- Posts: 4
- Joined: Jun 12, 2024
- Wed Jun 12, 2024 3:43 pm
#106936
7ncomment@gmail.com wrote: ↑Wed Jun 12, 2024 3:36 pm I have a quick question related to this question.
The anthropologist's claim is that survival >>>> thriving in diverse environments.
I see how the author confuses the conditions, but let's say we run with the author's counter argument that
Thriving in Diverse Environments >>>> Not Surviving.
Now the law of logic says that contrapositives are "another side of the same coin" or functionally equivalent to their original statement.
So, now the counter argument also functionally says "surviving >>> not thriving in diverse environments" which is the logical opposite of the anthropologist's claim that survival >>>> thriving. Why isn't the author then correct, because the contrapositive of the author's argument effectively disproves the anthropologist's claim.
I am honestly confused by the fact that even though contrapositives are essentially putting forth the same argument, we are not always allowed to use them, like in this example where we only go based off what the author overtly says and not the hidden contrapositive.