Asked by Trevor Demuth on Jul 21, 2024

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If both disjuncts of a disjunction are tautologies, then the disjunction itself is a:

A) tautology
B) self-contradiction
C) contingency
D) coherency
E) unable to determine from the information given

Disjuncts

Components in a logical expression that are combined with an OR operator, where the expression is true if at least one of the disjuncts is true.

Disjunction

An operation in logic that returns true when a minimum of one input is true.

Tautologies

Statements that are true under any possible valuation of their components in logic.

  • Evaluate the repercussion of deploying binary logical operators (and, or, conditional, biconditional) onto assorted types of statements.
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Verified Answer

ED
Elizabeth DavisJul 21, 2024
Final Answer :
A
Explanation :
A tautology is always true, so if both disjuncts in a disjunction are tautologies, then at least one of them is true, and therefore the whole disjunction is true. Thus, the disjunction as a whole is a tautology.