Page:Russell, Whitehead - Principia Mathematica, vol. I, 1910.djvu/143

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SECTION A]
EQUIVALENCE AND FORMAL RULES
121

of these ideas alone. We shall give the name of a truth-function to a function whose argument is a proposition, and whose truth-value depends only upon the truth-value of its argument. All the functions of propositions with which we shall be specially concerned will be truth-functions, i.e. we shall have

.

The reason of this is, that the functions of propositions with which we deal are all built up by means of the primitive ideas of *1. But it is not a universal characteristic of functions of propositions to be truth-functions. For example, " believes " may be true for one true value of and false for another.

The principal propositions of this number are the following:

*4·1.

*4·11.

These are both forms of the "principle of transposition."

*4·13.

This is the principle of double negation, i.e. a proposition is equivalent to the falsehood of its negation.

*4·2.

*4·21.

*4·22.

These propositions assert that equivalence is reflexive, symmetrical and transitive.

*4·24.

I.e. is equivalent to " and " and to " or ," which are two forms of the law of tautology, and are the source of the principal differences between the algebra of symbolic logic and ordinary algebra.

*4·3.

This is the commutative law for the product of propositions.

*4·31.

This is the commutative law for the sum of propositions.

The associative laws for multiplication and addition of propositions, namely

*4·32.

*4·33.

The distributive law in the two forms