Modus ponendo tollens

Modus ponendo tollens (MPT; Latin: "mode that denies by affirming") is a valid rule of inference for propositional logic. It is closely related to modus ponens and modus tollendo ponens.

Overview

MPT is usually described as having the form:

  1. Not both A and B
  2. A
  3. Therefore, not B

For example:

  1. Ann and Bill cannot both win the race.
  2. Ann won the race.
  3. Therefore, Bill cannot have won the race.

As E. J. Lemmon describes it: "Modus ponendo tollens is the principle that, if the negation of a conjunction holds and also one of its conjuncts, then the negation of its other conjunct holds."

In logic notation this can be represented as:

Based on the Sheffer Stroke (alternative denial), "|", the inference can also be formalized in this way:

Proof

Strong form

Modus ponendo tollens can be made stronger by using exclusive disjunction instead of non-conjunction as a premise:

See also

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Modus ponendo tollens, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.