Stage 15 · Triangles

15.2  Tools for Reasoning and Construction

From "it looks true" to "it is true" — definitions, if–then, proof, and compass & straightedge.

Ages 11–14 · Reasoning, one step at a time
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 6 in this lesson: 15.2.1 Definitions and statements

15.2.1 Definitions and statements

Every piece of reasoning begins with words that mean exactly one thing. A definition pins down a word with no fuzzy edge: "a right angle is an angle of 90°." That is precise — any angle is either exactly 90° or it is not, with no room to argue. Compare it to "a big angle," which has no sharp boundary and so can never be a definition. Good definitions are the bricks; you cannot build proof on sand.

A statement (or proposition) is a sentence that is definitely true or definitely false — not both, not neither. "Every square is a rectangle" is a statement (and it is true). "Two plus two equals five" is a statement (a false one). But "Draw a nice triangle" is neither true nor false — it is a command, not a claim — so it is not a statement at all. Reasoning works only on statements, because only a statement has a truth value to track.

Three sentences sorted. "A right angle is 90°" is a definition (it pins a word down); "Every square is a rectangle" is a true statement; "Draw a nice triangle" is neither — there is nothing to call true or false.
Key idea

A definition says exactly what a word means. A statement is a sentence that is either true or false. A request, a question, or a vague phrase is not a statement.

eastmath.com · 15.2 Tools for Reasoning and Construction · 15.2.1 Definitions and statements