fornuftsequivalenter
Fornuftsequivalenter is a term used in philosophy of logic to denote items that occupy the same inferential position within a given reasoning system. In practice, two propositions or sentences are fornuftsequivalenter if replacing one with the other in any valid argument does not change the set of deduced conclusions; equivalently, they have identical inferential consequences under the system’s rules.
Etymology and usage: The word combines fornuft (reason) with ekvivalenter (equivalents) from Scandinavian languages. It is
Criteria: Within a specified logical framework, A and B are fornuftsequivalenter if A entails B and B
Examples: In classical propositional logic, A: If it rains, the streets are wet (R → W) and B:
Distinctions: Not all semantic synonyms are fornuftsequivalenter; pragmatic context, scope, or interpretive conventions may prevent interchangeable
See also: logical equivalence; inferential role; paraphrase; argumentation theory.