- Posts: 15
- Joined: May 30, 2023
- Thu Sep 26, 2024 2:37 am
#109242
I fully understand why A is correct. It takes the premise makes it the sufficient, and the conclusion the necessary byproduct (via the contrapositive).
What I can not wrap my head around is how B does not do the same thing. Translating B into conditional logic, we have: "/many mass extinctions were caused by meteorite strikes—>Can not be causally linked"
Our first premise that "many mass extinctions were not caused by meteorite strikes" is certainty fulfilling the sufficient condition here, is it not? It is the natural flip side of the coin.
If not many extinctions were caused by meteor strikes, then naturally many mass extinctions were not caused by meteorite strikes. I understand "many" is a mushier word, but "many" and "not many" are proper negations.
What I can not wrap my head around is how B does not do the same thing. Translating B into conditional logic, we have: "/many mass extinctions were caused by meteorite strikes—>Can not be causally linked"
Our first premise that "many mass extinctions were not caused by meteorite strikes" is certainty fulfilling the sufficient condition here, is it not? It is the natural flip side of the coin.
If not many extinctions were caused by meteor strikes, then naturally many mass extinctions were not caused by meteorite strikes. I understand "many" is a mushier word, but "many" and "not many" are proper negations.