User:RMCD bot/subject notice In logic, Import-Export is a deductive argument form which states that [math]\displaystyle{ (P \rightarrow ( Q \rightarrow R )) \leftrightarrow ((P \land Q) \rightarrow R) }[/math]. In natural language terms, the principle means that the following English sentences are logically equivalent.[1][2][3]
Import-Export holds in classical logic, where the conditional operator [math]\displaystyle{ \rightarrow }[/math] is taken as material implication. However, there are other logics where it does not hold and its status as a true principle of logic is a matter of debate. Controversy over the principle arises from the fact that any conditional operator that satisfies it will collapse to material implication when combined with certain other principles. This conclusion would be problematic given the paradoxes of material implication, which are commonly taken to show that natural language conditionals are not material implication.[2][3][4]
This problematic conclusion can be avoided within the framework of dynamic semantics, whose expressive power allows one to define a non-material conditional operator which nonetheless satisfies Import-Export along with the other principles.[3][5] However, other approaches reject Import-Export as a general principle, motivated by cases such as the following, uttered in a context where it is most likely that the match will be lit by throwing it into a campfire, but where it is possible that it could be lit by striking it. In this context, the first sentence is intuitively true but the second is intuitively false.[5][6][7]