Statement
A witness logic game
In mathematics, philosophy, and logic, a statement:
- is a declarative sentence (i.e., a complete sentence that declares something),
- which is true or false (i.e., has a truth value),
- and has exactly ONE truth value (i.e., it cannot be true and false simultaneously).
Examples of non-statements:
-
- - incomplete sentences ("I had the.")
- - interjections ("Hey!")
- - questions ("Where are we?")
- - commands ("Go away.")
- - opinions ("He was dumb.")
There is a crime wave across the city!
Detectives have collected quotes from witnesses for 10 new cases, but the district attorney's office says we can only use logical statements to identify the culprits.
For each case, swipe away the clues that are not logical statements . Then submit the remaining clues so we can use them to ID the culprit!
Note: even if a statement is false it is still a statement, so we can use it.