Isn’t that implication arrow backwards?
“P follows from Q” is P ⇐ Q
Maybe that’s the joke, though.
EDIT: The text says “P follows Q”, which my brain apparently corrected to “P follows from Q”. These are not the same, and I’d argue that “P follows Q” is problematic as a phrase as a result. Grumble grumble.
It says Q follows fron P tho
So I reread it and it says “P follows Q”, which I (mis)read/(mis?)interpreted as “P follows from Q”.
I don’t remember if “follows” was ever used for forward implication in this way when I actually did a logic course, but it was a few decades ago now. Maybe it was.
There’s also that the usual joke in this category is that in basic logic, false implies true, which seems to be the punchline of the joke in the comic, just with the arrow backwards.
You’re missing the first word, it says “from P, follows Q”. I initially just quoted it as the easier way to read.
SMBC vibes
I analysed the panel using lasso regression to fit setups to punchlines, using both short and long lambdas, and this post came up short.