Peirce's Law/Strong Form

Theorem

Formulation 1

$\paren {\paren {p \implies q} \implies p} \dashv \vdash p$


Formulation 2

$\vdash \paren {\paren {p \implies q} \implies p} \iff p$


Law of the Excluded Middle

This theorem depends on the Law of the Excluded Middle.

This is one of the logical axioms that was determined by Aristotle, and forms part of the backbone of classical (Aristotelian) logic.

However, the intuitionist school rejects the Law of the Excluded Middle as a valid logical axiom.

This in turn invalidates this theorem from an intuitionistic perspective.


Source of Name

This entry was named for Charles Sanders Peirce.


Sources

  • 1885: Charles Sanders Peirce: On the Algebra of Logic: A Contribution to the Philosophy of Notation (Amer. J. Math. Vol. 7: pp. 180 – 202)