- Wed Mar 02, 2022 8:33 pm
#94029
I checked the LRB on this and I found something that I think applies, but I am not completely confident that I am rightly applying it. I think that I have realized something that will help me eliminate certain kinds of wrong answers more quickly, but I would like to explain my reasoning and see if I am right before I start using it as a machete. I will state it abstractly below.
Question stem: One should not do X, if A or if B.
Diagram of conditionals:
A
OR
should not do X
B
Diagram of contrapositive:
/A
should do X
AND
/B
My reasoning is that answer choices that say "I am allowed to do X, because I'm not violating condition A or B" are wrong, because they are committing a Mistaken Reversal based upon the contrapositive or a Mistaken Negation based upon the original conditional statement. Am I right in thinking this and can I use this fact to quickly and confidently eliminate such answers?
A second question related to this is: does this apply to any situation in which there is such a prohibition? Meaning, if I see "A or B
can't do X/shouldn't do X," is it right to think that I can only determine what should not be done but that I cannot positively prove/justify what MAY be done in the particular situation? I am asking this question in a formal logic sense rather than in a common sense one.
Thanks in advance.
Question stem: One should not do X, if A or if B.
Diagram of conditionals:
A
OR

B
Diagram of contrapositive:




should do X





My reasoning is that answer choices that say "I am allowed to do X, because I'm not violating condition A or B" are wrong, because they are committing a Mistaken Reversal based upon the contrapositive or a Mistaken Negation based upon the original conditional statement. Am I right in thinking this and can I use this fact to quickly and confidently eliminate such answers?
A second question related to this is: does this apply to any situation in which there is such a prohibition? Meaning, if I see "A or B

Thanks in advance.