in Mathematical Logic edited by
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28 votes
28 votes

Consider the following well-formed formulae:

  1. $\neg \forall x(P(x))$
  2. $\neg \exists x(P(x))$
  3. $\neg \exists x(\neg P(x))$
  4. $\exists x(\neg P(x))$


Which of the above are equivalent?

  1. $\text{I}$ and $\text{III}$
  2. $\text{I}$ and $\text{IV}$
  3. $\text{II}$ and $\text{III}$
  4. $\text{II}$ and $\text{IV}$
in Mathematical Logic edited by
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1 comment

Remember negation of quantifiers-

$\neg\forall x(P(x))=\exists x(\neg P(x))$

$\neg \exists x(P(x))=\forall x(\neg P(x))$
1
1

7 Answers

2 votes
2 votes

Hence (i) and (iv) are equal.

Ans (D)

0 votes
0 votes
B is correct for this I and IV are equivalent.
0 votes
0 votes

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