SoundnessA logical argument is sound if and only if, (1) the argument is valid\nand (2) all of its premises are true. Suppose we have a sound argument:
\nIn mathematical logic, a formal deduction calculus is said to be sound with respect to a given logic (i.e. with respect to its semantics) if every statement that can be derived within this calculus is a tautology of the logic. Stated differently, this says that everything that can be formally (syntactically) calculated is semantically true. The reverse condition is called completeness. |
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