Implication
Look up implication, implicational, implications, implies, or imply in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Implication may refer to:
Logic
- Logical consequence (also entailment or logical implication), the relationship between statements that holds true when one logically "follows from" one or more others
- Material conditional (also material implication, material consequence, or implication), a logical connective and binary truth function typically interpreted as "If p, then q"
- Implicational propositional calculus, a version of classical propositional calculus which uses only the material conditional connective
- Strict conditional or strict implication, a connective of modal logic that expresses necessity
- Implication elimination or modus ponens, a simple argument form and rule of inference summarized as "p implies q; p is asserted to be true, so therefore q must be true"
Linguistics
- Implicature, what is suggested in an utterance, even though neither expressed nor strictly implied
- Implicational universal or linguistic universal, a pattern that occurs systematically across natural languages
- Implicational hierarchy, a chain of implicational universals; if a language has one property then it also has other properties in the chain
- Entailment (pragmatics) or strict implication, the relationship between two sentences where the truth of one requires the truth of the other
Other uses
- Implication table, a tool used to facilitate the minimization of states in a state machine
- Implication graph, a skew-symmetric directed graph used for analyzing complex Boolean expressions
- Implication (information science)
See also
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