The rule permitting one to infer ‘A so either A or B’ (or equally, B, so either A or B).
| Philosophy Dictionary: disjunction introduction |
The rule permitting one to infer ‘A so either A or B’ (or equally, B, so either A or B).
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| Wikipedia: Disjunction introduction |
Disjunction introduction or Addition is a valid, simple argument form in logic:
or in logical operator (sequent) notation:

The argument form has one premise, A, and an unrelated proposition, B. From the premise it can be logically concluded that either A or B is true, or both are true.
Here is an example of such an argument:
Disjunction introduction is controversial in paraconsistent logic because in combination with other rules of logic, it leads to explosion (i.e. everything becomes provable). See Tradeoffs in Paraconsistent logic.
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