Students will be able to:
distinguish between simple and compound propositions
identify five types of compound proposition and the connectives they require: negation, conjunction, disjunction, material conditional, and material biconditional
define and apply the concept of the logical “scope”of a statement connective
translate compound propositions into symbolic notation, including conventions for punctuation and the concept of a well-formed formula (WFF)
use truth tables to define logical connectives truth-functionally
identify contingencies, tautologies, and contradictions through the use of truth tables
Must watch videos below to complete the assignment as well as read the attached chapter.
Part 1:
https://bbhosted.cuny.edu/webapps/blackboard/execute/displayLearningUnit?course_id=_2108678_1&content_id=_63452327_1
Part 2:
https://bbhosted.cuny.edu/webapps/blackboard/execute/displayLearningUnit?course_id=_2108678_1&content_id=_63452328_1
Part 3:
https://bbhosted.cuny.edu/webapps/blackboard/execute/displayLearningUnit?course_id=_2108678_1&content_id=_63452329_1
Part 4:
https://bbhosted.cuny.edu/webapps/blackboard/execute/displayLearningUnit?course_id=_2108678_1&content_id=_63452330_1
Part 5:
https://bbhosted.cuny.edu/webapps/blackboard/execute/displayLearningUnit?course_id=_2108678_1&content_id=_63452331_1
Part 6:
https://bbhosted.cuny.edu/webapps/blackboard/execute/displayLearningUnit?course_id=_2108678_1&content_id=_63452332_1


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