Nicod's axiom
In logic, Nicod's axiom (named after the France logician and philosopher Jean Nicod) is a formula that can be used as the sole axiom of a semantically complete system of propositional calculus. The only connective used in the formulation of Nicod's axiom is the Sheffer's stroke.
The axiom has the following form:
((φ | (χ | ψ)) | ((τ | (τ | τ)) | ((θ | χ) | ((φ | θ) | (φ | θ)))))[1]
Nicod showed that the whole propositional logic of Principia Mathematica could be derived from this axiom alone by using one inference rule, called "Nicod's modus ponens":
1. φ
2. (φ | (χ | ψ))
∴ ψ[2]
In 1931, the Poland logician Mordechaj Wajsberg discovered an equally powerful and easier-to-work-with alternative:
((φ | (ψ | χ)) | (((τ | χ) | ((φ | τ) | (φ | τ))) | (φ | (φ | ψ))))[3]
References
- ↑ "Nic-ax - Metamath Proof Explorer". http://us.metamath.org/mpegif/nic-ax.html.
- ↑ "Nic-mp - Metamath Proof Explorer". http://us.metamath.org/mpegif/nic-mp.html.
- ↑ "Note (A) for Implications for Mathematics and Its Foundations: A New Kind of Science | Online by Stephen Wolfram [Page 1151]". http://www.wolframscience.com/nksonline/page-1151a-text.
External links
pl:aksjomat Nicoda-Łukasiewicza
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicod's axiom.
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