1. The problem states the distributive law of set operations: $$p \cap (q \cup r) = (p \cap q) \cup (p \cap r)$$.
2. This law means the intersection of set $p$ with the union of sets $q$ and $r$ equals the union of the intersections of $p$ with $q$ and $p$ with $r$.
3. To understand why, recall that $\cap$ (intersection) means elements common to both sets, and $\cup$ (union) means elements in either set.
4. The left side $p \cap (q \cup r)$ includes elements in $p$ that are also in $q$ or $r$.
5. The right side $(p \cap q) \cup (p \cap r)$ includes elements that are either in both $p$ and $q$, or in both $p$ and $r$.
6. Both sides describe the same set of elements, so the equality holds.
7. This distributive property is fundamental in set theory and helps simplify expressions involving unions and intersections.
Set Distributive Law 8Ed4F5
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