See also: False statement. In logic, false[1] or untrue is the state of possessing negative truth value and is a nullary logical connective. In a truth-functional system of propositional logic, it is one of two postulated truth values, along with its negation, truth.[2] Usual notations of the false are 0 (especially in Boolean logic and computer science), O (in prefix notation, Opq), and the up tack symbol
\bot
Another approach is used for several formal theories (e.g., intuitionistic propositional calculus), where a propositional constant (i.e. a nullary connective),
\bot
In Boolean logic, each variable denotes a truth value which can be either true (1), or false (0).
In a classical propositional calculus, each proposition will be assigned a truth value of either true or false. Some systems of classical logic include dedicated symbols for false (0 or
\bot
In both Boolean logic and Classical logic systems, true and false are opposite with respect to negation; the negation of false gives true, and the negation of true gives false.
x | \negx | |
---|---|---|
true | false | |
false | true |
The negation of false is equivalent to the truth not only in classical logic and Boolean logic, but also in most other logical systems, as explained below.
In most logical systems, negation, material conditional and false are related as:
In fact, this is the definition of negation in some systems,[8] such as intuitionistic logic, and can be proven in propositional calculi where negation is a fundamental connective. Because is usually a theorem or axiom, a consequence is that the negation of false is true.
A contradiction is the situation that arises when a statement that is assumed to be true is shown to entail false (i.e.,). Using the equivalence above, the fact that φ is a contradiction may be derived, for example, from . A statement that entails false itself is sometimes called a contradiction, and contradictions and false are sometimes not distinguished, especially due to the Latin term falsum being used in English to denote either, but false is one specific proposition.
Logical systems may or may not contain the principle of explosion (ex falso quodlibet in Latin), for all . By that principle, contradictions and false are equivalent, since each entails the other.
See main article: Consistency. A formal theory using the "
\bot