Conditional proof
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A conditional proof is a proof that takes the form of asserting a conditional, and proving that the antecedent of the conditional necessarily leads to the consequent.
The assumed antecedent of a conditional proof is called the conditional proof assumption. Thus, the goal of a conditional proof is to demonstrate that if the conditional proof assumption were true, then the desired conclusion necessarily follows. Note that the validity of a conditional proof does not require that the conditional proof assumption is actually true, only that if it were true it leads to the consequent.
As an example of a conditional proof in symbolic logic, suppose we want to prove A → C (if A, then C) from the first two premises below:
1. | A → B ("If A, then B") |
2. | B → C ("If B, then C") |
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3. | A (conditional proof assumption, "Suppose A is true") |
4. | B (follows from lines 1 and 3, modus ponens; "If A then B; A, therefore B") |
5. | C (follows from lines 2 and 4, modus ponens; "If B then C; B, therefore C") |
6. | A → C (follows from lines 3-5, conditional proof; "If A, then C") |