A conditional true only if it is impossible for the antecedent to be true and the consequent false.
In logic , a strict conditional (symbol:
◻
{\displaystyle \Box }
, or ⥽) is a conditional governed by a modal operator , that is, a logical connective of modal logic . It is logically equivalent to the material conditional of classical logic , combined with the necessity operator from modal logic . For any two propositions p and q , the formula p → q says that p materially implies q while
◻
(
p
→
q
)
{\displaystyle \Box (p\rightarrow q)}
says that p strictly implies q .[ 1] Strict conditionals are the result of Clarence Irving Lewis 's attempt to find a conditional for logic that can adequately express indicative conditionals in natural language.[ 2] [ 3] They have also been used in studying Molinist theology.[ 4]
^ Graham Priest , An Introduction to Non-Classical Logic: From if to is , 2nd ed, Cambridge University Press, 2008, ISBN 0-521-85433-4 , p. 72.
^ Lewis, C.I. ; Langford, C.H. (1959) [1932]. Symbolic Logic (2 ed.). Dover Publications . p. 124. ISBN 0-486-60170-6 .
^ Nicholas Bunnin and Jiyuan Yu (eds), The Blackwell Dictionary of Western Philosophy , Wiley, 2004, ISBN 1-4051-0679-4 , "strict implication," p. 660 .
^ Jonathan L. Kvanvig, "Creation, Deliberation, and Molinism," in Destiny and Deliberation: Essays in Philosophical Theology , Oxford University Press, 2011, ISBN 0-19-969657-8 , p. 127–136 .