Suppose that in a four-round obligato game, the teacher first gives the student the proposition ¬ ( p → ( q ∧ r ) ) , then the proposition p ∨ ¬ q , then the proposition ¬ r , and finally, the proposition ( p ∧ r ) ∨ ( q → p ) . For which of the 16 possible sequences of four answers the student pass the test?
Suppose that in a four-round obligato game, the teacher first gives the student the proposition ¬ ( p → ( q ∧ r ) ) , then the proposition p ∨ ¬ q , then the proposition ¬ r , and finally, the proposition ( p ∧ r ) ∨ ( q → p ) . For which of the 16 possible sequences of four answers the student pass the test?
Solution Summary: The author explains the four-round obbligato game. The teacher gives four propositions and the 16 possible sequence of four answer that the student passes.
Suppose that in a four-round obligato game, the teacher first gives the student the proposition
¬
(
p
→
(
q
∧
r
)
)
, then the proposition
p
∨
¬
q
, then the proposition
¬
r
, and finally, the proposition
(
p
∧
r
)
∨
(
q
→
p
)
. For which of the 16 possible sequences of four answers the student pass the test?
Female
Male
Totals
Less than High School
Diploma
0.077
0.110
0.187
High School Diploma
0.154
0.201
0.355
Some College/University
0.141
0.129
0.270
College/University Graduate
0.092
0.096
0.188
Totals
0.464
0.536
1.000
Female
Male
Totals
Less than High School
Diploma
0.077
0.110
0.187
High School Diploma
0.154
0.201
0.355
Some College/University
0.141
0.129
0.270
College/University Graduate
0.092
0.096
0.188
Totals
0.464
0.536
1.000
Female
Male
Totals
Less than High School
Diploma
0.077
0.110
0.187
High School Diploma
0.154
0.201
0.355
Some College/University
0.141
0.129
0.270
College/University Graduate
0.092
0.096
0.188
Totals
0.464
0.536
1.000
Chapter 1 Solutions
Discrete Mathematics and Its Applications ( 8th International Edition ) ISBN:9781260091991
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