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Peirce's law (Topic)

Peirce's law is a formula in propositional calculus that is commonly expressed in the following form:

$\displaystyle ((p \Rightarrow q) \Rightarrow p) \Rightarrow p $

Peirce's law holds in classical propositional calculus, but not in intuitionistic propositional calculus. The precise axiom system that one chooses for classical propositional calculus determines whether Peirce's law is taken as an axiom or proven as a theorem.


Contents

History

Here is Peirce's own statement and proof of the law:

A fifth icon is required for the principle of excluded middle and other propositions connected with it. One of the simplest formulae of this kind is:

$\displaystyle \{ (x \,-\!\!\!< y) \,-\!\!\!< x \} \,-\!\!\!< x. $
This is hardly axiomatical. That it is true appears as follows. It can only be false by the final consequent $ x$ being false while its antecedent $ (x \,-\!\!\!< y) \,-\!\!\!< x$ is true. If this is true, either its consequent, $ x$, is true, when the whole formula would be true, or its antecedent $ x \,-\!\!\!< y$ is false. But in the last case the antecedent of $ x \,-\!\!\!< y$, that is $ x$, must be true. (Peirce, CP 3.384).

Peirce goes on to point out an immediate application of the law:

From the formula just given, we at once get:

$\displaystyle \{ (x \,-\!\!\!< y) \,-\!\!\!< a \} \,-\!\!\!< x, $
where the $ a$ is used in such a sense that $ (x \,-\!\!\!< y) \,-\!\!\!< a$ means that from $ (x \,-\!\!\!< y)$ every proposition follows. With that understanding, the formula states the principle of excluded middle, that from the falsity of the denial of $ x$ follows the truth of $ x$. (Peirce, CP 3.384).

Note. Peirce uses the ``sign of illation'' ($ -\!\!\!<$) for implication. In one place he explains it as a variant of the sign ($ \le$) for ``less than or equal to''; in another place he suggests reading $ A \,-\!\!\!< B$ as ``$ A$, in every way that it can be, is $ B$''.

Graphical proof

Representing propositions as logical graphs under the existential interpretation, Peirce's law is expressed by means of the following formal equation:

\includegraphics[scale=0.8]{PeircesLawFigure1} (1)

Proof. Using the axiom set given in the entry for logical graphs, Peirce's law may be proved in the following manner.

\includegraphics[scale=0.8]{PeircesLawFigure2} (2)

Equational form

A stronger form of Peirce's law also holds, in which the final implication is observed to be reversible:

$\displaystyle ((p \Rightarrow q) \Rightarrow p) \Leftrightarrow p $

Proof 1

Given what precedes, it remains to show that:

$\displaystyle p \Rightarrow ((p \Rightarrow q) \Rightarrow p) $

But this is immediate, since $ p \Rightarrow (r \Rightarrow p)$ for any proposition $ r.$

Proof 2

Representing propositions as logical graphs under the existential interpretation, the strong form of Peirce's law is expressed by the following equation:

\includegraphics[scale=0.8]{PeircesLawFigure3} (3)

Using the axioms and theorems listed in the entries on logical graphs, the equational form of Peirce's law may be proved in the following manner:

\includegraphics[scale=0.8]{PeircesLawFigure4} (4)

Bibliography

  • Peirce, Charles Sanders (1885), ``On the Algebra of Logic : A Contribution to the Philosophy of Notation", American Journal of Mathematics 7 (1885), 180-202. Reprinted (CP 3.359-403), (CE 5, 162-190).
  • Peirce, Charles Sanders (1931-1935, 1958), Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, vols. 1-6, Charles Hartshorne and Paul Weiss (eds.), vols. 7-8, Arthur W. Burks (ed.), Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA. Cited as (CP volume.paragraph).
  • Peirce, Charles Sanders (1981-), Writings of Charles S. Peirce : A Chronological Edition, Peirce Edition Project (eds.), Indiana University Press, Bloomington and Indianapolis, IN. Cited as (CE volume, page).




"Peirce's law" is owned by Jon Awbrey.
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Cross-references: Charles Sanders Peirce, logic, equation, implication, antecedent, consequent, propositions, proof, theorem, axiom, propositional calculus, formula
There are 2 references to this entry.

This is version 24 of Peirce's law, born on 2008-02-10, modified 2009-05-02.
Object id is 10254, canonical name is PeircesLaw.
Accessed 1873 times total.

Classification:
AMS MSC01A55 (History and biography :: History of mathematics and mathematicians :: 19th century)
 03-03 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: Historical )
 03B05 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: General logic :: Classical propositional logic)
 03B22 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: General logic :: Abstract deductive systems)
 03B35 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: General logic :: Mechanization of proofs and logical operations)
 03B70 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: General logic :: Logic in computer science)

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