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Sick Sun (sun@shitposter.world)'s status on Sunday, 16-Jun-2024 00:06:34 JST Sick Sun @kaia all the nurses I have dated were nice - kaia likes this.
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Not particularly hype for current thing??❤️?? (ytfoidlover1488@poa.st)'s status on Sunday, 16-Jun-2024 00:10:22 JST Not particularly hype for current thing??❤️?? @sun @kaia In mathematics and logic, a vacuous truth is a conditional or universal statement (a universal statement that can be converted to a conditional statement) that is true because the antecedent cannot be satisfied.[1] It is sometimes said that a statement is vacuously true because it does not really say anything.[2] For example, the statement "all cell phones in the room are turned off" will be true when no cell phones are present in the room. In this case, the statement "all cell phones in the room are turned on" would also be vacuously true, as would the conjunction of the two: "all cell phones in the room are turned on and turned off", which would otherwise be incoherent and false.
More formally, a relatively well-defined usage refers to a conditional statement (or a universal conditional statement) with a false antecedent.[1][3][2][4] One example of such a statement is "if Tokyo is in Spain, then the Eiffel Tower is in Bolivia".
Such statements are considered vacuous truths, because the fact that the antecedent is false prevents using the statement to infer anything about the truth value of the consequent. In essence, a conditional statement, that is based on the material conditional, is true when the antecedent ("Tokyo is in Spain" in the example) is false regardless of whether the conclusion or consequent ("the Eiffel Tower is in Bolivia" in the example) is true or false because the material conditional is defined in that way.
Examples common to everyday speech include conditional phrases used as idioms of improbability like "when hell freezes over ..." and "when pigs can fly ...", indicating that not before the given (impossible) condition is met will the speaker accept some respective (typically false or absurd) proposition.
In pure mathematics, vacuously true statements are not generally of interest by themselves, but they frequently arise as the base case of proofs by mathematical induction.[5] This notion has relevance in pure mathematics, as well as in any other field that uses classical logic.
Outside of mathematics, statements in the form of a vacuous truth, while logically valid, can nevertheless be misleading. Such statements make reasonable assertions about qualified objects which do not actually exist. For example, a child might truthfully tell their parent "I ate every vegetable on my plate", when there were no vegetables on the child's plate to begin with. In this case, the parent can believe that the child has actually eaten some vegetables, even though that is not true. -
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Sick Sun (sun@shitposter.world)'s status on Sunday, 16-Jun-2024 00:10:22 JST Sick Sun @YTFoidLover1488 @kaia I'm not saying it's universal. -
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casey is remote (realcaseyrollins@noauthority.social)'s status on Sunday, 16-Jun-2024 01:41:59 JST casey is remote @sun @kaia All the nurses I've known were extremely broken people, even though half of them were nice
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ランファン (leyonhjelm@breastmilk.club)'s status on Sunday, 16-Jun-2024 01:42:00 JST ランファン @sun
Spending so much time with babies is the kind of job that draws kind hearts
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