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Etymology edit

Named after the logician and philosopher Charles Sanders Peirce.

Proper noun edit

Peirce's law

  1. (logic) The classically valid but intuitionistically non-valid formula   of propositional calculus, which can be used as a substitute for the law of excluded middle in implicational propositional calculus.
    Consider Peirce's law,  . If Q is true, then   is also true so the law reads "If truth implies P then deduce P" which certainly makes sense. If Q is false, then   so the law reads  , which is intuitionistically false but equivalent to the classical axiom  .

Anagrams edit