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Open sentence |
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Open sentenceIn the jargon of the new mathematics of the 1960s, an open sentence is a sentence in which there are specific numbers which, when used to replace the variables, will allow the resulting expression to evaluate to true.Mathematicians have not adopted that nomenclature, but refer instead to equations, inequalities with free variables, etc. Such replacements are known as solutions to the sentence. Examples of open sentences include: Example 4 is an identity. Examples 1, 3, and 4 are equations, while example 2 is an inequality. Every open sentence must have (usually implicitly) a universe of discourse describing which numbers are under consideration as solutions. This same universe of discourse can be used to describe the solutions to the open sentence in symbolic logic using universal quantification. The idea can even be generalised to situations where the variables don't refer to numbers at all, as in a functional equation. See also: atomic sentence, compound sentence.
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