What is quantifier? Explain with example. From the Hypotheses: 3x(A(x) A-B(x)) and Vx(A(x) P(x)). Show that Conclusion: 3x(P(x)A-B(x))
Answers
Answered by
1
Answer:
A quantifier is a word that usually goes before a noun to express the quantity of the object; for example, a little milk. ... There are quantifiers to describe large quantities (a lot, much, many), small quantities (a little, a bit, a few) and undefined quantities (some, any).
Step-by-step explanation:
Quantifiers are words, expressions, or phrases that indicate the number of elements that a statement pertains to. In mathematical logic, there are two quantifiers: 'there exists' and 'for all.
Types of logic
Philosophical logic is an area of philosophy. ...
Informal logic is the study of natural language arguments. ...
Formal logic is the study of inference with purely formal content
Similar questions