Hello
What do the ⤠symbols represent?
Thanks,
Paul
At 06:21 05/06/2007, you wrote:
On Tue, 2007-06-05 at 01:16 -0400, Albert Y. C. Lai wrote:
> Scott Brickner wrote:
> > It's actually not arbitrary.
> [...]
> > A ⤠B iff A â B
> > A â B iff (x â A) â (x â B)
>
> Alternatively and dually but equally naturally,
>
> A ⥠B iff A â B iff (x â A) â (x â B)
>
> and then we would have False > True.
>
> Many of you are platonists rather than formalists; you have a strong
> conviction in your intuition, and you call your intuition natural. You
> think â
â¤U is more natural than â
â¥U
because â
has fewer elements than U.
> (Why else would you consider it unnatural to associate ⥠with â?) But
> that is only one of many natural intuitions.
>
> There are two kinds of natural intuitions: disjunctive ones and
> conjunctive ones. The elementwise intuition above is a disjunctive one.
> It says, we should declare {0}â¤{0,1} because {0} corresponds to the
> predicate (x=0), {0,1} corresponds to the predicate (x=0 or x=1), you
> see the latter has more disjuncts, so it should be a larger predicate.
>
> However, {0} and {0,1} are toy, artificial sets, tractible to enumerate
> individuals. As designers of programs and systems, we deal with real,
> natural sets, intractible to enumerate individuals. For example, when
> you design a data type to be a Num instance, you write down two
> QuickCheck properties:
> x + y = y + x
> x * y = y * x
> And lo, you have specified a conjunction of two predicates! The more
> properties (conjuncts) you add, the closer you get to â
and further from
> U, when you look at the set of legal behaviours. Therefore a conjunctive
> intuition deduces â
â¥U to be more natural.
So as I said (not really directed at you Albert), there are intuitive
reasons but no formal ones. And incidentally, implication was one of
the first things mentioned in the thread.
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