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 Capetowner
  • Posts: 56
  • Joined: Sep 04, 2025
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#121916
Jeff Wren wrote: Thu Sep 25, 2025 3:33 pm Hi Capetowner,

I'm not entirely sure what you're asking, so please feel free to provide examples of the three types of statements that you are trying to negate.

To just negate a biconditional, you would want a statement that allows one of the terms to occur without the other.

For example, the negation of the biconditional: "You will do well on the LSAT if and only if you study hard" would be:

"It is either possible for you to do well on the LSAT without studying hard or it is possible for you to study hard without doing well on the LSAT."

Of course, it is often easier to negate these more complex statements by simply adding "It is not the case that" before the statement in question. For example, "It is not the case that you will do well on the LSAT if and only if you study hard" is equivalent to the negated statement above and may be easier to figure out and understand.

To negate a mutually exclusive conditional, you would want a statement that allows one of the terms to occur with the other.

For example, the negation of the statement "No doctors are lawyers" would be:

"Some doctors are lawyers."

I'm not quite sure what you mean by your last example (the combo), so please feel free to provide an example for clarification.
Awesome note, wow that clears things up. Just a question on Dave's response above:

On another thread, Dave mentions , the Opposite of "likely (using the spectrum from 0-100)" would be "unlikely" which makes sense, as the opposite of 51-100 is 0-49

Why then when I read Adam's post above, does the opposite of "most" include half? This seems to counter the spectrum approach above

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