I got this question from Logic, laws of truth, by Nicholas J.J Smith. He says (page 24) : >"A connective is *truth functional* if it has the property that the truth or falsity of a compound proposition formed from the connective and some other propositions is completely determined by the truth or falsity of those component propositions." I don't really seem to be able to appreciate the usefulness of truth-functional connectives. Perhaps, I don't understand what he is saying in that paragraph, so I would appreciate any explanation of what he is trying to say and why truth-functional connectives are useful. Also (if you want to) can you guys explain what Nicholas means when he says "...this proposition has no **internal structure**..."?