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Equivalent

Equivalent describes a relation of sameness in value, function, or meaning within a specified context. Two things are equivalent if one can substitute for the other without changing the outcome, given the rules of the framework in which they are used.

In mathematics, an equivalence relation is reflexive, symmetric, and transitive. If a ~ b and b ~ c,

In logic, two statements are logically equivalent if they have the same truth value in all situations;

In science and everyday language, equivalent appears in chemistry as equivalent weight, a measure used in balancing

Etymology traces to Latin aequivalens, meaning "of equal value," highlighting substitutability within a framework rather than

then
a
~
c,
partitioning
a
set
into
equivalence
classes.
Common
examples
include
congruence
modulo
n
(a
≡
b
mod
n)
and
equality
under
an
isomorphism,
where
objects
are
considered
the
same
in
structure
even
if
they
are
not
identical.
written
p
↔
q
and
read
as
"p
if
and
only
if
q."
Equivalence
in
mathematics
often
means
the
two
objects
are
interchangeable
under
a
mapping,
not
necessarily
identical.
reactions,
and
in
pharmacology
as
bioequivalence,
indicating
similar
biological
effects
under
defined
conditions.
The
term
also
appears
in
physics
in
concepts
such
as
the
equivalence
principle,
which
relates
gravitational
and
inertial
phenomena.
universal
sameness.