common vertex. - Since the second statement does not match the
hypothesis then we can not conclude anything - If there is lightning, then it is not safe to be
out in the open. Marla sees lightning from the
soccer field. - It is not safe to be out in the open
- If a figure is a square, then its sides have
equal lengths, figure ABCD has sides of equal
length. - We can not conclude this is a square because out
statement matched the conclusion not the
hypothesis
23Law of Syllogism
- Allows you to state a conclusion from two true
conditional statements when the conclusion of one
statement is the hypothesis of another statement - If p ? q is true
- And q ? r is true
- Then p ? r is true
24Using the law of Syllogism
- What can you conclude from the given information?
- If a figure is a square, then the figure is a
rectangle. If a figure is a rectangle than the
figure has four sides - If a figure is a square then it has four sides
- If you do gymnastics, then you are flexible. If
you do ballet then you are flexible. - Each conclusion is the same so we can not use the
law of syllogism and can conclude nothing
25More Examples
- If a whole number ends in 0, then it is divisible
by 10. If a whole number is divisible by 10, than
it is divisible by 5. - If a whole number ends in zero is it divisible by
5 - If Ray AB and Ray AD are opposite rays, then the
two rays form a straight angle. If two rays are
opposite rays, then the two rays form a straight
angle. - The hypothesis and conclusion matches so we can
make no further conclusions
26The END!